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. Most of the mazes I have are available for downloading here.

Maze legendAll of my mazes are hand-drawn and include a couple of features that are designed to make going through the maze alot harder than usual. The first feature is the bridge. This lets one path cross over or under another path without connecting to it. It adds a bit of 3-dimensionality to the puzzle. Bridges are drawn similar to the way they would appear on a roadmap.

Old maze calendar cover artThe second feature is the one-way path. This is designated by an arrow in a path. You can go in the same direction as the arrow, but you aren’t allowed to go against it. (If you like to work backwards from the finish to the start, then you can only go against the arrows, not with them.)

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.

Mammoth Maze photoI also try to use a little ‘psychology’ when drawing my mazes, trying to lure you away from the correct path. But it doesn’t always work for everyone.

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 3×7.5 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. Use a program 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). To download a maze, right-click on the thumbnail and select “Save target as…”.

Free maze9″x4″. “MAZE” Drawn around 1982. 103k.

Free maze 8.5″x11″. “Lenses”. An early maze drawn in pencil. Drawn in 1978. 313k. ** This maze is faulty – There is no solution **
Free maze 8.5″x11″. An early, crudely drawn maze from 1978. This very easy maze should fit in your browser window. 152k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. Another early maze from 1978. Too easy. Fits in your browser window. 107k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. “Snake”. An early maze with a 5 minute time limit. First of a series of three. Drawn in 1979. 187k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. “Modern Art”. An early maze with a 5 minute time limit. Second of a series of three. Drawn in 1979. 216k. (solution)
Free maze 8.5″x11″. “MX-365”. An early maze with a 10 minute time limit. Third of a series of three. Drawn in 1979. 214k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. “Electronic Nightmare”. An easy maze using diodes – trace the conventional current flow (i.e. don’t go against arrows). Drawn in 1982. Fits in your browser window. 26k.
Free maze 6.5″x6.5″. “Doughnut Twist” Drawn in 1982. 192k.
Free maze 7″x7″. “Big Burger” Drawn in 1982. 361k – Color.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. Drawn in 1991. 265k.
Free maze 8.5″x14″. Drawn in October 1992. 329k. (In case you get stuck, I’ve provided the answer for this one just to show you that these mazes are do-able.)
Free maze 8.5″x11″. Drawn in 1992. 144k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. Drawn in 1992. 157k.
Free maze 8.5″x11″. Drawn in 1992. 159k.
Free maze 19″x24″ (poster size image 3825 x 2928). Drawn December 1996. 646k. (Fairly difficult).This maze is also available in color from Zazzle.com. Click on the color version below to buy it.
In association with Zazzle.com
Free maze 4″x4″. “One”. A fairly easy maze I did for my company newsletter. First complete maze I’ve drawn since 1996. Drawn 2014. 101k.
Free maze “Two”. This is my first ‘two-in-one’ maze. Find your way from start to finish, then find your way from finish to start. Drawn 2014. 415k.
Free maze “Three”. This is a ‘six-in-one’ maze. There are three openings, labeled 1, 2, and 3. Pick one as a start and another as a finish and find your way through. There are six possible combinations, meaning six different ways you can find your way through. Drawn 2014. 495k.

Comments

Andrew Bernhardt’s Mazes Home Page — 74 Comments

  1. Wow! I love these mazes. Big Burger is definitely a new favorite of mine. Did you publish that 1982 Maze Calendar? Thats not a bad idea – I’ve been wondering what to do with my own mazes. Feel free to check them out – they’re at http://www.mazedojo.com !

  2. Nope. I didn’t get far with the calendar. I’ve always had a hard time finishing things I’ve started. I checked out your site. You have some very nice looking mazes. I added your site to my maze links page.

  3. Hi, I work for a national magazine and we’re interested in putting a maze in our “games” section every issue (every 3 weeks). Your mazes are great and I think they’d be perfect for our needs. If you are interested in working with us, please e-mail me at (email address) and we can discuss the details. Thanks so much!

  4. These look like the mazes my mom and i did when i was a kid! my sister-in-law purchased them from a college student in south dakota – wonder if it’s you?? we did 4 such mazes between ’70 and ’74 – hope you are as my daughter loves mazes.

  5. No, sorry, that wasn’t me. I started drawing them in the mid-late 70’s, but I do remember seeing mazes like this in a magazine once, and that go me started drawing them. Perhaps those were drawn by the same student.

  6. The MAZE drawn in 1991 – do you have a solution for that one? I gave this one to Second Grade to try out, hope that is ok, and I think one little boy might have it. They are so very intrigued by mazes. I cannot believe they love most difficult ones!

  7. The MAZE drawn in 1991 – do you have a solution for that one? I gave this one to Second Grade to try out, hope that is ok, and I think one little boy might have it. They are so very intrigued by mazes. I cannot believe they love most difficult ones! (email address)

  8. I’m trying to do something with the mazes I’ve been drawing, have you had any type of market for yours? I just had a friend of mine make a website for mine about 4 days ago (this is written on June 28th 2010). Anyhow, I was going to have him add a “Links” section, because the site is rather plain as it stands. Anyhow, I’m thinking you’ll say yes, but I’ll wait for your reply. (email address removed) http://www.aMazeKing.com Also, wouldn’t mind knowing what you think.

  9. Hey, What you’re doing is really cool. I also draw mazes, and the more i do them, the harder they get. I was wondering if tell me how you sell them and how you even learned to do it. I’m kinda immature at it. So email me if you can please :). (email address)

  10. I have two mazes on zazzle.com (one of which recently came up most popular when searching for “mazes”). But the amount of sales is so low as to be virtually nothing (i.e. one $25 check in many years). A color print can be expensive considering you only get a single maze. I think a better market would be through books, magazines, etc, but I don’t have the time to make enough mazes to do so. Some years ago I started working on a program to draw mazes in my style, but more ‘art-sy’, which would have been useful for books, mazagines, calendars, etc. While I know I can do it, I don’t have the time to finish it. Several years ago I made a maze for a Nancy Drew movie-themed placemat for The Old Spaghetti Factory chain. This was done on a spur of the moment request (i.e. less than one week). I used PowerPoint (!) to draw it and while I think it came out pretty good, I also think it was just a little too difficult for the intended age bracket (but I heard no complaints). I made more on this one job than on all the other mazes I’ve made combined. I’ve always thought mazes would make good restaurant placemats.

  11. your mazes are aMAZEing! I’m writing a book of mazes at the moment – including a six – page one I’ve just finished. I recommend Ben’s mazes. I’m ten.

  12. What if some of us maze drawers got together to put some books together I think maybe we could make more then lets work together E-mail me at (email address removed) and I will send you a copy of one of mine and we can go from there I don’t know where to start on making a book but if we work together we can start a craze for them I bet

  13. What if some of us maze drawers got together to put some books together I think maybe we could make more then lets work together E-mail me at MatthewBuchanan @live .com and I will send you a copy of one of mine and we can go from there I don’t know where to start on making a book but if we work together we can start a craze for them I bet

  14. I want to say thank you for some really cool mazes! My 16-year-old nephew has aspergers & he LOVES mazes! I’m not sure he’ll be able to do these, but it’ll be interesting to watch him try! Do you have a book or other mazes? I would like to be able to get more if he is able to do these. You can email me at (email address) Thanks again. Happy New Year!

  15. Hi everyone, I just wanted to let anyone who is interested know that I am about to release a book of hand-drawn mazes. Please have a look at http://theologicallyamazed.webs.com/. It is a website to promote the sale of the book, which is also serving as a fundraiser given that I am preparing to move to Mozambique at the end of this year with my family as career missionaries. Please spread the word amongst the hand-drawn maze fraternity!

  16. Thank you. These will make my 6 year old granddaughter – who is good at mazes – really challenged. Is your maze calendar still available?

  17. Would it be alright if I used one of your mazes as the cover of the agenda/planner for my middle school? It’s not for profit and it would have an audience of about 350 students.

  18. I thought i was the only one who did mazes this good, mine are not like yours but i make them uber detailed and pathways are smaller. if you would like to see any, send me an email at (email address) I was wondering if i could get some pointers or tips on what i should do with the mazes.

  19. Please can I use one of your mazes in an AQA Higher Project about how criticisms expectations and praise effect performance? I would be asking people to complete it- but only members of my school, and they would not be able to keep it after 3 minutes of trying to complete it. Not for profit or anything.

  20. Hey, I am an art director working for an advertising company, can anyone here help me with maze drawings, i want a particular style of maze drawings. plz help. money also we can discuss.

  21. love your style andrew! I’ve been drawing for 17 yrs since 7th grade study hall. Finally published book this fall and now working on names, business logos, greeting cards, and a calendar. check out Mazes of the Century!

  22. Only the first maze has a solution provided (see the link in its description) so you can see how the maze is done. I haven’t provided solutions for any of the other mazes.

  23. Wow…just wow. Those mazes are absolutely a-MAZE-ing! I would never have a steady enough hand, not to imagine the amount of patience those must take! Well done!

  24. these mazes are damn awesome!! they look sort of tough but i would rather say, they are interesting….thank you Andrew Bernhardt for all this awesome mazes…..!!

  25. I’m the Activity Director in a nursing home, and I’m going to print your Big Burger maze to try with some of my residents next week… some of them enjoy a challenge! I found your page when searching for “hamburger puzzles” to go along with a theme day. Thanks so much for sharing your work! :)

  26. Andrew–I’m designing a poster for two friends who are putting up a sketch show. I really like your “Doughnut Twist” design and I’m interested in incorporating it in the design. Would that be OK with you?
    Thanks

  27. Hello Andrew I am so excited about your maze book that you are working on right now. Once it is in circulation and in stores . I will buy a copy or two from you. I also draw art mazes myself. Here is my link to my Matt’s Amazing Mazes Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/MattsAmazingMazes?ref=hl I hope you have a Facebook Page of your own. Without one you will not able to view my Maze Facebook Page. I have at lest a little over 3 dozen of drawn mazes I did so far. I hope your maze book business is a success. Once you have your business in action I will post a link of your maze book order process. So my maze fans will know wear to go so they can buy it online. Live Long And Prosper and have an A-maze-ing day

  28. I would like to use one of your puzzles for a math club t-shirt design – with your permission. The one I would like to use is titled Doughnut Twist.
    Please let me know if that would be OK.

  29. Dear Andrew Bernhardt,

    We are preparing a children’s book for Prestel Publishing in Munich about labyrinths
    by Silke Vry.

    We would be very grateful if you grant permission to publish your drawing
    7″x7″. “Big Burger” in this book and could provide us a high resolution digital image.

    We are looking forward to hearing from you
    and remain with kind regards and many thanks for your support

    Vera Maas

  30. Greetings Andrew,
    Just wanted to say “Hello” and tell you, your Burger maze and Mammoth Mazes are awesome.
    I am also a “Maze Artist” and have a website, http://www.mazeman.com.
    It seems my past is similar to yours in that my maze drawing heydays were back in the 80’s & 90’s when I used to draw mazes almost every night.
    If you have a chance, please check out my website and let me know what you think.
    Good luck to you and keep on drawing!
    Thank you
    Michael “Mazeman” Clarke

  31. Hello, we are preparing a Christmas competition on our Facebook profile with riddle topic and I like to ask for your permission to use one of your maze for this. It is obviousness to write credit to you as the author and link to your internet page.
    Please let me know if that would be OK.
    Thank you
    Jana

  32. Once upon a time, I played a browser game of a similar concept. Bridges and one-way doors. Navigate straight up/down/left/right and get your figure to the exit (portrayed by a money bill in this case).
    I got up to 15×15 and saved an image so I can “find it later”. Well… It turned out that’s not how you find the same website later.

    Years later, I’m still occasionally searching for it.

    Here’s the image I saved, uploaded to 2 different hosts:
    https://qph.ec.quoracdn.net/main-qimg-2843cdb7c8f0f672ce91916eb4affa2d
    https://i1196.photobucket.com/albums/aa417/trlababalan3000/Labyrinth%20reversed.jpg

    During my free time, I’ve recreated it in Minecraft for a first-person experience.
    In search for more layouts (or guides on making them), I stumbled upon your site. Nice work, man! :D
    One that cought my eye was the “Electronic Nightmare”, which would be a nice 19×15 for recreating in this blocky game.

    —> I started writing this to ask for some smaller layouts or guidelines on how to make one myself.

    But I have a problem… Having no top-down view, people become discouraged and quit without really trying. I’ve tried not to make it claustrophobic. Paths are 5m (15ft) wide, sometimes varying. And I’ve added some decorations. Moss, creeks of leaking water from walls, some walls appear ruined, some one-way-doors are mechanisms that open up a wall and close it behind you. Different light levels, etc.

    People nowdays don’t have the patience to solve mazes. Afterall, there’s no risk for entering and there’s no real reward for completing it either. Just close the game if you’re bored.

    —> Have you ever made someone born after 1990 completey solve one of those mazes? If so, how did you motivate them?

  33. in the 1978 maze 2 is the stepped black line at the bottom suppost to be there as a barrier? ive done it ignoring that line but just want to check i hadnt cheated! p.s my brain really doesnt like these mazes thats why im trying to do them to make it work!

  34. Drawing the large mazes are fun to a point… It’s just the time that goes into making them. I’ve lost track of the time I’ve put into my largest maze. It’s 2ft by 30ft… I started sometime in the early 2000’s and I’m finally reaching the end of working on it. Things in life happened and I had to put it on hold for awhile.
    What’s funny is restarting it after the long pulse. I went throw what I drew years ago and wonder how I drew it. My style is similar with many layers that can be gone in any direction as long as it’s on the same layer.
    I never got into publishing anything. I was trying to build up a portfolio first but I never finished and everything has sat for years. On Facebook I started a page but never really did anything with it.
    https://www.facebook.com/we_mazes-97464580729/
    On my personal Facebook page I post the progress of the large maze.

  35. I am working on your maze Drawn December 1996(Fairly difficult). This one has a color version on zazzle. I have gone through this maze forwards and backwards and I have yet to find a solution to it. I am wondering if you could give me a hint or some help as I am trying to solve it and I have already spent hours going through the whole thing. Maybe I am misinterpreting an arrow, I don’t know, please email me some help.

  36. Hey – is there any way to get ‘lenses’ maze. The finish, it seems to me, has only one way in but none of the paths around it can go to the finish because of one way roads. Am I dumb?
    Love your mazes. Working my way through them all.

    • No, you’re not dumb. I just noticed that one can’t be done for the reason you said. Funny, nobody pointed it out before. That is a very early one and obviously I hadn’t perfected my skills yet.

      • Phew! I had a lot of fun getting to those points though. And I’m enjoying your other mazes. Thank you!

  37. Andrew,

    I printed out your Maze #91-1 for my students to relax with after they completed their standardize test. I had the entire class working on this one maze for an entire hour and no one was able to solve it. I was wondering if you had the solution to this as I offered extra credit to the first student who solves it.

    Thank you!
    Donna

  38. Hi Andrew. Love your mazes. I’ve been inspired to make my own maze featuring bridges and one-way paths. I’ve included a link to it.

    Also, I’ve made a coloured version of your Mammoth Maze, which shows the solution path and other topological features of the maze. Do let me know if you want me to send you a copy of it.

  39. For the life of me i can not figure out the hamburger maze. Can you please show me the path. Its deove me crazy for days now

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