A 150-piece puzzle with tiny pieces, this was the last in the lot of four puzzles that I bought. The image is a poster by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec showing the famous can-can dancer Louise Weber, known as “La Goulue”, the Glutton (because she would swipe drinks from the customers while dancing).

Instead of a box, there’s a plastic test tube. The puzzle has the tiniest pieces I’ve ever seen, definitely smaller than the Educa miniature pieces:
The quality was not good, but for a puzzle this small it was no problem. I originally intended to do this on a flight, and the pieces would easily have fitted on the tray, but then I thought of turbulence and decided to save it for later. Which was just as well, as we actually had some turbulence.
What a fun image! Love it 💖
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Paris around 1900 was an exiting place, and there are lots of great posters from the era, but I’ve not seen that many as puzzles.
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Usually lots of Chat Noir puzzles is all I see.
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how much does it cost? i have a collection of tube mini puzzles (99 – 150 pieces), they can be very cheap and very expensive at the same time
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I paid 9 EUR for three puzzles, but this was the only mini puzzle in the lot. The others were 150, 300 and 500 pieces. They were used, but all complete.
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rather economical purchase) 9 for 3 puzzles)
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Sorry, four of course! This one and three others.
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[…] The only artist credited on the box is Viktor Shvaiko, but the background (top half) is actually from a poster by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, so they might have mentioned him, too. I’ve actually done that poster as a mini puzzle. […]
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