I have been making mazes since I was a wii lad. The last one I drew, before really 'taking mazes seriously' was in the year 2000. However, one day my (then) girl-friend sent me a colorful drawing of my name. This prompted me to create artwork with her name in it, which brought me back to the mazes.
I sent her the framed maze, somewhere around 2006/7 A.D. After I had sent the maze out, I thought, "how can I make a maze, and not have one to keep at my house?" Therefor, I created the "Rebel Tri-Start" and over the course of the last threee years, I have added 9 others, and am negotiating to finish the eleventh.
Some of these mazes are so "difficult", my friends aren't even willing to attempt to complete one. After tiring of the accusations that my maze/art work was immpossible to complete, I decided to include the answer key on the maze itself. The best way I found to accomplish this, is to use black-light activated
ink. When black-light is shown onto the maze, the way is revealed. This way, the haters can have their doubts blown away.
Unfortunantly, since there aren't any black-light ink printers, that I know of, the answer key must be added by hand, each time. Therefor, I must charge accordingly for the meticulous extra effort involved in doing that. Which is an shame, but a necessity.
Each maze was meticulously hand drawn with Sharpie Markers. And for you backwards solvers out there, I work from the start and finish, working towards the middle so it's equally as hard both ways.
If this maze project is to work out, and become a profitable endevour, I have a multitude of other business that I will be starting up. If, however, there is no market for these mazes, at lease more people can come and view them.
They WERE just sitting on my wall.