Ansel
by Brandon Wolf |
The rear surface - not much to see here. |
The first that I heard about it was when a review
showed up
on the Five Sinatras review site and Brandon received a magnificent score of 5
Sinatras for the overall puzzle. Of course, by this time the whole lot had
sold out and I figured that this was one I would have to leave on my wish list
without any real hope of ever getting a copy - I don't do auctions any more to
protect my finances. Luckily for me and a further 80 puzzling punters, Brandon
decided to create another batch and, by this time, I had gotten myself onto
his mailing list. A week ago, a copy showed up and after my dalliance with
Juno's masterpiece, I quickly moved onto this.
The Ansel (named after the famed Ansel Adams) is beautifully presented in a
lovely box (which I duly threw away because space is an issue) and inside a
lovely walnut reproduction of what looks rather like an old Kodak Instamatic
133 camera (Mr Adams certainly didn't use one of those for his iconic
artistry). Damn! I'm old! I actually remember using one of these and putting
flash cubes on top for indoor photography (those cubes were bloody expensive
and were limited to 4 uses each!) The aim is to open the viewfinder to allow
you to take a photo. There's a nice thumb cutout on the bottom to allow you to
manipulate the viewfinder but at the beginning nothing works - it is all
locked solid.
In the lens opening there is a drilled hole which obviously needs manipulating
somehow but in the absence of having sharpened talons/claws, there was no way
to use it. The instructions warn the puzzler not to unscrew the nuts and bolts
so I didn't. The only other clue is a tiny hole in the side of the puzzle
which the use of a torch reveals a dark hole and maybe something shiny inside.
Now what? There really isn't very much you can do at the beginning but
remember that it has been classified as a sequential discovery puzzle and
therefore, by definition, a tool or several needs to be discovered to allow
progression. As someone who is not terribly bright, it took me 3 days to make
the first move and discover the tool.
Once the tool has been found, there is an obvious next step and after that I
found myself real confused. I managed to make stuff happen and then make it
unhappen. Yay! Sometimes I could make it happen and then not unhappen and
sometimes it would happen in a funny direction and un or not unhappen. Lord! I
was confused! Time to get systematic and maybe draw a diagram of what might be
happening inside. This sort of forced me to properly think© about it and
helped me discover the next key feature:
Viewfinder partially open |
Back to the drawing board and I had a really improbable idea of what must be
inside. So if I do the first moves like this and carefully move the viewfinder
slider like this and wiggle the cat on my lap in a certain direction and
ooooh! Look at that...I have an old configuration but it 's not quite the
same. What next? At this point there is a really lovely set of moves that make
my diagram much more complex and AHA! Oh that is unexpected - I can take my
photo:
Viewfinder open - no spoilers here In fact there is something extra to it but I cannot tell you what. |
Take care out there guys! The second wave is well on its' way here in the UK and hospitals (including my own) are gradually being overrun with cases again - less critically ill so far but that always lags a couple of weeks behind. A lot of Europe looks to be in terrible trouble again and the US has well and truly lost its' paddle. Hopefully the upcoming removal of the orange stain on America will lead to some decent health/pandemic management policies. Don't under-estimate the severity of this virus - I have a mild version of "long Covid" and Mrs S is also stricken. Even if you don't get ventilated or die, you can be ill for a very long time! Keep your masks on and keep a safe distance from others.
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