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Saturday, July 31, 2021
Salon invitation & first anniversary mailing (Colin's 40th B'day)
Friday, July 30, 2021
Surprise. Janet's flowers to Debbie
I thought I had used up all of those stamps and then -surprise- I found one more. I'm fine with this variation of Janet's flowers - although I just noticed that I missed one of the purple petals. Dang. Plus, I am short one envelope to fill up July. By the time this pops up, I will be through with my grandma duties for the summer - so, who knows, I might be at death's door with the latest germ or I might be rejuvenated and have scintillating replacement blurbs. I tend to catch the local Chicago germs and bring them home and spend a week in bed.
Thursday, July 29, 2021
Scrawling to Rachael, Chuck, Troy and Smash
Wednesday, July 28, 2021
PTSD to Carolyn and Jessica (Olympic rant)
Tuesday, July 27, 2021
Coffee stamps to MicB and Leslie (Elizabeth Gilbert and Ann Patchett)
I'm cringing at the way I wrote MicB -- it would take me a while to get a MicB that I liked. It's an odd group of letters. I feel better about the style on Leslie's - but it's not a *wow.* I am also thrown off by the spelling of MicB because I knew someone who went by McB -- so MicB looks like a misspelling to me. I'm sure if MicB sticks with the exchanges, I will figure out some MicBs that I like.
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I do not have anything rant-worthy today, but I can recommend a book with some good ol' rants. I needed to find something to take to jury duty and checked it out from the library. Jury duty involves a lot of waiting and I had ample time to get into it. Lucky for me, they found enough jurors without needing me so I got to go home by noon. But, by then, I just wanted to finish the book and so I did.
Perfection by Julie Metz. I think it came out in 2006, so maybe everyone has already read it. The rant(s) she relates involve calling up 5 women with whom her husband had had affairs. She only found out about the affairs after he literally dropped dead, unexpectedly, in his mid40s and left some email tracks for her to follow. The book was recommended by Marion Roach Smith who teaches classes in writing memoirs and her recommendations seem to be good recommendations if you like those better-than-fiction stories.
While it was full of justified ranting, she does work through all kinds of issues and I will not spoil the ending. It was one of those coincidences that defies description - magical doesn't seem like the right word. Cosmic?
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And I have to mention another book that has one of those unbelievable *things* that happens that seems very *cosmic.* I don't even know if that's the right word. The book is by Elizabeth Gilbert and the name is Big Magic - so maybe *magic* is the appropriate word. She had done a lot of writing on a book - but it wasn't coming together - so she set it aside. Then, years later she ran into another author (I'm pretty sure is was Ann Patchett) and when they were catching up and talking about what they were working on, Ann was working on a book that was pretty much everything that Elizabeth had already written and set aside. There's more to the story, but considering I'm not even sure I have Ann's name right -- I won't say more. I did enjoy the book a lot.
Oh, I love Google. I found a blurb about the incident. In Big Magic, Elizabeth tells how they even pin pointed how the idea that was *flying around* flew into Ann. (Yes, my memory was correct - it was Ann Patchett.)
The friends recently discovered they were writing novels about the same topic. As Patchett explained to Gilbert: “this friend of mine, who happens to be you...[was] writing a novel about the Amazon, and then you decided not to write a novel about the Amazon, and then I started writing a novel about the Amazon, and later when we compared notes (your book dismissed, mine halfway finished) they had remarkably similar story lines, to the point of being eerie. I thought this must be because it was an incredibly banal idea and we had both come up with a generic Amazon novel, but then you told me that ideas fly around looking for homes, and when the idea hadn’t worked out with you it came to me."
Monday, July 26, 2021
Step 5 (I think) (stoic stuff)
I'm doing a bunch of posts during coffee time in early June. If you think this one looks like I was just trying to cover up multiple layers of mess - you are correct. Sometimes I end up liking these overworked monstrosities. Of course, there was also the added layer of using up the stamps. I don't think I ever decided how I felt about this one. In case you can't see it - the name Kate Riley is layered.
The virus doesn’t care.
It doesn’t care that you love visiting your grandmother. It doesn’t care that you recently finished chemotherapy. It doesn’t care about the collateral damage. It doesn’t care about your theories or your political beliefs. It doesn’t care about anything.
And for the “virus” we can plug in lots of things. Fate. Death. Tyrants. Time. The economy. Creative destruction. As the Tim McGraw song says, the highway don’t care. It doesn’t care that you’re a good person. It doesn’t care that you looked down at your phone for just one second. It doesn’t care that you had your whole life in front of you.
In Meditations, Marcus Aurelius quotes a long-lost fragment from Euripides. Why should you be angry at the world, he says, as if the world would notice. The world doesn’t care that it broke your heart. The world doesn’t care that you really, really needed something. Fate and fortune are indifferent. Objective. Merciless. They just keep marching on.
We can get upset about this. We can take it personally. But why? This doesn’t change anything either...except to make us extra unhappy on top. All we can do is accept what they are and what they represent. All we can do is fight to protect ourselves and the people we care about. All we can do is continue to hold ourselves to the standards we believe in. All we can do is live while we can.
Sunday, July 25, 2021
Step 4 - not even stealing anymore (jury duty)
There's nothing left of Janet's good idea. I dwindled into my go-to stuff. My excuse was that these were done in May while I was in the doldrums. Seems like eons ago.
I deeply regret the RE in Drewski.
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I'm writing this on June 6 - jury duty starts tomorrow. I served on a jury one time. Vehicular homicide. We convicted. I think people who have served on any kind of homicide case and convicted should be exempt from further duty. Also, opinions that were generated during the 40 years of hearing about inner workings of legal stuff (from Mr Wilson) should keep me away from the whole process.
And my hearing is terrible. What if I can't hear? Should I raise my hand and tell them I can't hear and need to go home. How old does one have to be to be too old and to be exempt?
And Mr Wilson thought I needed a new car so he mentioned it to a friend of his who had purchased previous used cars from the Wilsons. Upon hearing that a new model from the Wilson fleet was going to be available the friend managed to total his current car. Mr Wilson sold my car to the friend because the friend *needs* a car to get to work.
Mr Wilson thought you could just go out and buy a car. You can if you want a basic model. But he wants all the added safety features - so all he can do is get on a waiting list.
Does this mean Mr Wilson is going to chauffeur me to jury duty? Or will they excuse me because I do not have a car? Am I supposed to ride the bus? I'm perplexed. But, for those of you who enjoyed my rants, we might have some good ones coming up. I have not even mentioned how much I am dreading being around a bunch of people. I wonder what they would do if I showed up in a haz-mat suit with a bubble helmet and my own oxygen.
Saturday, July 24, 2021
Stealing from Janet, step 3 (Fish book and Chatter book)
Friday, July 23, 2021
Stealing from Janet, step 2 (Where's Dave?)
Thursday, July 22, 2021
Stealing from Janet (UPS driver story)
He Delivered for Me
How my UPS driver went from annoyance to emotional lifeline.
By Danielle Festino
April 30, 2021, 12:00 a.m. ET
For the first year of our relationship, I didn’t know his name and didn’t welcome his interruptions. I felt hassled by the unexpected knock on my window, which was necessary to get my attention because my apartment lacked a doorbell.
Despite my annoyance, I secretly named him Kris, for Kris Kringle, because he was a kind of modern-day Santa Claus. With his white hair and grandfatherly vibe, he brought me presents and tried to spread cheer. Except his uniform was UPS brown, not Santa Claus red, and I had ordered and paid for the presents myself.
Our relationship started nearly two-and-a-half-years ago when I moved into a small, ground-floor apartment north of Boston. My boyfriend and I weren’t quite ready to move in together, so this was an interim step, a place for sleeping when I wasn’t at the office or socializing. And I was almost always at the office or socializing.
On the rare days I was home, the UPS man, seeing my car in the driveway, would knock until I reluctantly came to collect my package. I hated small talk, but with him I made an effort, chatting about the weather or Tom Brady, fail-safe topics for building camaraderie in Boston.
I asked my somewhat misanthropic boyfriend if it was odd for me to spend so much time with the UPS man. He said it was weird, possibly dangerous, and urged me to ignore future knocks, which should have been easy advice to follow. But Kris reminded me of my father, who also had spent his workdays alone on a truck (in his case, delivering home heating oil) and had loved chatting with his customers, so I continued to answer the door.
But that was all before. Before my boyfriend and I broke up. Before Tom Brady moved to Florida. And before Covid changed everything, including my feelings toward Kris, the UPS man.
Trapped in my studio apartment, I craved conversation and company. Days would pass without any human contact. My upstairs neighbor got sick and went to the hospital. I watched people outside my window sneaking into the closed church to pray. My entire world had become small, lonely and apocalyptic. And far from dreading Kris’s knock, I became a Covid version of Pavlov’s dog, salivating when I heard it.
Well, not exactly salivating. But I did look forward to his visits and deliveries, which were plentiful. From workout equipment to tie-dye jumpsuits to baking supplies, he brought the endless stream of stuff I had ordered and would then stay for some face time.
With him standing at the edge of the porch, masked, and me in my doorway, we discussed current events (the volatility of the toilet paper market), pop culture (we both loved Baby Yoda) and details about our lockdown hobbies (he had taken up gardening while I was learning how to play the recorder).
One dreary afternoon, he lingered for a particularly long chat, sharing details about his new lemon trees. After walking me through the entire repotting process, he said, “Well, I hope this helped.”
It was then I realized that he meant our five-minute conversations to be a lifeline — and he was possibly doing the same for others, despite his busier-than-ever workload.
On days without deliveries, I would work uninterrupted at the small desk I had set up facing my front window. Between strategic planning sessions on Zoom, I would watch the traffic outside, looking for his brown truck to pull up my narrow, one-way street.
Despite my ex’s warnings, there was nothing the least bit creepy or even flirtatious about his overtures. Kris would tell me about his favorite routes and neighborhoods, how he loved tree-lined streets but hated hills and was obsessed with “Star Wars.”
I even learned his real first name, Dave. He had a wife and two sons, whom he worried about constantly. Part therapist and part guardian angel, he also checked in on my mental health (“Are you losing it yet?”), my work (“How many Zooms today?”) and my distractions (“Any new hobbies?”).
One sunny day in early June, he motioned to the package he had placed on the porch and said, “That felt heavy. New workout equipment?
“Nah,” I said. “It’s just a dumb frying pan.”
By then, he knew me well enough not to shrug it off. “Why do I feel like there’s a story here?”
I hadn’t told anyone the embarrassing truth of the pans, but with him, the story poured out. “Over a decade ago,” I said, “my mother found a gorgeous new cookware set on sale at Macy’s. She was saving it for my wedding shower, or my sister’s, whichever came first. Because that hasn’t happened yet for either of us, the pans sat in my mother’s basement, mocking me every time I went down there. So last month, I finally took them.”
My mother hadn’t told me to take them — not because she didn’t think I deserved to, but because doing so felt like I was throwing in the towel for both me and my sister.
“Honestly, I’m not sure why I took them,” I said. “I thought I would feel empowered, but I just feel sad.” I looked at the ground as my eyes welled with tears. Blinking them away, I said, “Anyway, to use instead, I bought an overpriced, nontoxic pan I saw on Instagram, and you just delivered it.”
Dave stood quietly for a moment, as if working out a complicated math problem. “I had a dream the other night that the world ended,” he said, “but I survived. I know that’s a lousy thing to say given what’s happening, but it wasn’t sad, because my family survived too.” He shrugged behind his mask. “I wonder: If it all disappeared, except for you, your family, your house, would those pans hold the same meaning?”
I shook my head. “Probably not.”
“You are exactly where you are supposed to be,” he said. “I believe that. And I hope someday you do too.”
One hot day in July, Dave knocked with a package, and when I answered, he told me that UPS was changing his route. My heart sank as we stood in our usual spots, him leaning on the railing and me in the threshold of the door.
I was embarrassed to admit how much I had come to depend on his visits. Other than a few outdoor get-togethers with friends and family, I had been completely alone. Sometimes I would even abruptly end Zoom meetings when he arrived, happily trading screens and Slack messages for actual human contact.
“I’m excited for a change,” he said, “but I’m going to miss my regulars.”
“Congratulations.” I didn’t know what else to say. How do you thank a person for saving your sanity?
He broke the silence with a typical Dave question: “When travel becomes safe, where will you go first?”
“Italy,” I said. It was always Italy. Not knowing how to say goodbye to Dave, I instead babbled about the small Pugliese town where my mother was born.
“That must be nice to know where you come from,” he said.
“It is. I only wish it helped me figure out where I’m going.”
He nodded, but between his mask and sunglasses, it was difficult to know what he was thinking. “I used to wonder what I was doing with my life,” he said. “My job, this job, just felt so — small.”
“What changed?”
“Nothing, apart from my attitude,” he said. “I realized that I was delivering people things they needed, things that brought them joy. Even before the pandemic, I decided it was important.”
I couldn’t see his smile through his mask, but I could sense it. “So wise, you are, Padawan,” I said. “And so important.”
At that, Dave finally pulled down his mask and flashed a smile, then offered me his elbow before turning to leave — all of my gratitude and affection reduced to an elbow bump. I owed him so much more.
That was many months ago. I haven’t spoken to the new guy yet; he comes and goes like a ghost, delivering my packages without knocking.
I still miss my friend. If I saw Dave tomorrow, I would tell him I’m learning the theme to “Titanic” on my recorder, planning a trip to Italy with my sister, and I just got my first shot. I would ask him how he and his family are doing and if the lemon tree bore fruit. More than anything, I would ask him for his address so I could deliver something to him this time — a gift of my appreciation.
Wednesday, July 21, 2021
From Ming - (new NYT puzzle)
I love the brackets on this envelope and need to start an official place where I park the ideas that I want to try. Thank you, Ming.
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When I first added this game to the post - I was getting it for free every day. Then it went to subscription only. Then it went to one-play-per-day. So, it might have changed by the time this posts pops up.
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I discovered another morning-coffee-game that I just love. If you try it - click on the [Help] button to see the rules. You get 12 letters - and those 12 letters will make up 2 words. While it is fun to figure out the two words, the point is to make a certain number of words out of the letters provided and there is a requirement for the order of letters that is too complicated to explain.
All I can say is that the day I stumbled across this game, it really caught me, in a good way. I spent a ridiculous amount of time finding *5 words or less* - so the next day -- I popped it open and magically, I could see the two words that could be made from the 12 letters. It totally hooked me.
And here is the best part -- the name of the game is Letter Boxed. That's a perfect name for an envelope aficionado. I can't figure out if it is brand new (in May when I am writing this) or if it was there all along and I just didn't see it. Doesn't matter -- so happy to have found it.
https://www.nytimes.com/puzzles/letter-boxed
This is a screen shot of what it looks like as you figure out words. Whatever letter you end on - becomes the first letter of the next word. I need to find a word that starts with H and hopefully includes a G or Z. Or two more words. Each day, if you are very clever, you can find two words that use all the letters. In this puzzle, the two words were ZEBRA ANTHOLOGY
Tuesday, July 20, 2021
Hearts from Leslie (cardboard beds)
Monday, July 19, 2021
KateR (Martha Leaver?)
This lettering reminds me of Martha Leaver's. I am not going to do any research on the spelling of her name or what she might have going on currently. When I first got into fun lettering, I saw her stuff online. That was a long time ago. It was before Pinterest. And waaaaaay before the plethora of online classes. I think, at the time, people had websites and blogs -- and that was it. I (obviously) had a blog - but I never had a website. I pondered -- but knew that I did not have time.
I found a really long list of lettering arts websites that I had made a really long time ago. I started going through the list to see who was still up and running. I am not keeping track of percentages - some are still around - others have disappeared. Hopefully, I will figure out a way to collect the good stuff off my blog and put it into an archive that is easy to search. That seems like a project for this winter.
Back to the envelope -- I like the layout. I like the flush left address and how it is indented to fall right under the red stroke on the J. I love the little hearts, especially the one down by the zip code where Kate realized that the layout needed one more little *sum'thin'* to keep the eye moving around. Very nice.
Sunday, July 18, 2021
LOVE stamp from Janet
Remember -- any idea can be morphed into a different subject. Or any idea may be appropriated and used freely. On this one, making some of the letters backwards is sooooo cute. I hope I remember to do it. I also hope I remember to buy some more of those stamps because I have a bunch of navy envelopes.
I'm thinking the lettering looks like gel pen, but, I might be wrong. Maybe Janet remembers and will tell us. Another appropriate-able idea is the stacking and intertwining of the name.
Has anyone noticed that I have switched from steal worthy to appropriation or appropriate-able? I think I will switch back to stealworthy. Or maybe not. Decisions, decisions.
Saturday, July 17, 2021
Hearts for GraceE - back on track
It looks like GraceE used one of those fine tipped brush markers that are everywhere. So many different brands. I have several and I highly recommend them, except they do wear out (get mushy so that you no longer get any really fine lines). I have no idea if some of them are longer lasting. If you are frustrated with pointed nibs, these brush markers are an ideal way to try some copperplate without the finicky-ness of a pointed nib.
That is a nice border and it is always fun to see LOVE stamps from the past. It would be fun to meet the person who gets to run the meetings where they choose designs. I'm guessing there is a committee - but there must be someone who runs the meeting. Or - to sit in on the meetings. Or - turn the meetings into a reality show. I truly love some of my ideas. Thank you, coffee.
Friday, July 16, 2021
From Lauren to CathyO , MicB and Leslie
Thursday, July 15, 2021
e&c - thank you - mailing No 10
I hardly ever center the lines, but, my eye likes centering on a square envelope. I also like mixing styles of lettering. |
The one in the upper left is done with white gel pen which looks nice. but I like the darker green better. Maybe not. |
Wednesday, July 14, 2021
e&c - brunch invitation - mailing No 9
That's our uber-versatile Anything Goes lettering style. |
Tuesday, July 13, 2021
e&c - the program and what's what
Over the years, when I was doing a lot of addressing of envelopes for brides, I had many requests to help clients with the programs. They are often printed on letterhead paper and folded in half or in thirds and the information is always awkward. The layouts are soooooo boring. They became my least favorite part of wedding work. It's hard to describe all the things that annoy me -- so I will spare you the whining.
My first idea for a program was a business card that had these words:
Front:
ELLEN&COLIN
5-7-11
Back:
EVERYONE WALKS IN
I DO - I DO
EVERYONE WALKS OUT
I can't imagine I will ever find a bride and groom who would put up with such nonsense. But, I'm sure there are plenty of guests who would appreciate it. Maybe it could be printed on a cracker, so that they could nibble on it as they waited for the show ceremony to begin. I don't mean to be disrespectful of important events. All those years of being super polite to people who were dealing with programs at the last minute wore me out. No matter how emphatically I encouraged then (or warned - or admonished) they were always waiting til the last minute and that annoyed me -- because I had warned them that they needed to get the programs out of the way a couple weeks prior to the wedding. Grrrrr.
So -- my more traditional idea went in this direction:
On the front, the wedding party is listed in the order that they were standing from left to right. I didn't spell that out for the guests and I didn't care if they figured it out. If you turn the program counter clockwise, once, there's your lineup.
On the inside, we had seen a program online that included a tissue for happy tears and we knew we had to include that. The pocket was a good place to include details about parents, grandparents, etc.
I loved my idea for the order of the ceremony. The part about programs that caused my migraines was that they were a boring list and included all kinds of info and blah-blah-blah - and depending on the info, there could be lines that were way too long (or too short) - and the layouts were always really cumbersome and less than aesthetic.
I wanted to fit it into a neat box. That was easy- and there was a natural way to let people know that it was the predictable list, in a new format. Numbers. Because they were both CPAs, I loved the idea of including numbers. Again, I'm not sure if anyone picked up on that - and I do not care. I liked the looks of it.