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Introducing the Repeating Tile Mini Grids!

Writer's picture: Elise CorbinElise Corbin

I've been wanting to experiment with the idea of tiles in crosswords since the einstein took the popular science world by storm a couple years ago. At first I tried to make a grid shaped like an einstein tile, but after hours of trying, the grid bore no resemblance to the shape.

I gave up on the shape itself and turned to creating tiles with a regular mini crossword grid. The einstein's uniqueness comes from its nonrepeating pattern, which I obviously couldn't replicate in crossword format, but I did manage to create a series of 5x5 mini grids which, when repeated infinitely like tiles, form a coherent grid. (The idea is that the letters repeat as well as the pattern of black squares.) I call them the Repeating Tile Mini Grids; if you can think of a catchier name, please tell me.


I wrote a script to generate all possible mini grids which are fillable and follow crossword rules when repeated infinitely, and dumped them all in an Excel spreadsheet. Each sheet shows a different grid repeated four times so you get an idea of the pattern. There are 4,831 grids, some of which are more visually interesting than others. And since I can't fill them all myself, I am sharing the spreadsheet with you all. Browse the patterns, pick a favourite grid or two, and fill it yourself! Be sure to let me know (via blog, Twitter, or email: ecorbin567 at gmail dot com) when you make one so I can solve it. You can also use them in your bathroom tiles, or perhaps the fabric for your newest piece of crossword-themed clothing.



This example is on sheet 78. I've called it "Checkmarks" because I think the pattern looks like checkmarks.



Here are some more of my favourites that I've found so far:



Interesting-looking stairs, #91







Waves, #117






This one is a little out there, but I think it looks like feet walking on a road. #211





Happy solving, and happy making!!

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corbinj
Aug 03, 2024

Fun! I loved the construction challenge. Here is my Grid #19 - my favorite number. Happy solving!



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About  
 

Hello! I'm Elise. I'm from Upstate New York, USA, but I live in Toronto. I construct puzzles based on science and technology that I find interesting, and sometimes other stuff as well. I like to think that my February 2023 New York Times debut led to a spike in physics-related google searches, but I have no evidence to back this up. I mostly publish in indie outlets, so if you enjoy my puzzles, please support them! They can and will go away if you don't. :,(

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