Clementoni’s Ethnic Collection

About 10 years ago, Clementoni had a series called Ethnic Collection. The images always looked like they were painted on wood, and they represented various cultures seen as exotic from a European perspective. I had two puzzles from the series:

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Li Jiang River,  Clementoni, 1000 pieces. Completed on November 5th, 2007.
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Chichenitzái, Clementoni, 1000 pieces. Completed on February 23rd, 2009.

In addition, there were at least a couple of puzzles with African themes (one was Kilimanjaro) and one with an Indian theme (Taj Mahal, obviously).

Heye Portraits

About 10 years ago, Heye had a series of four 1000 piece puzzles with historical portraits. I tried a bit of Googling, but couldn’t find any information (such as year of release) about them.

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Elizabeth I, Heye, 1000 pieces. Portrait by Nicholas Hilliard. Completed on October 23rd, 2007. Sorry about the glare.
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Victoria, Heye, 1000 pieces. Portrait by Franz Xaver Winterhalter. Completed on April 5th, 2008.
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Katharina II (aka Cathrine the Great of Russia), Heye, 1000 pieces. Portrait by Aleksey Antropov. Completed on May 1st, 2008.
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Madame de Pompadour (mistress of Louis XV of France), Heye, 1000 pieces. Portrait by François Boucher. Completed on August 24th, 2008. One piece missing.

 

I have to say I don’t remember much about these, but I must have enjoyed them as I completed the whole series. The frames look like something I would not be too keen on, but it can’t have been too bad, as I don’t remember them. Then again, it is over 10 years since I did the last one 🙂

Ancient Egypt, the Fakes, Vol 1

I like Ancient Egypt-themed puzzles. Some of them are pictures of actual Egyptian artwork, but most are of more recent production and only use ancient material as inspiration. Here are some of those.

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Nefertari, Jumbo 1000 pieces. Completed on October 17th, 2007.

Nefertari was the wife of Ramesses the Great. She is here surrounded by various gods of Ancient Egypt, right in front of her mouth is Osiris, and above Osiris is Isis, I think. Oh dear, I used to recognize all of these gods…

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Legends of the Nile, White Mountain Puzzles, 1000 pieces. Completed on November 21st, 2011.

This is very similar to the first one, with the same images around the central picture. Different brand though.

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Egyptian Tarot, Lo Scarabeo, 2000 pieces. Completed on March 31st, 2008.

This was great fun, and I still have the puzzle. The manufacturer, Lo Scarabeo, apparently make tarot (and other types of) cards, but I’ve not run into any other puzzles by them. I managed to spill a drink on this, but I dried it out as best I could and intend to do it again one day.

17th and 18th Century World Maps

Maps, especially old maps, used to be one of my favourite puzzle themes, but eventually, I got a little tired of them. The same thing happened before with Alpine landscapes, but I would be happy to do either of those again.

World maps from the 17th and 18th Century usually show the two hemispheres as circles, and around everything, there are various illustrations, sometimes of ancient gods and myths, sometimes of scientists or scenes from world history. The world looks pretty much as it does on modern maps, except that Australia is usually missing, or at least severely disfigured. The first known landing in Australia by Europeans was by a Dutch ship in 1606, and even before that there were theories that there is an undiscovered southern continent (often present on maps as Terra Australis, Southern Country).  Information about the landing was probably not immediately available to the map makers at the time, and even if it were, it wasn’t nearly enough to produce realistic maps. Also, India often looks way too small, and the far east is somewhat disfigured. But all in all, you know it’s our earth, not, say, Middle Earth of Tolkien. Which can not be said for some of the really old (mediaeval) maps…

Here are some old map puzzles:

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World Map 1630, Ravensburger 5000 pieces. Completed on May 18th, 2012. With scientists in the corners.
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There’s even an in-process picture. Just getting started here.
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Copy of Map of the World, 1639, Castorland, 1000 pieces. Completed on November 11th, 2007. Really bad photo, sorry.
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Historical Map of the World, Schmidt, 1000 pieces. Completed on November 7th, 2007. This photo is even worse…
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Historical Map of the World, Ravensburger, 5000 pieces. Completed on June 14th, 2008.
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Map of the Earth 1749, Trefl, 3000 pieces. Completed on November 18th, 2011. One piece missing. But look! There’s Australia!
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Copy of Antique World Map, Castorland, 1500 pieces. Completed on November 29th, 2011. No date on this one, but I’m guessing the 18th Century. The text is in French, not in Latin.
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Copy of World Map, Castorland, 2000 pieces. Completed on May 27th, 2012. Strictly speaking, this doesn’t really belong here, it looks like a modern map made up in the old style. There are pictures of famous buildings, including the Sagrada Familia in Barcelona, where construction started in the late 19th Century. (It’s still not finished…)

The Tower of Pisa

I’ve never been to Pisa, but I found two versions of the Tower of Pisa among my puzzle pictures. The cartoon:

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Pisa in Motion by RS Crisp, Heye, 1000 pieces. Completed on October 27th, 2007.

And the traditional one:

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Pisa, Clementoni, 500 pieces. Completed on July 19th, 2018.

Both good puzzles 🙂