Our foil jigsaw puzzles have metallic accents printed directly onto the puzzle pieces, adding shimmer and visible depth to the finished image. The collection includes 500-piece and 1000-piece puzzles across a wide range of themes, with artwork from Joy Laforme, Michael Storrings, Frank Lloyd Wright, Victoria Ball, and more.
Jigsaw Puzzles
490100 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
14300 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
12500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
167750 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
171000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
2141500 Piece Jigsaw Puzzle
62000 Piece Jigsaw Puzzles
2Cats & Dogs Puzzles
50Flowers & Nature Puzzles
95Food & Drink Puzzles
35Landscapes & Cityscapes
66Shaped Jigsaw Puzzles
21Wooden Puzzles
14Double-Sided Jigsaw Puzzles
27Michael Storrings Collection
58Andy Warhol Collection
47A foil puzzle has a metallic layer applied to select areas of the printed image. When the puzzle is assembled, those areas reflect light and shift in appearance depending on your viewing angle. The effect adds a visible sense of depth and movement that you don't get from a standard matte-finish puzzle.
The foil is integrated directly into the piece surface during printing - it's part of the piece itself, not a sticker or coating applied on top. That means it won't peel, bubble, or wear off with handling. The metallic areas are flush with the surrounding printed image, so the pieces feel the same as any other puzzle piece when you pick them up and snap them together.
The foil placement varies by design. In some puzzles, the metallic accents highlight specific details - flower petals, window panes, starlight, ornaments, glassware, or architectural elements. In others, the foil covers larger background areas or repeating pattern sections.
The effect is most visible under direct or angled light. When you move around a completed foil puzzle, the metallic sections catch and release light at different points, which gives the image a shifting quality that flat printing can't replicate. This is one reason foil puzzles are popular for framing - the finished piece changes subtly depending on the room's lighting.
This collection is split roughly evenly between 500-piece and 1000-piece puzzles, which are our two most popular sizes for adults. You'll also find:
A few 1000-piece foil puzzles come in square box packaging, which uses a compact box shape rather than the standard rectangular one. The puzzle size is the same - only the box dimensions differ.
Foil works especially well with subjects that have natural reflective elements - holiday lights, city scenes at night, stained glass, metallic objects, celestial imagery, and water surfaces. A large portion of this collection leans into winter and holiday themes, where the foil picks up ornament shine, snow sparkle, and string lights. But the range extends well beyond that.
Joy Laforme has the most designs in this collection. Her layered, color-rich illustration style pairs well with foil - the metallic accents add dimension to her already-dense compositions. You'll find her work across holiday villages, city scenes, and floral subjects.
Michael Storrings contributes several holiday-themed foil puzzles featuring his signature detailed cityscapes and seasonal illustrations. Frank Lloyd Wright designs appear in both standard and shaped foil formats, with geometric and architectural patterns. Victoria Ball brings a watercolor-influenced style to floral and domestic scenes.
Other artists in the collection include Wendy Gold, Liberty London, Jonathan Adler, and Phat Dog Vintage.
It depends on the design. The metallic areas can help with sorting because foil pieces look visibly different from matte pieces when spread out on a table - you can group them quickly. On the other hand, the reflective surface can make color matching harder in certain lighting conditions because the foil changes appearance as you tilt each piece.
Overall, foil doesn't dramatically change the difficulty compared to a standard puzzle at the same piece count. A 1000-piece foil puzzle still takes roughly 8-12 hours. A 500-piece foil puzzle still takes about 3-5 hours. The format adds a visual element, not a structural one.
Foil puzzles are among the most popular formats we sell for framing. The metallic accents create a wall piece that looks different at different times of day as the ambient light changes. Use puzzle glue or adhesive sheets to fix the pieces in place, then mount on a backing board. The foil effect is best preserved behind glass or acrylic, which also protects the surface.