Over the past couple of years there have been disputes over whose idea the jigsaw puzzle pen was. There have been some volatile threads and some not so subtle digs over it. Well, from my perspective, I'm out of this one.
Bruce Boone showed a jigsaw puzzle design back on 2/10/2005.
His description said
As I recall, in 2004 my pen was inspired by Art Liestman's jigsaw puzzle hollow forms, which he demoed at the Capitol Area Woodturners meeting in October. It just took me a while, working with three different laser cutters, to realize it. Maybe I was also inspired by Bruce. If so, I don't remember it that way...but hell, I'm old. Perhaps CRS has set in.
Ok, I disavow claim to the design. I give inspirational credit to Art and Bruce.
I will remove all claims of my pens being the "original" from my website.
In fact, I remove all claims to everything pen related except the Heritance trademark...that's registered with the U.S. PTO... and any of my copyrighted photos, website original content or articles.
I'm also bowing out of any future discussions about copyright, trademark or patent. I won't show or comment on anything that might relate to any of those issues. I'm back to just showing pretty wood pens once in a while.
Bruce Boone showed a jigsaw puzzle design back on 2/10/2005.
His description said
He also talked about how to make one from wood that interlocked, but never showed it.I got ahead of ring orders today for a couple hours and here's what I worked on. I had a lot of problems casting with polyester never setting up properly, and ruined several blanks in the process, so I finally just used CA. I added the dyes and luster pigments that I got with the polyester and they seemed to work OK. Using the CA with the accelerator allowed me to use different colors whereas polyester would have to be one color. The wood is walnut and has a nice grain that's hard to see in the picture.
Hi Eagle, Yes, my first attempts were two different woods. It worked, but the pieces were tough to lock and unlock because of what I call the "Jack-O-Lantern Lid Syndrome." This is where the parts can only go together from one end due to the divergent lines all pointing to the centerline. The pieces were somewhat loose when it went together. That could have been fixed by compensating for the beam width, which is around .007", but the biggest issue was that it was a three dimensional jigsaw puzzle and was darn hard to put together!
As I recall, in 2004 my pen was inspired by Art Liestman's jigsaw puzzle hollow forms, which he demoed at the Capitol Area Woodturners meeting in October. It just took me a while, working with three different laser cutters, to realize it. Maybe I was also inspired by Bruce. If so, I don't remember it that way...but hell, I'm old. Perhaps CRS has set in.
Ok, I disavow claim to the design. I give inspirational credit to Art and Bruce.
I will remove all claims of my pens being the "original" from my website.
In fact, I remove all claims to everything pen related except the Heritance trademark...that's registered with the U.S. PTO... and any of my copyrighted photos, website original content or articles.
I'm also bowing out of any future discussions about copyright, trademark or patent. I won't show or comment on anything that might relate to any of those issues. I'm back to just showing pretty wood pens once in a while.