Go back

Your message has been sent

Warning

PlanktonPunkt Designs puzzles available in CreateJigsawPuzzles

link to order print on demand PlanktonPunkt Designs jigsaw puzzles (printed in China)

PlanktonPunkt Designs POD products in Printify

link to order PlanktonPunkt Designs print on demand wares from the source

PlanktonPunkt Designs POD products in Etsy

A link to order from a selection of PlanktonPunkt Designs print on demand wares from Etsy

Jigsaw puzzles – the beginning

I enjoy jigsaw puzzles, so I have begun to submit my pictures for new puzzles.

My plan is to have two types of jigsaw puzzles: a sample of free online puzzles on jigsawexplorer.com (made with their software), and (hopefully soon) for sale, a selection of solid jigsaw puzzles, which can be ordered from a print-on-demand shop.  Both online and hard copy puzzles can be accessed by clicking their images, which will take you to their respective websites. The first puzzles here are based on photos, but I may also experiment with drawings, AI, collages and other sources of imagery.

Digital jigsaw puzzles have the convenience for being portable, never losing a piece, and pets or clumsy stumbles never messing with the nearly assembled game. You can adjust the number of pieces depending on mood and available time.

However, traditionalists and people without reliable Internet, especially those in a remote cabin in the woods (even before an EMP strike or Carrington Event 2.0 wipes out the Internet) may prefer a solid, real-world jigsaw puzzle. There is the enjoyment brought by handling puzzle pieces without the help of electronic shortcuts, and the resulting concrete object can be framed into a piece of art. Or tossed back in pieces into its container, never to be touched again.

But imagine this picture: ten years After the Event, a lonely hermit is getting ready to finish his 10 000-piece, bright blue sky -puzzle. A reminder of the sky, like it was before the Event, even before the Chemtrails, when he realizes that he is missing one of the pieces. That would not be a good day.

Lemons

It is unclear if this picture contains free-range lemons foraged from the streets of Bay City Northeast, or commercially factory-farmed lemons bought from a grocery.

Eucalyptuses

Unfortunately, the eucalyptus photo was taken from a place that does not allow commercial photography, so I have deleted this jigsaw puzzle in preparation of becoming commercial.

Eucalyptuses are the tallest weeds of California. They are covered in sheets of multihued peeling bark, which accumulates onto ground.

Rose

I like the pink and yellow petals.

(Magnolia in the neighborhood)

(Deleted to avoid conflict)

(Spring blooms before the leaves.)

Comments

Leave a comment