From around 1980, a #puzzle advertising Fungus Computer Products of Castleford, West Yorkshire, England. The four cubes must be arranged in a 4x1 cuboid to show a total of ten mushrooms on each long face. The first puzzle of this type, Katzenjammer, was produced around 1900.
Posts by Ian Simpson
A c1920s #puzzle advertising ICI Dyestuffs Group. 9 pieces must be placed in a 5x5 square with no colour repeated in any row or column. One piece is marked ICI, two are marked BDC (British Dyestuffs Corporation) and one is marked OW. Looking for suggestions as to what OW means.
A small #puzzle from Hull company Owbridges, advertising their Lung Tonic. The four numbered cubes must be arranged in a line to show a total of 20 on each long side. Unusually for this type of puzzle, the same constraint applies to the internal and end faces. Undated but c1920s?
I did wonder if the use of "Reversi" might have been a trademark infringement, but it seems not, the name having been around since the 1880s.
Crossword Reversi - Use your word power to turn the tables. Learn it in seconds - play it for hours. Players take turns to make words using letter tiles which can be reversed. Invented in 1992 by Dr Kenneth Miller and produced by Bear, Bear & Bear Ltd.
An edge matching #puzzle advertising cruises from the Holland America line. The 9 pieces must form a 3x3 square with the pictures matching wherever the edges meet. Unsure of exact date this was issued, but relatively recent.
Oh, interesting - I didn't know that. Thanks for the info.
The Penguin Book of Sunday Times Crosswords, compiled by Derek and Elizabeth Jewell. First published in 1975, this is a reprint from 1978. Containing 80 puzzles with solutions, and a guide on how to solve cryptic crosswords. The cover design is by artist Robert Hollingsworth.
Sheriff Court news from #Edinburgh, reported in today's Times newspaper.
Crosswords: How to solve them by the late Ruth Crisp, a volume in the Hodder Teach Yourself series, published in 1992. Ruth Crisp was known to Guardian readers and others as the crossword setter Crispa. You can read her obituary in The Guardian here: www.theguardian.com/media/2007/j...
A six-piece dissection of a cube by the late Kevin Holmes (trading as Trench Enterprises) of Stowmarket, Suffolk. Kevin sold beautifully crafted handmade wooden puzzles from a market stall in Covent Garden, London, in the 1980s. This particular #puzzle has two solutions.
Found at the #Edinburgh Holy Corner #ChristianAid Sale today, Letter-Bags, A Word-Making Game on an Entirely New Principle. Invented by the late Alexander Miller. Only obtainable from Miss MI Drury, Kingstown, Ireland. Most online sources date this to around the 1890s.
Two #puzzles promoting New Zealand dairy products to the British market. Five pieces contained in an envelope must be assembled to make a square. From around the 1960s or 1970s.
From 1930 and 1931, the first and second Daily Telegraph #Crossword #Puzzle Books. The Daily Telegraph's first crossword appeared in the newspaper in 1925.
Yes, I think that's right - a quick look through ABE shows that the Twentieth Century Dictionary was "Chambers's" in the 1965 edition but "Chambers" in the 1972 one. The Biographical Dictionary seems to have made the switch around 1968.
From 1970, The Listener #Crossword Puzzle Book, published by Penguin, together with the second volume of #puzzles published a year later. Among the setters featured is Gong (Jonathan Crowther) who as Azed recently set his 2,750th puzzle in The Observer newspaper.
A Rubik's Cube with a secret - it's actually a working salt grinder from around 2009. Made to the same dimensions as the classic #puzzle, there was also a companion pepper grinder, which came with the red face on top. These were sold as Rubik's Cruet, but are no longer produced.
Modern #Puzzles by Henry Ernest Dudeney, published by C Arthur Pearson. This is the second edition, undated in the front matter, but the dust jacket rear flap contains an advert for the Fourth Times #Crossword Puzzle Book which dates it to around 1936.
From 1976, Leadergrams by Frederick and David Bates. Answers to clues in the left hand grid form an acrostic spelling out an author and one of their works. Transcribing the numbered cells into the right hand grid reveals a quotation from the same work. #puzzles
The Crossword Addict #Puzzle, a 49-piece sliding tile puzzle featuring a #crossword design. Produced by Dodo Designs of Tunbridge Wells, England. Undated but perhaps from around the 1990s.
Weekend #Crossword #Puzzle Book No. 2, published by Associated Newspapers Group PLC, 1982. Over 90 quickies plus 10 real stinkers. Price 70p.
The Fifth Four Square #Crossword #Puzzle Book, by Harold S Tribe and Roderick Morrison. Published by The New English Library, April 1966. 131 standard cryptic puzzles and a handful of specials, including 2 numericals.
I cheated.
2/2 The competition judge was the popular crime fiction author Edgar Wallace. The yellow star is not part of the original #puzzle but seems to have been a newsagent's display piece.
1/2 The John Bull Star of Fortune #puzzle, from 1922. The 20 pieces had to be arranged to make a six-pointed star, with £250 awarded to the winner and £150 to the runner-up. A further prize of £100 was offered for a solution which used half of the pieces face down.
Leisure Time #Crossword #Puzzle Book, published by Robertson & Mullens Ltd, Melbourne, 1945. 40 new crossword puzzles including 18 of the cryptic type. Also issued in a green cover, as seen in this 2010 exhibition: studylib.net/doc/11224441...
The Ten Spot Domino #Puzzle, c.1920, by Valentines of #Dundee, better known for their picture postcards. Four paper covered 2x1 wooden cuboids must be arranged to make a 2x2x2 cube with 10 spots on each face. There are 7 solutions, and another 2 with 11 spots on each face.
From around 1985, #Crossword Cubes by Wellingtons Ltd of Stamford, Lincolnshire. The eight cubes must be arranged in a larger 2x2x2 cube to show 5 complete crosswords (the bottom face is excluded). Invented by Dr Kenneth Miller. #puzzles