Cute typewriter calendar from SkyGoodies. It’s a “printable”—you download a PDF and assemble it yourself.
Cute typewriter calendar from SkyGoodies. It’s a “printable”—you download a PDF and assemble it yourself.
I’m all done printing, trimming and assembling, so it’s time to unveil my 2014 calendar. Below are a few pictures. Click here to see all the months.
The biggest project I undertake each year is a letterpress printed desktop calendar, one page for each month with a graphic and one of my haiku. This will be my 6th calendar and today I started printing. The photo shows my set up—there’s one color for the graphic and one for the calendar & haiku. I set up a chase for the text and another for the graphic so it’s easy to swap for another month.
While the printing is time consuming and will take me at least until the end of the month, it’s the easy part of the project. Getting here meant culling through my stash of haiku, designing the pages, getting the plates made for printing, selecting the colors… and for good measure I always thoroughly clean my shop first. The calendar pieces take up every available space and then some, so every extraneous thing in here gets stored until I’m done. You can see my previous calendars here.
As it’s after the first of the year, my 2013 desktop calendar is now on sale. It was $22, now $15. Click here to see photos of all the months.
The other day on Letterology, I saw Norman McKnight’s 2013 calendar, which uses 19th century copper blocks for the illustrations (see several of them below). You can see McKnight’s calendar on his blog, as well as lots of photos and notes about type and typography.
My 2013 desktop calendar is now available for sale on my website. This year’s design features my haiku and some of my collages. Click here to see photos of all the months.