Precious Stones by Mucha - Premium Wooden Jigsaw Puzzle
Precious Stones โ Alphonse Mucha โ Wooden Jigsaw Puzzle Mucha's printer censored one of these panels before it went to press. The figure of Amethyst was originally bare-breasted. F. Champenois, who printed Mucha's work in Paris, asked him to cover her up before the series went to market in 1900. Mucha complied. The version most people know has always been the edited one. ๐ The Story Behind This Piece Mucha made "The Precious Stones" in 1900 as a set of four color lithograph panels, each one personifying a gemstone through a single female figure: Topaz, Ruby, Amethyst, Emerald. The color logic runs deep. Each woman's robes, hair ornaments, mosaic halo, and eye color all key to her stone. Topaz carries the flat, bold outlines of Japanese woodblock prints. Emerald leans darker, stranger, her armchair carved with monster heads. Four panels, four distinct moods, one coherent system. Mucha built his career on the idea that commercial art and fine art occupied the same space. The posters he made for Sarah Bernhardt in the 1890s proved it, and he never walked the argument back. "The Precious Stones" came out of that same conviction: decorative objects could carry serious symbolic weight. The gemstone series wasn't illustration work dressed up as art. It was art that happened to hang in people's homes. Assembling the four panels together, the first hard section is the mosaic halos. On screen they read as flat gold rings. On the wood, UV printing pulls out the individual tile colors inside each halo, and the gradient work between warm amber and cool violet becomes a sorting problem you didn't anticipate. The laser-cut grid holds tight enough that you can place a section and trust it. Pieces don't drift. What you built an hour ago is still exactly where you left it. ๐ Who Gets One of These A few kinds of people find their way to this one. โ๏ธ The Art Nouveau collector โ already owns Mucha prints; wants an object that interacts with the work, not just hangs near it. โ๏ธ The museum-going gift recipient โ the person who owns the Mucha retrospective catalog and has seen the Slav Epic photographs; a puzzle gives them something to do with that knowledge. โ๏ธ The decorator who thinks carefully โ four coordinated panels, each anchored to a gem color; works as a single framed piece or split across a wall. โ๏ธ The puzzler who has outgrown cardboard โ has finished the 1000-piece Ravensburgers and wants something that stays in the house after it's done. Works well as a birthday or anniversary gift for anyone who collects decorative arts. The four-panel format also makes it a natural choice for a housewarming, when someone is building a room around a color. ๐งฉ Puzzle Specifications โ๏ธ Precision laser-cut wooden pieces โ๏ธ 3mm MDF core โ rigid, warp-resistant, built to last โ๏ธ UV printing directly on wood โ no paper laminate, no peeling โ๏ธ Traditional grid-cut design โ๏ธ Piece counts: 500โ1000 โ๏ธ Handcrafted wooden keepsake box included โ๏ธ Made to order โ ships in 3โ4 weeks ๐ Why This Puzzle Lasts Most wooden puzzles at this quality level sell for $300 to $500. WAWW makes them for $115 to $170. The gap comes from direct manufacturing and no wholesale markup, not from cutting corners on materials. The construction is the same either way. Each puzzle is built on a 3mm MDF core. Pick one up and you feel the difference immediately: it has weight. Cardboard flexes and warps; MDF holds its shape under pressure, under humidity, under years of storage. Pieces cut from it click together cleanly and stay that way, reassembly after reassembly. UV printing bonds color directly into the wood surface rather than onto a paper layer glued on top. No laminate means no peeling at the edges, no fading along the seams, no corners that lift after a few years in a frame. The traditional grid cut keeps solving tactile and honest. Each piece locks in with a small physical click; the fit is precise enough that you know when you're right. When the puzzle is finished, it goes into a handcrafted wooden keepsake box built specifically for it, not a cardboard sleeve, not a plastic bag. The box is part of the object. Every puzzle is made to order, which means a 3 to 4 week lead time. Nothing sits in a warehouse. Yours is cut after you buy it. ๐ผ๏ธ After You Finish It Most people frame it. UV printing on wood holds color without degrading, so you don't need UV-protective glass to keep the panels looking right. Standard framing works. The four panels together span a serious amount of wall, and Mucha's color system means they coordinate without being identical. Finished and framed, the puzzle stops being a puzzle. โ ๏ธ Important Notes Puzzles may have light laser residue on the surface โ a damp cloth handles it. There's a natural wood scent when the box first opens; it fades within a few days. Made-to-order production means your puzzle ships in 3โ4 weeks. If anything arrives damaged, we replace or refund. No questions.
Specifications
- Size
- 500 Pcs | 40 x 23 inches, 1000 Pcs | 40 x 23 inches
Variants (2)
- 500 Pcs | 40 x 23 inches โ 145.00 USD โ In stock
- 1000 Pcs | 40 x 23 inches โ 165.00 USD โ In stock
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