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  2. We found the 20 best gifts to buy your grandkids this season

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/best-gifts-grandkids-2024...

    Start (or add to) their Magna-Tile collection by giving them this classic 100-piece construction set. It comes with a selection of different shapes in a variety of colors so they can build ...

  3. Penrose tiling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penrose_tiling

    One approach is to color the vertices (with two colors, e.g., black and white) and require that adjacent tiles have matching vertices. [32] Another is to use a pattern of circular arcs (as shown above left in green and red) to constrain the placement of tiles: when two tiles share an edge in a tiling, the patterns must match at these edges. [21]

  4. Last-minute gifts from Amazon that will still arrive by ... - AOL

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    MAGNA-TILES Space 32-Piece Magnetic Construction Set Magna-Tiles are among the year's hottest toys. Each piece connects to the next via magnets, making for a fun building experience regardless of ...

  5. All of the best Black Friday deals: Amazon, Walmart, Wayfair ...

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    Updated: Black Friday's best weekend deals are here on Apple AirPods and iPads, Samsung TVs, Bissell vacuums, KitchenAid and Ninja small appliances, gifts for men, women and kids — and more.

  6. Girder and Panel building sets - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Girder_and_Panel_building_sets

    The sets came in two sizes: a single red car set (17), and the bigger two-car set that contained the blue car (18). The sets that came in the upright storage containers were Set #30 (one car) and Set #31 (two cars) There were no track switches , so the layout was either a completed circuit (circle), or a single line, (red end-of-line bumpers ...

  7. Magna-Tiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magna-Tiles

    The pieces are plastic tiles of varying shapes that snap together magnetically, allowing users to build various geometric structures. Magna-Tiles were originally developed in Japan, where they were sold under the name Pythagoras. [1] [2] American salesman Rudy M. Valenta saw the toy while visiting Japan in 1996 and bought the rights to the toy.