Airshow
64 Piece Children's Educational Jigsaw Puzzle
Here is a puzzle with an amazing mix of airplanes in a spectacular air show. We included a multicopter and a winged jetpack to show technical innovations that are under development and that we believe will come in the future. In the upper left corner, you see a Boeing Stearman Biplane from the USA in the 1930s, with a lady standing on top of the plane. Here are biplanes and a triplane, paraglider, and helicopter. Fighter planes and bombers are painted with fresh, friendly colors. Many of the pieces are cut out along the contours of the image, and some pieces are shaped like airplanes. The puzzle with 64 pieces is best suited for slightly older children.
About Larsen Puzzles:
It all started with a single puzzle. In 1952 five-year-old Pal E Larsen was given a single cowboy puzzle from his Aunt in America. Made of a deeply cut thick board, this puzzle proved to be the catalyst for what would become the Larsen puzzles we know today.
The following year his father, Lars Andreas Larsen, having been impressed with the quality of the puzzle and noticing that his son preferred it to the others he had, printed what would become the very first Larsen puzzle in their family basement using an old die cutting machine.
From there, it was history. The family business, now called Larsen Puzzles, grew over the next 60 years into a small, but dedicated and passionate group of employees who have produced over 400 puzzles, each one designed to educate or delight children from around the world.
Larsen Puzzles remains one of the best STEM options in the jigsaw category for young children who are beginning to fine-tune both their motor and concentration skills.
Many of the pieces are shaped as recognizable objects and animals, which adds another layer of dimensional thinking. Each puzzle is cut so deeply, that you can see the indent of the shapes in the tray - this is one of many Larsen's outstanding hallmarks of quality.
All puzzles are manufactured in Flekkefjord, an idyllic town in southern Norway, using 100% recycled cardboard. Each piece is made to be extra thick (2.5mm) and solid.