A madness well restrained

I’m a bit of a word junky. I love to discover new words or meanings for words I didn’t know or even new meanings for words I do know. A good source for new meanings is the Urban Dictionary. My husband Harold found this site when he was trying to prove to me that some word he made up was actually a word (I lost the argument). I used it recently to figure out what crunchiest means in “He was clocked doing 100 miles an hour in the crunchiest of cars” where the car in question was a Toyota Prius. Here’s the definition:

CRUNCHY. Adjective. Used to describe persons who have adjusted or altered their lifestyle for environmental reasons.

For the same reasons I also like to read poetry, especially where the familiar meanings of words are turned on their head. I have a collection of poems that I use to find titles for my broadsides. One line I recently used for a title is A Madness Well Restrained, from At the Mermaid Cafeteria by Christopher Morley (d. 1957). The poem refers to the art and passion that go into the making of a poem. But of course it extends to the making of anything one is passionate about, as in my case, wood type collages with numerals.

TRUTH is enough for prose:
Calmly it goes
To tell just what it knows.

For verse, skill will suffice–
Delicate, nice
Casting of verbal dice.

Poetry, men attain
By subtler pain
More flagrant in the brain–

An honesty unfeigned,
A heart unchained,
A madness well restrained.

Mr French’s papers

Pop ToneWhen I’m working out a book design, I like to sit on the floor with a pile of swatch books and my big box of paper samples to figure out the right paper to use. Color, weight, price, and sheet size all contribute to the decision. I’d love to be able to afford any kind of paper for my books and get that paper in small quantities locally. But it never works out that way. Right now I’m working out the design for my 2008 calendar, and I’d like to use colored paper. There are so many choices for white and off-white paper, but colored paper — not so much. I’ve used French Paper for several books. It’s a family run paper mill in the mid-west and they sell smaller quantities of paper from their website. Recently I found out that they have several new lines of paper and I got the new swatch books this week. I’m especially excited about Pop-Tone (that’s the swatches on the right). These are colors I can’t get elsewhere, plus they sell matching envelopes too.

Etsy

Etsy Featured Seller

In the Spring of 2006, one of my letterpress students told me about Etsy, an online marketplace for handmade goods. I wrote down the name but didn’t get around to looking at the site until August. I discovered it hardly cost anything to list my books. I already had pretty good photographs from trying to sell from my personal website, and making sales from my own website was proving difficult, so I took the plunge and opened an Etsy shop. The past year has been quite an education–improving my photography skills, figuring out how to safely mail my orders, doing accounting. This week I’m honored to have been selected as the featured seller! You can read my interview here.

Steamroller Prints

RoadworksAs part of its fundraising efforts, the San Francisco Center for the Book has a group of local artists create unique large linocut prints that are inked and pressed by a two ton steamroller and then sold at an annual auction. On the day the linocuts are printed, there’s also a street fair with a book arts and printers’ sale as well as a chance to pull a print on the center’s letterpress printers. This year the big print day is Sat Sep 8 from 11-5 (at 16th & De Haro). You can find out more here. (The photo is of SFCB studio manager Katherine Case on the steamroller.)

Screen Printing

My husband and I own several vintage Porsches, and he belongs to a hot-rod Porsche club. My friend Tracey and I became members this year but the t-shirts that are available for club members start in men’s large. So I started looking around for a way to make two small women’s sized shirts for me & Tracey. I’ve made iron-on transfers in the past, but they feel heavy and tacky when I’ve applied them to fabric. I toyed with getting a gocco printer, but they are more money than I want to spend. Then on the Etsy forum, someone mentioned PhotoEZ, a method for creating a stencil using sunlight & tap water that can then be inked onto fabric . The crucial thing for me was that it allows you to make the stencil from a laser printer output.

Here’s the stencil that I made

EZScreen Stencil

And the first t-shirt (making the stencil was easy; I need practice in applying ink–Tracey’s shirt is much more evenly inked)

tshirt

There are three videos on YouTube explaining how to use the stencil kit: