Anyone a fan? I hadn't done one for years but we spent a quiet Christmas down south with an elderly friend who may well not see another one and pretty much an entire day was spent putting together a 1000-piece jigsaw. I was struck by how peaceful and therapeutic an activity it was, with several of us utterly consumed by it and not a screen of any sort involved!
Obviously it's something you need a good chunk of spare time to do, but I could see myself chipping away at one over a few days/weeks and am having a hunt around for what look like challenging but interesting ones.
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Thread: Jigsaw puzzles
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08-01-2025 01:38 PM #1
Jigsaw puzzles
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08-01-2025 02:07 PM #2
I tried one once but it was impossible. The picture on the box was of a big rooster but there was only bits of cereal inside??
PERSEVERE
Verb: pə:ːsɪ'ˈvɪə/
To not give up.
To go the distance.
To stop at nothing.
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08-01-2025 02:18 PM #3
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08-01-2025 02:20 PM #4This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-01-2025 02:21 PM #5
My dad used to do jigsaws when we were younger. Not for hours at a time but he would sit for a half hour here and there every day and just plod along with them. Totally out of character for him as he's a football, golf and pub kind of guy.
Not something I would think I would have the patience for if I'm honest.PM Awards General Poster of The Year 2015, 2016, 2017. Probably robbed in other years
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08-01-2025 02:26 PM #6
I got this one at Christmas. It’s a Van Gogh painting and will drive me round the bend. Good fun tho’.
IMG_2602.jpgLast edited by Jim44; 08-01-2025 at 02:29 PM.
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08-01-2025 02:42 PM #7This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-01-2025 03:33 PM #8
My auntie is a fanatic, she is in her 80s now but still tackles 1000 and up to 3000 piece puzzles. The 3000 piece puzzles take up the large dining room table but she will go and do 30 minutes here and an hour there, she won't spend all day at one. My sister and I were sent to hers for a fortnight every school summer holiday to give my mum a break and we would start a jigsaw first day and have to have it finished before we left 2 weeks later, she loves Graham Thompson puzzles which are intricate cartoon scenes that are actually really difficult. I still dabble if she's got one on the go when I visit but my eyesight isn't really up to it nowadays.
Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former.
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08-01-2025 03:37 PM #9This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Not for me either.
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08-01-2025 03:53 PM #10This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-01-2025 04:07 PM #11This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I've no idea if they're better or worse than the type Scouse is talking about.
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08-01-2025 04:18 PM #12
Jigsaws are hugely popular. The charity shops are stacked with them. I get a bit bored with them but the wife spends hours doing them. Once you're finished though, that's it. Back to the shop it goes.
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08-01-2025 04:25 PM #13
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When I go on cruises there's always a table somewhere on the ship where there's a jigsaw partly completed.
When it's quiet I like to pass by and slip a piece in my pocket for later on.
Just kidding 😂
I think that's the only thing that still has keel hauling as punishment!Space to let
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08-01-2025 04:28 PM #14This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-01-2025 04:34 PM #15
I did a few during lockdown one was an absolute beast only 1000 pieces, it was a cartoon scene in a gym. The twist was that the picture on the box was not what the puzzle pieces made, it took me ages to realise the pieces were the reflection of the picture on the box on the wall mirrors of the gym. Took me 4 days, at least 3 or 4 hours each day.
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08-01-2025 05:15 PM #17
We got 3 at Christmas, also got one of the rolls to tidy them away. Maybe spend an hour at a time. No rush to finish.
Couple of years ago got one made of one of my photos.There is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-01-2025 05:16 PM #18This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-01-2025 05:22 PM #19This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
Hippy!
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08-01-2025 05:33 PM #20
Yep I've got loads of them. As others have said I find them therapeutic although my current one is proving difficult
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I use a roll up mat which are great for 1000 pieces. I did have a 3000 piece but it covered my dining table so was only allowed to do it once
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08-01-2025 06:35 PM #23
Over the years, we (as a family of three) have done a few jigsaws, the hardest being that famous picture of the steelworkers having their lunch atop a steel beam, mid-build of a New York skyscraper. It was greyscale and very challenging.
However, last December I was browsing that famous middle lane of Lidl and spotted a 1000 piece Christmas scene for £5. I bought it as a throwaway something to do on a Friday night when my mum was coming over to stay after my dad had recently passed away. I'm 50 so my mum is of an age, she hasn't done a jigsaw in years and she found it so therapeutic (as others have mentioned). She managed to switch her brain off for the first time in months and focus on something other than grief.
So much so, we bought her the roll mat and another challenging jigsaw for her Christmas. That's hers completed, mines is still partially done.
P.S This thread reminds me of Brian Cloughs nickname for the keeper Mark Crossley, Jigsaw, because he's goes to pieces in the box 🤣
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08-01-2025 07:07 PM #24
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I was an etch a sketch kid 🤭
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08-01-2025 08:00 PM #25This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
I once spent two days building a Star Wars X Wing for them, it's possibly the happiest I've ever been
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08-01-2025 08:55 PM #26This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-01-2025 09:14 PM #27This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show Quote
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08-01-2025 09:26 PM #28This quote is hidden because you are ignoring this member. Show QuoteThere is no such thing as too much yarn, just not enough time.
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08-01-2025 09:30 PM #29
Got me through quite a few lockdown afternoons.
Album covers and London Underground were my faves. Stopped when my wife kept buying ones that were too difficult.
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08-01-2025 09:33 PM #30
I've always enjoyed them, I love puzzles in general but when I lost my Mum In 2022 I was going through a 1000 piece ones a day, every day. It was the only thing I could focus on for a while, I'd get up, shower and get ready and go down stairs to sit building a jigsaw all day.
Did this for a good few weeks and it really helped relax my mind added to the fact it focused me on something.
I don't have time these days for much but I still like them when I can sit down. I usually get a couple at Christmas from people who know I like them.
I just build them and break them up to give to charity shops. I only keep a couple of interesting ones.
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