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Article About Jigsaw Puzzles For Reading
Article About Jigsaw Puzzles For Reading
’ Moments With
Jigsaw Puzzles
Whether made of cardboard or sculpted out of wood, jigsaw puzzles test skills like
spatial reasoning and can help to stave off anxiety. They can also be works of art in
their own right.
Back in March, when hand sanitizer evaporated, toilet paper shortages loomed and
in parts of New York City, cans of Lysol couldn’t be had for love or any reasonable
amount of money, another commodity flew from shelves and warehouse pallets:
jigsaw puzzles.
What explains the craze? “Life is full of puzzles,” Nick Baxter, who chairs a puzzle
design competition, said. “Those real-life puzzles aren’t very fun. They aren’t
elegant.” But a jigsaw puzzle, he said, is designed to have a satisfying conclusion.
“It’s there to make you feel good.”
At the very least, a jigsaw can stave off feeling bad, occupying the same neural
pathways we reserve for anxiety. “A lot of people have told me that when they’re
doing a puzzle, they just sort of shut out all their worries, they just concentrate on
matching pieces,” said Anne Williams, the author of “The Jigsaw Puzzle: Piecing
Together a History.” Nine months into the pandemic shortages are mostly
alleviated. But anxiety continues. So puzzles remain quite popular.
Jigsaw puzzles had a huge surge in popularity about 90 years ago, around the time
of the Great Depression. Unsurprisingly, they have surged again during lockdown.
A good jigsaw — whether it involves hundreds of pieces or thousands — provides a
relatively inexpensive form of home entertainment with a tactility that screen-
based entertainments don’t allow.
“There is supposed to be a dopamine hit every time you put puzzle pieces together.
So assembling a puzzle is just a constant dose of happy chemicals,” said Tammy
McLeod, a champion puzzler and a founder of the USA Jigsaw Puzzle Association.
While the association promotes timed events, most people experience jigsaws as
collaborative rather than competitive. Several of the major companies make
pandemic-friendly puzzles expressly designed for families. In family puzzles, pieces
come in a variety of sizes, some quite large, so that even little hands can contribute.
Still, jigsaw puzzles work for isolated play as well. (They are also available in a
variety of apps, though that style of play removes the haptic pleasure of having the
pieces in hand.)
Certain skill sets help with puzzle-solving — a good visual memory, a talent for
pattern-matching, organizational flair. Patience, too. And with a good puzzle that
patience is rewarded. What makes a good puzzle? “A lot of it is, ‘Hey, is there an
aha experience?’” Mr. Baxter said. “Is there some kind of light bulb that has to go
off?”
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Here are some puzzles, mostly priced between $10 and $200, for the novice or the
aficionado.
Jigsaws as Art
If aesthetics matter to you, there are companies that push puzzles closer to art and
design. One is Pomegranate, which specializes in fine art reproductions of works by
the likes of van Gogh and Diego Rivera ($17.95 to $34.95), allowing you to linger
on color and suggestions of texture as you solve. “You can learn about brush strokes
and color palettes and you can memorize the smallest details of vastly complicated
and densely populated canvases,” the novelist and jigsaw enthusiast Margaret
Drabble wrote in an article last spring. Then again, an Old Master in 2-D may still
feel kitschy. Those who prefer a more Modernist feel can try Piecework’s hip and
sumptuous illustrations ($26 to $36), Areaware’s soothing gradient puzzles ($15 to
$35), in which colors slide from light to dark, Pomegranate’s line of Charley Harper
posters or Jiggy’s playful rectangles ($40). Some collectors might argue that certain
wooden puzzles are works of art themselves or, at the very least, models of
exquisite craftsmanship, especially those that specialize in whimsy shapes,
like Liberty Puzzles and Wentworth Wooden Puzzles.
No Easy Pieces
You could try The Lines from Bgraamiens ($18.99), in 1000 crazy-making pieces of
graphite strokes on a white background. Too abstract? Check out puzzles
from Nervous System, the makers of those mixed puzzle sets, which specializes in
organic shapes based on phenomena like geodes, ammonites and wriggly amoebae
($45-$95). For a particularly devilish version of the gradient puzzle, try 5000
Colors from Play Group ($150). No piece is the same shade as any other. If that is
perhaps too many colors, turn to monochrome puzzles, like Ravensburger’s Krypt
series ($20.99), which takes incredible patience to solve as every piece is colored
precisely the same. Or here’s one where the name says it all: Beverly Micro Pure
White Hell (about $25).