Stewart Coffin Explained

Stewart Coffin is an American puzzle maker. According to Ars Technica, he is considered to be one of the "best designers of polyhedral interlocking puzzles in the world."[1]

Biography

Coffin majored in electrical engineering in college at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst where he graduated in 1953.[2] He worked at the Lincoln Laboratory at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) building computers from 1953 through 1958.[3] In 1964, he left electronics to start building canoes and other boats. He and his family moved to a farm in Lincoln, Massachusetts.

Coffin currently lives in Carlisle, Massachusetts, where he moved to in 2021. He has three daughters, all of whom are very good at solving his puzzles.[4]

Work

Coffin began creating puzzles in 1968, after quitting the design and manufacture of canoes and kayaks.[5] One of the puzzles he created, made of 12 hexagonal sticks and cast in epoxy, was brought to school by one of his three daughters. This event led to Coffin meeting Thomas Atwater who was a business agent for inventors of games and puzzles. When 3M showed an interest in his work, he decided to quit making boats and concentrate on puzzles. Hectix, one of his designs, was patented in the United States in 1973[6] and then manufactured by 3M.[7] When they were manufactured, the design was so complex that factory workers were unable to assemble them. The parts were shipped to his Lincoln residence where he, his daughters and neighborhood children all put them together, making 20,000 puzzles in two weeks.

Later, Coffin stopped patenting his puzzles because he did not feel he could make a living by designing products for mass production. Instead he turned to woodworking and selling his puzzles as an art or a craft.

Coffin has designed more than 500 original puzzles, most of which are polyhedral.[8] Some have been commercially produced, such as the Hectix. Most of his designs are crafted in wood, some of which use exotic woods such as cocobolo, bubinga and rosewood.[9] In creating his wooden puzzles, Coffin selects beautiful types of wood, cuts and glues the work and then adds his own finish to the piece.[10] Coffin has had no formal training in puzzle making and designs his works intuitively.

Coffin's puzzles have several rules, including that each piece be dissimilar, have different axes of symmetry and only one solution. He has freely shared his designs for reproduction, making his puzzles widely produced and sold internationally.

Coffin has called his work "AP-ART," "the sculptural art that comes apart" and he feels that the "ultimate object in puzzle design is amusement." Curator, Amy Slocum, has highlighted the artistic effort that Coffin puts into his work when she exhibited several pieces at the Katonah Museum of Art.[11] Jerry Slocum, the founder of the International Puzzle Party, has called Coffin's puzzles "beautiful three-dimensional sculptures."

In 2000, Coffin was the winner of the Sam Loyd Award.[12] In 2006, he won the Nob Yoshigahara Award for his lifetime contribution to creating mechanical puzzles.

In 2007, Coffin spoke at the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Boston, where he discussed his puzzle making and demonstrated his puzzles.

Books

He is the author of several books and articles about puzzles, puzzle design and memoirs of his life:

Excerpts

The Universal Book of Mathematics provides the following information about him:

A leading designer of mechanical puzzles. He is also the author of The Puzzling World of Polyhedral Dissections, one of the most significant works produced on this subject.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: AAAS: Design of Mechanical Puzzles. 24 February 2008. 14 July 2015. Ars Technica. Conde Nast. Ford. Matt.
  2. Book Marks. Smith. Linda C.. 2008. UMASS Amherst. 14 July 2015. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20151122050414/http://www.umassmag.com/2007/Spring2007/ClassNotes/bookmarks.html. 22 November 2015.
  3. News: The Man Behind the Puzzles. Beaulieu. Angie. 7 December 2007. Eagle-Tribune. 14 July 2015. The Norman Transcript.
  4. Web site: Stewart Coffin Visit. 7 February 2010. Brian's Damn Puzzle Blog. Pletcher. Brian.
  5. Book: Coffin, Stewart T.. Ap-Art: The Sculptural Art That Comes Apart. December 2000. 1. 14 July 2015.
  6. US . 3721448 . patent . Assembly Puzzle . 1973-03-20 . 1970-05-04 . Coffin, Stewart T..
  7. Web site: Hectix. 14 July 2015. Jim Storer. The Brandeis Computer Science Department. Storer. Jim.
  8. Web site: Stewart Coffin. 14 July 2015. Puzzle World. Rausch. John.
  9. News: The Kansas City Star. Kirsch. Elisabeth. 10 May 2015. 14 July 2015.
  10. Web site: Mechanical Puzzles Exhibit at the Katonah Museum of Art, 2000-2001. 14 July 2015. Association of Game and Puzzle Collectors. Slocum. Jerry. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150905195246/http://agpc.org/mechanical-puzzles-at-katonah-2000-2001/. 5 September 2015.
  11. News: Art Review; Delectable Puzzlements. Zimmer. William. 12 November 2000. The New York Times. 14 July 2015.
  12. http://www.agpc.org/index.php/awards/128-association-awards Association Awards: Sam Loyd Award