This is one of the easiest 1000-piece puzzles I ever completed. It was easy to pick out the pieces for each ad, and the great Ravensburger quality helped as well.


This is one of the easiest 1000-piece puzzles I ever completed. It was easy to pick out the pieces for each ad, and the great Ravensburger quality helped as well.


The London underground by de-lux, a brand I’ve never heard of. I must say I was sceptical, but it turned out to be fine. Sturdy pieces and grid cut with enough variety in piece shape.

I’ve done one underground map before (of Paris), and I think there were a lot more all-white pieces then. As you can see, there weren’t that many here. Anyway, definitely saved the edges for last.

The red line is Central line, and the blue line below represents the Thames. I think it’s kind of sweet to have a stylized version of the river on the map 🙂

Not much progress, but I finished the edges.

Also, I pulled the pieces for the birds a long time ago, but only now did I put most of them together. Even managed to connect some of them to other bits!

Now I’m working on the pinkish area at the bottom.

Great vintage train puzzle, I love the style, and it was also a pretty easy puzzle.

Tactic had a series with album covers of Finnish bands, where you get a 300 piece puzzle and the album as a CD. The series has been discontinued, but you can still find them second hand. Most of the covers don’t make great puzzles (so much black), but this was interesting.
The band, Sielun Veljet (Soul Brothers, although “soul” doesn’t refer to a type of music in Finnish, and their music was definitely not soul), is one of my all-time favourites and one of the most successful Finnish bands ever. Most of their stuff is in Finnish, but this album has English lyrics. You can probably guess that their music is quite strange from the title: Softwood Music Under Slow Pillars. They were impossible to put into any one genre, and the word “shamanistic” was often used when someone tried to describe them. They were also a brilliant live act!

The edges, as well as top and bottom, were really easy, the rest took a while, but it was only 300 pieces, after all.

The box contains the puzzle and a CD.

On the back of the box is this brilliant image that I used to have on my wall in the 80’s. I was so happy to see it again!

This is definitely something different, but I’m afraid I didn’t find it that enjoyable, I don’t know why.

Two weeks ago I mentioned on the blog that the ice hockey world championship was about to start. Well, against all odds, Finland won! None of the big Finnish NHL stars wanted in, and 18 of 25 players were first-timers. Still, they managed to beat Sweden (21 NHL players), Russia (title favourites) and finally Canada in the final. In the end, hard work and team play beat star-studded opponents. Amazing!
Also, I managed to finish my Egyptian collage. The section below on the right, Tutankhamun in the middle and the two sections above and below him turned out to be pretty easy. For the remaining five I could sort the pieces into two piles, one for the two images with grey stone and one for the three remaining images with yellowish stone. It wasn’t all that easy, but still enjoyable from start to finish!

The Aztec Cosmos, also known as the Aztec Calendar (it’s a calendar, but also sort of a map of the universe). This was hard, especially the black part. Pieces would fit where they didn’t belong, which surprised me because I had only heard good things about Pomegranate (this was the first I did). My second Pomegranate did not have this problem, in fact, the quality was great.

Optical illusion puzzle, where a sitting woman also forms a skull. In the background, there is bread that looks like skulls. There was a lot of dark in this, it was pretty difficult.

I started on a 2000-piece Egyptian collage by Grafika.



The pieces for these two sections were pretty easy to pull, but it’s going to get a lot harder from now on.