Grid art! Bruce is carving out a niche for himself with these diagonal symmetry art pieces. The bird visual came through strong and ...
read moreGrid art! Bruce is carving out a niche for himself with these diagonal symmetry art pieces. The bird visual came through strong and clear for me; enjoyable change of pace, especially for a Monday.
Bruce brings up an interesting point about symmetry. Since so few of these diagonal symmetry puzzles have been published, it's difficult to figure out what their rules should be. My first reaction was similar to his — if the grid is diagonally symmetric, shouldn't the themers be too? But that's far from an absolute.

Matching grid and themer symmetry seems like the most elegant solution, but in this case, it might not be possible. With diagonal symmetry, long themers must intersect at some point — a tough task, dependent on a lot of luck. And grid-spanners (entries of 15 letters) can only be placed in row/column 3 through 13, otherwise they'd force double- or triple-stacked grid-spanners. All sorts of difficulties, so I'm okay with a bit of inelegance.
I would have liked FLOCK TOGETHER to be symmetrical with something, though. It doesn't have a matching themer in WRAPPING PAPER, nor does it sit in a centered spot, like it would with usual symmetry. Same goes for GOOSE. Sure would have been cool if GOOSE (or GEESE) were flying up diagonally or something!
Very difficult construction. Not a surprise that the roughest patch was down in that SE corner, with such a big space, constrained in a few different ways. And Bruce's point about the preponderance of 3-letter words was one I definitely noticed. Switching back and forth between acrosses and downs tends to make my solve feel somewhat choppy; not as much flow as I would like.
Finally, I wish Bruce had knit his "for the birds" concept together with something a little more thematic than CLEARED FOR TAKEOFF. ALFRED HITCHCOCK would have been great! Would have given BIRDS OF A FEATHER / FLOCK TOGETHER quite a different (Halloween-y) feel, though.