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Very sad news |
After my last post (about Christoph Lohe's marvellous design, Neighburr) I
received an email from both Laszlo Molnar and Goetz Schwandtner with the very
sad news that Christoph had sadly passed away at the end of January this year.
It would appear that his family had not had contact with him for a few
days and contacted the police and he was found in his flat. It has been judged
to be natural causes. As many of us puzzlers are getting older this sort of
thing should not come as a shock but he was only 65 years old. I guess that with
what I do for a living, I should not be that surprised.
He was a significant scientist having received a MSc in Experimental
Physics from the Technology University Aachen in 1989 and a PhD in 1993. He
worked as a Product manager Ferrofluidics, Nuertingen, Germany, 1996-2000.
Project manager Aixtron AG, Aachen, since 2001. As a scientist of note he had
been listed as a noteworthy physicist by Marquis Who's Who.
I considered Christoph a friend. We had never met and I was not constantly in
touch with him but we exchanged emails every few months to discuss puzzles and
his wonderful designs. You can still buy some of them from
PuzzleMaster here or print them yourself from
Thingiverse here.
His amazing skill as a designer is shown by the fact that I have
reviewed 20 of his wonderful designs
here on my little section of t'internet. I thought that it would be a nice
think to look back at a few of my absolute favourite of his designs.
Collaboration with the TICMaster, Andrew Crowell
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Cyburr and Chamburr from Pelikan
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Climburr from Matt Nedeljko |
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When the first 2 came out from Pelikan, I wondered whether these two masters
of puzzle design had created a completely new type of puzzle and
raved about them. They made my top 10(ish) in
2021. The Climburr was felt to be too difficult to produce in wood by Jakub and
it was only when Matt Nedeljkogot the courage to attempt them did we get to
attempt the final one in the series. Spoiler alert -
it was fabulous and made the top ten in the
next year.
Locks, Locks, Locks!
Christoph had a bit of a thing about locks and keys but not in the classical
sense. He designed burrs in that shape. The fun thing is that rather than make
simple 6 piece burrs where the pieces interact in the 3 axes, Christoph made the
burrs with a frame to restrict movement and a key and shackle (and pieces) to
lock up in at least 2 of the axes. The one amazing thing about all of
Christoph's designs is that they are not terribly high level but are always
challenging and fun without being too arduous. I absolutely adored these. The
fact that even the late Eric Fuller thought well enough of these to make one of
them, does show how good they were.
Framed Burrs
I adore a burr that has just the standard 6 pieces but is constrained in its
movement and interaction by the presence of a frame. It makes them so much
more interesting.
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Neighburr by Brian Menold
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Bouquet |
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Castle
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Timburr
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Again, we have puzzles that are so good that both Jakub and Brian Menold
decided they were worth putting the effort into manufacturing in reasonable
numbers. They all had something special and were all great fun without being
too difficult.
Unconventional packing puzzles
Whenever I think of this particular type of challenge the names that always
spring to mind are the incredible Alexander Magyarics and Osanori Yamamoto.
But they were not alone, Christoph also had a fascination with these and
designed some amazing puzzles:
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Liliput |
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Trenta |
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Box with 2 balls |
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Kamelle Box |
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This is only a few of his great contributions to the puzzling world as well as to my collection but they include my favourites.
Do you have any favourites that you think should be given special mention? If so then please leave a comment below.
Rest in peace Christoph - I was proud to call you a friend.
How about the gorgeous Victoria by Pelikan? 🙂
ReplyDeleteOoh yes! It was stunning and a very nice design. Totally different to everything else he’d designed. Thank you for the reminder.
DeleteWe will all miss Christoph! He was also the designer of the Labyrinth Cube aka Maze Cube a very nice sticker variant of the Rubik's Cube. https://web.archive.org/web/20100712044840/http://lohe.gmxhome.de/maze_cube.htm
ReplyDeleteAh yes, I was aware of those but never experienced them myself. Thank you for reminding me.
DeleteWhen I met Christoph we had a lovely conversation and I shared with him that I of course I really enjoyed his burrs, but I loved his symmetry puzzles. He shared with me some designs I hadn’t seen yet and to this day I have not found the final solution to cutter!
ReplyDeleteIf anyone hasn’t tried his symmetry puzzles yet I would encourage you to check them out.
Thank you for that, Amy. I don’t think I’ve tried any of his symmetry puzzles (or Cutter). I suspect they might take me years to solve.
DeleteClosed Box is a level 15 ,framed , three pieces burr in cube-form
ReplyDeleteAh yes, I have that one. A very clever puzzle. Christoph was very good with framed designs.
DeleteSo sad to hear of Christoph's passing. I recently purchased his "Moai" and "Splinter" puzzles from Brian Menolds. I was happy to solve Moai after a few weeks but Splinter no such luck. Such an interesting symmetry puzzle with such a tiny piece. He and his wonderful puzzles will be sorely missed.
ReplyDeleteThank you for that George. Christoph was multi-talented. I never attempted his symmetry puzzles because I am awful at them!
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