Wednesday, July 31, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #6

Warning!  This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.

This week's puzzle is "Where's Waldo On The Beach" 100 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle circa 1989. 

There is first the challenge of completing the puzzle. Second, there is the challenge of finding Waldo.  Lastly, there is the challenge of finding the extra images that are printed on the side of the box.

The front of the box is the puzzle solution. 

There are a few "odd" extra images that can be construed and that I'm unsure of what the correct answers are.

The completed puzzle.

The puzzle.  
Waldo is FOUND! 

The Checklist of other fun things to find. 


A man who is overdressed. 

A muscular medallion man. 

A popular girl. 

 
A water skier on the water.


A stripy photo. 

A punctured lilo

A donkey who likes ice-cream.


A man being squashed.


A punctured beach ball. 

A human pyramid. 

I missed the "A human stepping-stone."  It's just right of center. 

Sadly, almost all the people could be "Two odd friends."  Funny that two is actually even. 

A cowboy.

A human donkey. 

Age and beauty. 

A boy who follows in his father's footsteps. 

Two men with vests, one without. 

A boy being tortured by a spider. 

A gang of hat robbers. 

"An odd couple" again, could just about be any two in this photo.  Strange that a couple is also even. 

Five Sprinters. 

A towel with a hole in it. 

A punctured hovercraft.

A boy who's not allowed any ice-cream. 

Thanks for reading,

Dr. Alex








Tuesday, July 30, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #5

Warning!  This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.

This week's puzzle is "The Missing Piece" and it's really more of an ad for a new defunct fashion(?) website veer.com.  The goal of the puzzle is to find the mystery code word and then add $500.00 into your cart and use the coupon code to save $100.00.  

Better hurry because this offer is only good from May 1st to June 15th, 2007!

In reality, you do not need to solve the puzzle.  You just need the central area.  The pieces are easy to sort into the four made-up movie posters and then leaving the central round clue word area to for an easy piece together.

The back of the box has the puzzle solution with a "see side for details" where the codeword is hidden in the puzzle.  

We did this puzzle on a green felt puzzle roller/saver thinking that it might take a bit longer to put together the 550 pieces. Nope, we finished it in one night. 



Code: CASECLOSED

Thanks for reading,

Dr. Alex

Wednesday, July 24, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #4

Warning!  This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.

This week's puzzle is actually a three in one!  Cluster Puzzles "Figments," "Animals," and "Doodles."
Cluster Puzzles were created by artist/designer Alex Palmer and my edition was published by Cadaco sometime between 1977 and 1988.

Each of these puzzles has a common theme in that they have no straight edge border, all irregularly shaped pieces, no full image on the box, and a clue card to help fit each piece together with one other.

Examples of the clue card might include "Giraffe: I'm glad I have the Squirrel to help hold up my neck." 

All three of them finish off rectangular-ish in shape.  The pieces of thin and often slide over each other while placing more complicated pieces into small groves.  They were a challenge and without the clue cards, I doubt I would have stuck with all three of them.
 
Top of the box. 

 Completed Animals (#1) Puzzle.

 Completed Figments (#2) Puzzle.

Completed Doodles (#5) Puzzle. 

 Thanks for reading!

Dr. Alex

Monday, July 15, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #3

Warning! This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.


This week's mystery puzzle is a 323 piece puzzle called The Plymouth Express - by Agatha Christie and published by BePuzzled. 

The storybook contains two short stories by Agatha Christie - The Plymouth Express taken from The Underdog and Other Stories and The Tape-Measure Murder taken from Three Blind Mice and Other Stories.  Only The Plymouth Express works with the puzzle.  The second story is just a bonus and pure joy. 

The story is, of course, well written: it is written by Agatha Christie.  The puzzle was fun with only a few hard to notice area - the wooden floor and a wooden dresser with a mirror. 

The clue to the puzzle is well visualized and ties in well to solving the mystery.  The cat is totally random. 

Now, no to the pictures:
WOW!!!  Look at those calves! 

Completed puzzle!

Thanks for reading!

Dr. Alex



Monday, July 8, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #2



Warning! This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.


  
I just finished a
jigsaw puzzle in 2
weeks when it said
on the box 2-4 years! 

I'm so proud ?

This week's puzzle solve and reveal is "Who Said That?" A Quiz Jigsaw Puzzle by Buffalo Games.

Yes, this puzzle has 252 pieces that all interlock together. This type of puzzle is really two puzzles in one. First, match the picture with the famous quote. Second, match the two pieces with their surroundings so that the background image is that of JFK. There are also tops of heads and bottoms of collars that need to match as an added guide.

Sadly, the background image is just a fine shade of grey. Even darker areas such as the eyes and the nostrils are less precise than one desires. Thankfully the back of the box has a mini partial solution.

The full puzzle (minor error on the bottom row.)

Four close-ups of the puzzle:


You can tell that I should have switched Mark Twain and Carl Jung before taking these photos.  The tops of the heads don't match up.

Overall, fun to find the quotes and pictures, but a pain to match up to the larger JFK image.  

It was interesting that there was already a JFK quote in the puzzle.

Thanks for reading,

Dr. Alex





Saturday, July 6, 2019

Mystery Puzzle SPOILER #1

Warning! This post contains spoilers to a mystery puzzle.

For the past several weeks my wife and I have been working on several different mystery puzzles during the evening when our daughters are asleep. Often these have a short story to set the scene. We then solved the puzzle, where the final puzzle image is NOT the image on the box. Finally, we use the clues in the puzzle to solve the crime/mystery/murder from the short story.

We've had a lot of fun reading the stories and finding the clues hidden in the puzzle. I wanted to share some of these fun final solutions on this blog.


The puzzle that I'm going to reveal is titled "Garfield Seek and find jigsaw puzzle - Camp Out." It's made for ages 6 and up and contains 96 pieces. Published by Great American Puzzle Factory. After completing this puzzle, the added challenge of locating 5 bats and 3 flashlights that are hiding in this picture.

The completed image.

The 5 bats in 3 flashlights.
Thanks for reading,
Dr. Alex