
Every few years I seem to crave the time and patience required to put together a 1000 piece jigsaw puzzle. The one pictured above is my current project, a collage of various scenes from Jane Austen’s novels. Many characters people the scene and a guide to each is supplied in case there is any difficulty identifying anyone.
For the first time I am using a puzzle board covered with felt that can be propped at an angle making bending over less tiring. It also keeps the puzzle out of reach of the puppy who would be only too happy to devour one or more parts. Since she has become very stealthy I might not notice until the very end of the construction when I discovered a hole in the array.
I tend to work in little parts as you can see, and sometimes those need to be connected to other finished segments. I have found a serious drawback to the felt; it is impossible to easily slide sections together. However the tilt is easier on my back, so on balance the board is an improvement.
Putting together a jigsaw puzzle can’t be rushed. Careful attention to each piece means focus and calm. Periodically being drawn to assemble one lets me know that at any given time I must need both.
A fine advocacy for the activity
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Thanks.
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I am envious of that level of patience, Elizabeth. Patience is a virtue I sadly lack.
Good luck with the jigsaw. 🙂
Best wishes, Pete.
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Your patience goes into your writing and responding I think.
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I don’t know if this will work, but I have a suggestion you could try: put a piece of paper under the separate section when you start it, so when you’re ready, you can slide it to connect to another section. What do you think?
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Great idea. It works.
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We have a puzzle of Mr Mole proposing to Thumbelina which I liked so much I sent off for the print to frame. We got it out every December. The first time we opened the box our puppy at the time got hold of a dropped piece and it ended up with toothmarks and a corner missing. After that first year, we always knew where that piece went and it was one of the early ones located on the puzzle. Sadly, the jigsaw was lost along with a drawer of stuff in one of my moves, but my niece found us a replacement from a summer fete stall. It doesn’t have that chewed piece though 😦
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I’m willing to chew it for you if you want!
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Too funny.
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I discovered that one piece of this lovely work is missing! I am afraid it may have gone into the vacuum cleaner in a distracted moment.
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😦 An artist, a chunk of card and a pair of sharp scissors?
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LOL. Now I am on to “The World of Shakespeare.” If I hand the puzzle on I guess I will need to warn of one missing piece.
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Well done yo! Like Pete, I don’t have enough patience
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Beautiful, I admire the time you put into it. Can you have it framed later?
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I could but will probably take it apart and donate it to the nursing home where I give my puzzles.
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For a moment or two I thought the puzzle had lots of background green and I thought how difficult it must be. Even so, respect to you!
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Thanks. I hate puzzles with seas of one color.
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I’ve never been a puzzle person, probably because I don’t want to stand hunched over a table. But that board makes it look doable, and your puzzle selection, fun!
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Well I think the concentration you give to photography serves the same reflective purpose my puzzle assembly does.
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Interesting! I never thought of it that way. 🙂
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I definitely see the connection.
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We always clear away a table in the winter for a 2,000 or 3,000 piece puzzle. It is come-and-go to connect the puzzle, usually with coffee in the morning. It may take the whole winter, but we love that ongoing puzzle.
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I have participated in such “crowd sourced” puzzles and enjoy them. Sadly no place is puppy free to lay one out here.
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I know what you mean!
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It looks beautiful. I used to make smaller ones with my grandson in 2017 in Germany.
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I started puzzles as a kid at my grandmother’s house!
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I like your puzzle. I used to like jigsaw puzzles, but I can’t see well enough to work one now. There are other things I can still do, so I’m not going to fret over it.
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That makes sense. Enjoy what you can.
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What a marvelous puzzle, Elizabeth. I am ashamed to say I’ve never liked doing puzzles but I do like to draw.
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My granddaughter said the same to me when she saw this one.
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💞
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Have you ever tried online puzzles, Elizabeth? Here’s one of my favorite sites: https://www.jigidi.com/. People create the puzzles and new ones come up all the time. It can be competitive or not, as the site records the ten fastest times. The puzzles come in varying amounts and subjects. Unlike traditional puzzles, there’s no question of whether pieces fit together. There’s this little satisfying sound when two pieces snap together. I’m hooked and it’s not hard on the back.
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Thanks. Yes a friend introduced me to online puzzles. They are indeed easier on the back. The physical ones seem to satisfy a different need. I like them both.
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I gave all our remaining puzzles to another family during our various lockdowns thinking I’d buy some more. I did half heartedly try but never saw anything I liked but seeing yours is making me think it’s time to really go looking – again!
Maybe have little cards about the size of postcards to put the scenes together then as someone above said you’ll be able to move the pieces to where they fit
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I was amazed at the really engaging designs now available. I have tried the idea the other writer mentioned and it work well.
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I’ve never really had the patience for puzzles, though I do seem to be able to sit for hours and play computer games if I allowed myself to do that. Go figure. Oh, and I never realized puzzle pieces were good for eating. Learn something new every day. LOL
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Puzzle making seems to be more contemplative to me than the games I enjoy on the tablet.
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