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Kagen Sound

Kagen Sound
Born Kagen Schaefer
Nationality American
Alma mater Colorado College
Occupation Puzzle artist
Notable work Pipe Organ Desk, Lotus Table, Maze Burr
Spouse(s) Megan Sound (m. 2013)

Kagen Sound (formerly Schaefer) is an American puzzle box and puzzle furniture craftsman, and is recognized as a leader in these fields.

Sound has developed a worldwide following, and is recognized as a Friend of the Karakuri Creation Group, the world’s only puzzle box guild, and remains the only member of this group to be of non-Japanese origin (as of June 2017). He has won more awards at the annual International Puzzle Party (IPP) than any other designer.

Sound spent his childhood in Colorado, at which time he developed an interest in mathematics. He would often draw elaborate mazes in primary school, and was first introduced to puzzle boxes by a fellow student in his first-grade class. He began designing his own puzzle boxes in middle school.

After completing high school, Sound attended Colorado College, where he received a mathematics degree in 2000. He then began working as a teaching assistant in the college’s mathematics department, as well as assisting in the art department’s woodworking studio. After his first win at the Nob Yoshigahara Puzzle Design Competition in 2002, Sound took a series of woodworking jobs in Los Angeles and Denver, before relocating to Portland to focus on improving his skills. He returned to Denver in 2005.

Sound's work has attracted celebrity attention, with film director Darren Aronofsky commissioning him in 2007 to create a custom work known as the Pipe Organ Desk. The desk took a total of four years to design and build, reaching completion in 2011, and is made from exotic woods such as South African pink ivory, Lignum vitae, and Bastogne walnut—one of the world's most valuable woods. The total cost of materials equated to approximately $10,000 (USD), and was sold for the price of a “nice car”. He experienced a significant increase in demand in 2012, when Fine Woodworking magazine published an article about the desk.

Another notable design of Sound’s is the Lotus Table, the top of which is composed of ten concentric rings of inlayed wood which must be rotated to create geometric patterns. If the correct patterns are formed, drawers will open in sequence, resulting in the table resembling a lotus flower. The first prototype of this table was completed in 2010, after development since at least 2008. This design was also transferred across to a series of boxes beginning with a prototype in 2011 and later consisting of the Caterpillar, Lotus, and Butterfly boxes.


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