Sunday, December 31, 2023
Nov (wedge brush) to Amy
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Dec to Amy, Patty, Madison, and Troy (Cathy's holly)
This was a design I appropriated from CathyO. Mine is different in that I used my scroll tip nib. I was soooooo annoyed with myself that I misplaced Cathy's envelope and was not able to refer to it when I made the dots. She very clearly put them in groups of three and when I was not aware of that - I used my Official System of Scattering to place the berries - and my system failed me. They are not 100% wretched - but they aren't quite right.
There is no way that I can come up with iron clad rules for how to steal or appropriate. Obviously, we do not want to be obsessive - but, there are times when the originator has a better handle on the nuances. I guess it is like cooking or styling or arranging flowers -- after you have done enough of it - you have a sense about where things need to go.
These were Dec envelopes mailed inside my November exchange envelopes.
Friday, December 29, 2023
From Kate in Oct - atomic habits
Thursday, December 28, 2023
To 7 people in Dec
Wednesday, December 27, 2023
To Carolyn and Chuck in Dec
These are the last two that are somewhat like the re-run to JeanR that was my inspiration. These are way too *tight* - but not in a bad way. Those are actual USPS postage stamps. I can't remember how much they are valued at. Last year or the year before, I used 3 of them which would have been enough - and the USPS returned the envelope to me because SOMEONE did not recognize them as actual US postage stamps. It wasn't worth my time trekking to the PO to have a discussion with a clerk who would not have been the person who did not recognize the stamp with no denomination.
Tuesday, December 26, 2023
To Maggie in Dec
Monday, December 25, 2023
To Christy in Dec
Sunday, December 24, 2023
The blog's tradition
Over the years a tradition evolved - where I come up with a heartwarming story for Dec 24th. I do not go overboard during the holiday season - but I do enjoy looking for a story with warm-fuzzies each year.
This year (as I write this on Nov 2nd) I do not have anything spectacular for my annual holiday story. Because I have such a steady stream of warm fuzzy mail - maybe that should be the basis of my Dec 24th post.
Hopefully I have not gone overboard with thanking my readers and pen pals. Is it even possible to go overboard with gratitude?
This envelope arrived in October - from Clover.
Saturday, December 23, 2023
From Troy in Oct - Christoph No. 10
***
Sitting at my desk is always right.
I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about how to make good work. There are millions of tips and tricks and manifestos out there. But at the end there’s only one single truth for me: sit down and start drawing.
A Manifesto by Christoph Niemann
1
The only relevant artistic talent is the ability to deal with frustration.
Most of what I produce is not good enough. It’s too complicated, too simple, or has been done before (by myself or others). This is and always will be frustrating. But I can only survive as an artist if I can constantly brush it off and start over again with childish enthusiasm. It is the most important superpower.
2
Be reckless.
A piece won’t be great unless you risk it being terrible. By that I mean sometimes a drawing starts out nicely, but then I’m so afraid of ruining it that I become hesitant - which inevitably ruins it.
3
Deliberately ruin a drawing.
This is a liberating (and incredibly difficult) exercise. Make a drawing using your usual tools, then step on the gas and drive it into a wall at full speed. Make it pompously, unapologetically, irrevocably ugly and wrong.
4
Be less precious about your art.
The benefit of this exercise (no. 3): you remember that if you don’t like it, you can always do another one.
5
Draw like nobody’s watching.
Nobody sees what you are doing in your studio. You can make 97 bad drawings and three great ones. As long as you only show the the three good ones, people will believe you’re a great artist.
6
Trust the drawing to have its own life. I start with an idea from my head. By default this is derivative and predictable. When I start putting it on paper, it starts having its own agenda. It is only when I manage to let go of my original intentions , that something interesting begins to happen
7
Accept that only a fraction of your work is *great.* (Whatever *great* means)
8
Walk away. Then come back.
Wait a few days before deciding whether a piece is *great* or not. Drawing is hard and requires all your attention. Thinking about the merits of a piece is a waste of energy. You’ll be a much better judge tomorrow.
9
Don’t count the hours.
Art is not efficient. Sometimes a good piece is born in minutes, but even then it’s usually surrounded by days of seemingly fruitless poking. Accept this and you’ll be much happier.
10
Sitting at my desk is always right.
I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about how to make good work. There are millions of tips and tricks and manifestos out there. But at the end there’s only one single truth for me: sit down and start drawing.
Friday, December 22, 2023
4 to the USPS - Christoph No. 9
Don’t count the hours.
Art is not efficient. Sometimes a good piece is born in minutes, but even then it’s usually surrounded by days of seemingly fruitless poking. Accept this and you’ll be much happier.
Jean's comment: This one is so perfectly written that I do not have anything to add - other than letter it beautifully and hang it where you will see it daily.
Thursday, December 21, 2023
From Leslie in Oct - Christoph No. 8
Walk away. Then come back.
Jean's comment: Yup. There's no way of knowing if I have ever mentioned this - but it is a very basic lesson that once learned, is probably one of the ones that we remember and implement. Maybe everyone already knows how to set things aside and come back later with fresh eyes.
Of course - it can always work the other way. You might be pleased with something and then the next day you see some weaknesses that need to be fixed - or maybe just let them go. Decisions decisions.
Wednesday, December 20, 2023
From Irene in Oct - Christoph No. 7
Accept that only a fraction of your work is *great.* (Whatever *great* means)
My interpretation of what he means by *great* is whether or not the person who made the work is pleased with how it turned out. If we had a way of pulling up every time I said I was unhappy with something and then a reader would leave a comment suggesting that I amend what I said - we would find several examples. We might also see that I responded by explaining that my nit-picking at details is just part of a larger process. It's not like any of us have time to work and rework each and every envelope until it gets to the level of *great* - or as I prefer to call it - *no need to fix anything.*
Tuesday, December 19, 2023
From Chuck in Oct-Nov-Dec - Christoph No. 6
Trust the drawing to have its own life. I start with an idea from my head. By default this is derivative and predictable. When I start putting it on paper, it starts having its own agenda. It is only when I manage to let go of my original intentions, that something interesting begins to happen.
This one is great. It's a hard one for me to add onto. The only thing I can think of is that I know I do better when I give up on trying to force a name into a specific mold - and rethink the size and shape of the name - and let it *speak to me.* Reminder - this is where pencil roughs are your friends.
Monday, December 18, 2023
Dec 18 From Grace in Oct - Christoph No. 5
Draw like nobody’s watching. Nobody sees what you are doing in your studio. You can make 97 bad drawings and three great ones. As long as you only show the three good ones, people will believe you’re a great artist.
Sunday, December 17, 2023
From Maggie in Oct - Christoph No. 4
Be less precious about your art. The benefit of this exercise: you remember that if you don’t like it, you can always do another one.
This is a continuation of deliberately *ruining* something - to come up with something better. Once again - our world is a little different - because our envelopes are not our livelihood. I almost left this one out. I noticed that some students are entrenched at the end of the spectrum where they think that all of their efforts are dismal. Or worse.
Saturday, December 16, 2023
Dec 16 From Lynne in October - Christoph No. 3
Deliberately ruin a drawing. This is a liberating (and incredibly difficult) exercise. Make a drawing using your usual tools, then step on the gas and drive it into a wall at full speed. Make it pompously, unapologetically, irrevocably ugly and wrong.
Jean's comment: OK, he is talking about drawings - and envelopes are a little different. I actually do this from time to time and I gotta say - sometimes it really, really, really works. For me - it's all about whether I want to waste an envelope. And for sure - I don't do this exercise if the stamp is on the envelope.
Friday, December 15, 2023
From Patty - Oct Skeleton - Christoph No. 2
Be reckless. A piece won’t be great unless you risk it being terrible. By that I mean sometimes a drawing starts out nicely, but then I’m so afraid of ruining it that I become hesitant - which inevitably ruins it.
Thursday, December 14, 2023
From Christy - cupcake in Oct - Christoph No. 1
The only relevant artistic talent is the ability to deal with frustration.
Wednesday, December 13, 2023
From Leslie in Oct - biters
This is a handmade envelope from Leslie. She did something very smart - to accommodate the fragility of the paper which had some texture and loose fibers. She adhered it to a piece of card stock that is the size of the envelope. The 4 fold over parts are just the paper. It worked very well - and I hope I can remember to use the idea. She enclosed a note saying that she is not a *goth fan* but thought that style went with the paper. It does - nice and spooky - I can see myself riffing on this next year.
The card inside did not photograph well at all - there were sparkles and some tone on tone action.
***
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
From Madison in October - mailbox costume
How cute is this? I saw it at USPS.com - but it said *while supplies last.*
The mail box for the North Pole is at the West Des Moines post office. I wonder if they answer the letters that kids drop in their box. Seems like I had a post one year about a team of volunteers who respond to mail to Santa. Once again, the disciplined Jean will not let herself be distracted.