
decorated envelopes, mail art, lettering ideas
This is my favorite of the valentine group and I feel some appropriating coming up. Although, the success of this one hinges on that subtle off-white background and I think Mary uses alcohol markers and I don't have alcohol markers - so I might not be able to do this. At least I analyzed and spotted a potential stumbling block.
And then there are the proportions - I'd be inclined to run the design closer to the left and right edge - but, I have a funny feeling that that would throw it off. It has a folk art feel and sometimes you need things to be less regimented. That delicate balance.
I'm on a mission to find really good ways to put clear addresses into designs. The designs have to have some flexibility to allow for those longer addresses. If I were to re-do this one, I'd have more grid lines. That white edge on the stamp could fit into a white box. It would be a bonus to have smooth white lines on all four sides of the stamp.
As much as I love stamps that come in booklets, the way the stamps have inconsistent borders can create issues. Not big issues. Just those minor issues that you have to ignore - but secretly, you really want to fix them. Some of you are scratching your heads and might not understand what I am talking about. Others are nodding - and they know exactly what I mean.
Onward.
The brown one to Liz was something I did in a hurry when I thought I had forgotten to do her January envelope because I did not have a photo. But, then her January envelope arrived and she sent me a photo. It looks pretty road-weary.
WRONG. Grrrrrrrrrrr.
Here's my practice border. This is part of the note to Rachael I tucked into the envelope. I might have to do a few. more of these. I like the bold black strokes on the Keith Haring stamp but I don't think his style goes with the trollish-ness of Danbo's lettering.
We need troll stamps.
This is the envelope that contained the checkerboard madness envelope that you saw yesterday. The style is from Thomas Danbo. I ran a blurb about him in a post when I saw some amazingly large wooden trolls that he had constructed. He designed this font for his own use. It took a while to find all 26 letters off his website. I hope he doesn't mind if I imitate his lettering. I had a lot of fun and wish I had done something more with the envelope. I got this far and then couldn't decide what to add.
For some reason I decided to try Checkerboard Madness without using a ruler. I should have doubled up the LL in Phillip - so that it had the same number of squares in each row. I'm not sure how I feel about the black border but I do like the stamp overlapping the name. Rachael's original design used one of the round stamps - and I think those stamps are perfect for this idea.
Here is another one that's pretty good. It is a smaller envelope - A6 - that was tucked into a larger envelope with actual postage.
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Today is Sheila Waters birth-date - March 13, 1929. On the morning of March 18, 2022 - Sheila did not wake up. A gentle exit for one of the rock star scribes who touched many lives. This is a lovely quote done by Cancelleresca.
Then I tried something with color. I wasn't being lazy yet - but the results are dismal.
This 2 color option is beyond pitiful. Those neon letters do not work with the olive envelope. I'm only posting this as a stern warning to people about making poor color choices. And on top of it -- I am a repeat offender.
Once upon a time - one of the exchangers made a comment in either an email or snail mail that she *enjoyed my musings.* I won't say who it was - although if you said it and you remember saying it and now you regret it - go ahead and alert me that the musings are getting tedious.
$%^&*$%^&$%^& During the time I just took to put that note in about musing - I forgot what I was going to muse about.
I just retracted the cursing - because maybe it was a blessing in disguise that I lost my train of thoughts.
We have wrapped up the January envelopes and now we will move on the February. Lots of red. Lots of good ideas.
And as far as my musings go - I've seen way worse than mine....at least mine are getting shorter.
Rachael had warned me that it could be a headache-inducing style and I wish I could remember what was going through my head that convinced me to try something that was going to be so hard. (Chore avoidance, no doubt)
Drawing all the letters is not hard. It's the filling in that is tricky. Below is my very first attempt - on paper - not an envelope. It was a test run to see if I could come up with a way to *color in* the spaces that was not solid. Something faster. Also, to test how hard it is to. keep track of whether you are coloring in a background or a partial letter.
The letters are too large. My alternative to filling in a solid is crosshatching. There are two ways to cross hatch. You can draw little lines, always in one direction, lifting your pen each time. Or you can make the lines in a back and forth motion - that gives a bit of zig-zag effect. I did both on this one.
I will spare you a lengthy discussion of the pros and cons of one direction vs zig-zag vs combining. Since there is vertical, horizontal and 2 directions of diagonal - we have lost our footing on a very slippery slope.
Today's regular post is below this one.
OOOPS - I forgot to add the link
Jeanette sent this to me at least a month ago - and it's been buried on my desk. I love the idea - and even though March 12 is supposed to be the official Art and Found Day - I'm pretty sure anyone with extra artwork could send their art out into the world whenever they felt like it.
The concept is to wrap up a piece of artwork, put an *Art and Found* label on it (download and print off the label) and then leave it somewhere for someone to find. You can take a photo of where you leave it. You can also leave your name and contact info - and you can participate in all kinds of social media options if you want to network with other people who are sending their art out in to the world for other to find. It looks like it was originated in 2022.
Here is just a portion of the info at the website:
We recommend leaving your artworks in high traffic areas such as busy streets, transit hubs, parks and condo or retail lobbies. Also consider leaving your work off the ground to ensure it doesn’t get damaged and is easily seen, such as on benches, ledges, or hung from poles, signs, trees, etc. Watch our 2021 video for more ideas.
It's a clever idea --- you can read more at the website. There are people all over the world participating. Some have registered with the group - but, I'm sure it's fine to just put stuff out there anonymously. If I decide to do this, I am going to wrap it in something transparent. I think people should be choosing things based on whether they like it. If they open it and they don't like it - they might just throw it away.