That Handmade Connection

Reader DiaryI grew up crafty — as a kid we made our own Christmas tree decorations, painted intricate patterns on blown eggs at Easter-time, and learned how to sew. In my first house as an adult, I couldn’t find shades I liked for the windows, so I made my own. When I discovered Etsy, I found a world of people like me who loved making things. And I’ve acquired art for my walls, as well as some great unique purses (my own sewing skills have always been lousy), a bit of jewelry, and, best of all, silk screened t-shirt dresses to wear over jeans. My husband has never liked store-bought soap (too waxy) so after trying a few different soapmakers, now we buy lovely fragrant handmade bars from a woman here in the bay area.
Often the connection to the maker is as important as the piece itself. At the BABA Book Jam last Saturday, I meet in person some of the people who’ve bought my books and artwork online. One woman said “I have your calendar, and I’ve been careful not to look ahead, so when I get to the next month I’ll have a surprise, a new haiku to read.” Another woman told me she’d bought my reader diary, put a gift card for Borders in the pocket along with the bookmark, and gave it to her daughter for her birthday. I could go on and on…
Getting ready for craft & book fairs can be stressful — do I have enough of this? should I take that? did I get all the labels made? — but at more and more shows I come home at the end of the day completely satisfied from meeting so many people who’ve bought my things and been excited about their handmade uniqueness.

A Happy Hour

Kristy Higby - Red Ghost
Kristy Higby’s Red Ghost

After working all day getting ready for the Book Arts Jam this Saturday, I was in the mood for a mindless break from folding and gluing. An email from my friend Sharon provided me with the perfect fodder: a post she found called 10 Brilliant Book Artists. I spent a happy hour clicking through all the links before going back to making flip books. (Kristy Higby’s book to the right is one of the books mentioned.)

Large Prints

Several people have asked me about doing bigger prints with my wood type. I’m experimenting with 16×20″ reproductions of my original letterpress prints. I’ve now got four different designs in my shop. They are printed on thick white Lettra and printed on a high-end Epson printer. Take a look at them here.
The Weight of Numbers

Single Sheet Books

singlesheets.jpgOne of the problems with making your own books using an ink jet or laser printer is how to print them without lots of fancy software. My first books of my artwork and stories, with two pages per sheet and double sided, required me to devise an often complicated recipe for the order to print the pages. Then I discovered single sheet books. Because they are printed all on one side of a sheet, once I had a template, they were easy to design and quick to print and put together. They end up being small — from an 8-1/2 x 11″ sheet you get a 2-3/4 x 4-1/2″ book — but very easy to work with.
Earlier this summer when I was making a book out of my haiku poems, I played around with several single sheet configurations. I was reminded how convenient they are to work with, so I wrote up some instructions and made a kit that includes directions for five different configurations and three books to make — each pre-printed and ready to fold, cut and assemble. And it also includes a Word template to use to design and print your own book from a single sheet. The kit is available here.