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  2. Gibsons Games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibsons_Games

    In the first few years of the twenty-first century, almost half of Gibsons' sales came from jigsaw puzzles. In 2024 the proportion is closer to 70%. In 2006, the company moved premises to their current office building in Sutton. The business launched their own direct-to-consumer website in 2019.

  3. Victory jigsaw puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Victory_jigsaw_puzzle

    The company was the manufacturer of plywood jigsaw puzzles named 'Victory' since the early 1920s. [ 2 ] Although the jigsaw puzzle producers like Hayter flourished in the 1930s, through the concept of the weekly jigsaw puzzle, the English Victory puzzles, found in department stores in the 1950s and 1960s, almost completely vanished.

  4. Wentworth Wooden Puzzles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wentworth_Wooden_Puzzles

    May 6, 2021, Wentworth Wooden Puzzles released a series of mini jigsaw puzzles to promote the mindfulness and wellbeing that jigsaw puzzles can provide while also supporting mental health awareness week, Money from the sale of puzzles during that week were donated to Mind, a UK mental health charity.

  5. Tower Press - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tower_Press

    They began making cardboard wearings in the 1930s but were best known for their jigsaw puzzles and later children's games. They made a jigsaw puzzle range named "Riders of the Range", [2] and also made games such as Ask Pickles (1948), [3] Inspector Brown, [4] and many others. By the early 1960s they were the world's largest maker of jigsaw ...

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  7. Jigsaw puzzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jigsaw_puzzle

    Jigsaw puzzle pieces were first used as a symbol for autism in 1963 by the United Kingdom's National Autistic Society. [32] The organization chose jigsaw pieces for their logo to represent the "puzzling" nature of autism and the inability to "fit in" due to social differences, and also because jigsaw pieces were recognizable and otherwise ...