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Yet another side of my life... For those who like to get lost, nothing beats working your way through a maze. I started drawing mazes in the mid-70's and quickly developed my own style which hasn't changed since. I used to draw alot of them, most of which were given away or claimed by my mother, but I've only completed one few in the last 10 years. Most of the mazes I have are available for downloading here.
The start and finish areas of each maze typically have a few different entrances and exits, any one of which may work. In general, all the entrances are interconnected to each other somehow and the same holds true with the exits. Paths generally tend to lead back to where you've been before. I draw each maze by working from the start and finish at the same time, keeping track of which paths lead from the start and which paths lead to the finish. Somewhere along the line, I connect a start path and a finish path. This tends to make the maze as difficult to solve working backward from the finish as it does forward from the start. Back in my maze-making heyday, I made several very large mazes, the largest of which is the Mammoth Maze 5. I drew it in 1981. It is over 20 square feet (roughly 3x7.5 foot) and contains almost 1/4 mile of paths! Click on the image for more information about this maze and how to buy a copy. Most of the mazes that are available for downloading here are fairly small. The originals were done on letter or legal size paper (some with a little color for a more artistic look) and were scanned in black & white (typically at 200 or 300dpi). The scan quality isn't the best but the mazes are do-able. Still, the bitmap size is quite large (over 2000x3000 in GIF format) so if you decide to download one or more, you should print them out first instead of attempting to do them on your screen. Use a program (such as Microsoft Photo Editor) that allows you to print the maze so it fits on one full-sized piece of paper. These were hand-drawn, then scanned in black & white (unless otherwise noted). These are intended to be printed out using a graphics program such as PaintShop Pro or Microsoft Photo Editor that can scale the image fit on one page. To download a maze, right-click on the thumbnail and select "Save target as...". Other interesting maze sites... Adrian Fisher Maze Design - Maker of walk-through mazes. aMAZEing ART - by Christopher Berg. ClickMazes - by Andrea Gilbert Daily Pencible - Eric Thomas Nusbaum's maze site Daniel Schmidt's mazes Just4Mazes - Hand-drawn mazes. Maze Box - A Japanese maze site (in English or Japanese) Free Mazes - A lot of links to various mazes available for free on the Web. Humboldt Baxter's Psychedelic Mazes Joe Wos - Once Upon A Toon mazes. Mark Michell's Mazes - Mazes of All Shapes MazeMaster International - David Anson Russo's mazes. Mazoons - Cross between cartoons and mazes. Meditative Mazes - by Terry McGuire MegaMAZES.com - A site devoted to quality mazes. MyMazes.com - Free online mazes. PuzzleMaker Mazes - from Discovery.Com Robert Abbott's Mazes - Logic mazes Segovia Mazes - Hand-drawn mazes U.W.E. Mazes - More hand-drawn mazes Walter Pullen's maze site Other puzzle sites... IQ & Personality Tests- Check out our range of PhD certified Personality, IQ, Aptitude & other Self-Assessment Tests. We also have loads of other fun tests that you would love. Jigsaw Puzzles - from Crea-soft, home of X-plosive JigSaw Puzzles. |