Send your email to Jan by October 13th and she will email the list out on the 14th.
Please mail your envelopes by Oct 31st.
Send your email to
janhardt [at] mchsi [dot] com
Please include:
Your name
Your street address
City-State-Zip-Country
Your email, for Jan only- we do not pass emails along.
Indicate the number of envelopes you wish to exchange - 5 or 10.
Do you want USA addresses only, or are you OK with foreign addresses.
1-oz mail from US to foreign countries is $1.20
**************
To read through all the guidelines, if you are new to the exchange, click on the words that say: READ MORE ( right below) and they will appear.
-OR-
at the top, right next to the [Home] tab, the *rules* are now listed on their own page.
TIMELINE
I post the invitation to join around the 5th-6th-7th of the
month. You send your information to Jan
(JanHardt (at) mchsi (dot) com) by the date indicated (about a week
later). She sends out the list on the
following day (always by the 15th). You
have until the end of the month, at least two weeks, to send your envelopes.
HOW MANY - WHO GETS WHICH ADDRESSES
You may sign up for 5 or 10 envelopes. If this is your first time, please sign up
for 5. The names are randomized. You send to 5 people, but you may not receive
from the same 5.
ARTWORK
There is no theme, do whatever you want. Any medium is fine - ink, markers,
ballpoints, watercolor, typewriter, rubber stamping and digital art are all
acceptable. Calligraphy is welcome, but
not required. Please decorate the
envelope. You do not need to enclose
anything. If you send an empty envelope
write *empty* on the back. Or, you may
enclose a note and write *open* on the back.
QUALITY AND SKILL LEVEL
We have a wide range of skill levels, welcome beginners, and
do not judge the quality of the artwork.
Don't worry about where you are on the bell curve of creativity, Explore
possibilities, experiment and have fun.
FIX-IT-JEAN
If you are having trouble, feel free to send me a reject and
I will fix it. In my classes, I always required students to toss their rejects
on my desk rather than tossing them in the waste basket. I called it the
jean-challenge. I’ve never met an envelope I couldn't fix. So, if you have
something that you think is beyond repair, send it to me and I will fix it and
post it on the blog showing before and after. I will not post your name, unless
you ask me to.
EMAIL ADDRESSES
We prefer not to share email addresses. When Jan sends the list, she does not include
emails. You may include your email in
your envelope, and request the recipient to let you know that the envelope
arrived. However, recipients are NOT
required to respond.
MISSING ENVELOPES
If you do not receive the same number of envelopes you sent,
let Jan know and she will track down the missing envelope. We send replacements when necessary.
LATENESS
Sometimes things happen and your envelopes will be late.
Please email Jan and let her know. In
the event that you are unable to complete your envelopes, let Jan know and we
will be happy to do them for you.
WHAT DO I PUT ON THE BLOG
Pretty much anything and everything. Most exchangers are happy to see their work
on the blog. If you are shy and don't want your work on the blog, please try to
get over it. There are a bazillion images on the internet, and I don't think
anyone is going to notice one more decorated envelope. This blog is all about
sharing, and it will be a better blog if you join in the sharing.
POSTING PERSONAL ADDRESSES
I avoid posting personal addresses. Four of us old timers
(Jean-Jan-Smash-Finn) already have our addresses all over the internet so I do
not blur them. Anyone else, I will blur your address before posting. I request that any of you who have blogs also
blur addresses that are not your own. I have asked people to put return
addresses on the back of the envelope...which in theory, would make it
unnecessary to blur the return addresses, but it seems that a return address on
the back sometimes confuses the scanning machines.
So.....
WHERE TO PUT THE RETURN ADDRESS
We do not have any perfect solution for this. I like to put
it at the top of the back flap. Some people have reported that when they do
this, the scanner will read the return address, print that bar code, and the
envelopes comes right back to their house. One option to make it less likely
the scanner will pick up the return address, is to put it along the right or
left side, vertically, on the envelope.
MAKING THE ADDRESS HARD TO READ
There are times when a design is so cool that you want to
put the address into the design in a very artistic way. That is also very hard
to read. If you choose to do this, and your return address is very easy to
read, that may cause the scanner to pick up the return address. In general, I
recommend making the street and zip code pretty easy to find and read. But, it
is up to you.
WHEN DOES IT COST EXTRA
The post office will charge extra if you have a square
envelope or one that is addressed in the portrait orientation. The address
should be level with the bottom of a landscape orientation if you want the
standard one-ounce rate.
please let me know if it was easy to find the *rules* tab. thanks
ReplyDeletethere was no 'read more' but the guidelines are right there, so no problem finding them! Carroll
ReplyDelete