Happy Weekend!

Happy Friday everyone! Earlier this week, I took a quick trip up to New York to attend an event organized by Etsy Wholesale called Open Call. Thirty artists and designers came to pitch their goods to a panel of retailers including buyers from Nordstrom, The Land of Nod, and our very own Emily from Clementine! It was so wonderful to see Emily and meet many of the artists at Open Call – I can’t stop thinking about the experience! I’m sure the Etsy folks will do a recap on their blog soon, but for now you can explore the hashtag on Instagram for images from the day! But in the meantime…

To Infinity and Beyoncé Print / Lionheart Prints via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Photo by Lionheart Prints (um – put this print in your shop soon, mmmkay?) via Instagram

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Check back a bit later for this week’s cocktail recipe! Have a wonderful weekend, and I’ll see you back here on Monday! xoxo

Business Card Inspiration #18

It has been a little while since I rounded up some pretty business cards! Here are a few recent favorites!

Business Card Inspiration / Oh So Beautiful Paper

1. Illustrator Meera Lee Patel‘s colorful painterly business cards (via Instagram)

2. Beautiful watercolor and letterpress business cards with gold edge painting by Holly Hollon for Joanne Lue Events (via Instagram)

3. GORGEOUS green and gold foil business cards by Christine Wisnieski for floral studio Molly Taylor & Co. (via Instagram)

4. Gold foil and offset printed business cards for Candlefish / Design by Fuzzco and gold foil by Mama’s Sauce (via Instagram)

5. Hand lettered letterpress printed business cards / Printed by Czar Press for Odd Daughter Paper Co. (via Instagram)

p.s. If you’d like to submit your own business cards for a future post just tag your photos with #osbpbusinesscardlove on Instagram!

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress

I had the pleasure of meeting Cara of Underwood Letterpress in person at The National Stationery Show this year. Though it was her first show, she is no printmaking or business rookie – she is (very quickly) taking over the California coast! Here’s the scoop on her business prowess, days at work, and design process. –Megan

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I learned to letterpress print about 10 years ago in a printmaking class during college, but then I took a detour from the world of design for a bit, got my masters in public policy and built a career in philanthropy working with some of the most talented and generous people that I know. I gained skills in management, planning and collaboration that have influenced the way I run my business today. I thrived in my career, but couldn’t be happier about the switch. I love working with my hands again, designing beautiful things and being my own boss. I don’t know what the future holds, but I’m excited to have embraced this non-linear career path and am excited about where it may take me!

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I officially launched Underwood Letterpress in 2012. When we launched, our custom work took off really quickly and we were fortunate to get some great exposure through various prominent design blogs including Apartment Therapy, One King’s Lane and Design Love Fest. We spent two years building our custom work and with a leap of faith we decided to launch our own greeting card line this year at the National Stationery Show. We were a finalist for Best New Product and had a really great response to our card’s simple, modern designs and playful color palette.

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper underwood-38

Underwood Letterpress is located in the arts district in downtown Los Angeles in a shared workspace called The Unique Space. The building is a collective of designers, entrepreneurs, writers and bloggers, and also has a co-working space that brings different creative people to the building every day. While we are all hard at work running our own small business, we often find time to collaborate on projects or just bounce ideas off of one another. It’s a creative utopia!

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Our studio consists of our 12×18 Chandler and Price printing press from 1915 (yes, there’s a 100 year birthday in the house!!), our guillotine paper cutter, workspace, and as much shelving as we could fit to house our paper, inks, and other wares. We are lucky to have access to storage in the building’s basement which has allowed us to house a ton of inventory and grow our product line without crowding us out of the studio.
Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Our incredibly talented studio associate Mallory is running the show in L.A., while I work on expanding our business in the Bay Area. With a “minor” turn of events, my husband was recruited to northern California for a new job early this year, so I figured I would take on the challenge of bringing the business to another part of California that I love. I have set up a home studio and am fortunate to be printing at the San Francisco Center for the Book until I set up a permanent studio there. I travel to L.A. every other month for various projects and to meet with clients.Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Running a business in two locations means there is no “typical” day in the office. Each day is a unique combination of client consultations, emails, and designing. I am on the press about twice per week and spend the rest of the time building the business. I’ve found that I actually love working on the business side of things — finances, marketing, planning — all of it. This is an area I want to grow in and can’t wait to attend Business Boot Camp organized by the paper industry’s amazing professional network TSBC.

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Our greeting card line incorporates bold color, pattern, geometry and juxtaposition. I take a lot of cues from fashion, home and lifestyle trends and love Scandinavian design. When designing a new card, I focus on color and design first. The sentiment or occasion comes next and usually organically pops right out at me.
Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

All of the cards are hand drawn which means that I start the process with a trusty Sharpie pen. I like to lay out a large piece of paper on my workspace and cover it with doodles, to do lists and reminders. That way, I have access to a canvas all day long and can sketch my ideas as they come to me. From there, I convert the images to digital artwork, refine the designs in Illustrator and then determine the color palette.

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful PaperUnderwoodLetterpressStudioTour058-9UnderwoodLetterpressStudioTour069-11UnderwoodLetterpressStudioTour066-10

We specialize in letterpress printing, but offer foil printing, edge painting and embossing. We dip dye in house using a special technique that allows us to get really rich and textured color. We also work with handmade papers to create custom envelope liners and other special finishes. I’ve had a lot of people tell me that they like to frame our cards and I love that! We work hard to make sure everything we touch turns in to a piece of art which I think makes our card line unique.

Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

We also have a love affair with vintage postage and offer curated postage sets through our Etsy shop. We believe that the outside of our mail should be just as pretty as the inside. The U.S. Postal Service has been issuing beautiful stamps for the last 150+ years, so why not send them out in to the world so they can be enjoyed! We just started selling our curated postage through card shops all over the country this year, so definitely be on the lookout!Behind the Stationery: Underwood Letterpress / Oh So Beautiful Paper

All photos by Jen Emerling.

Interested in being featured on the Behind the Stationery column? Please contact Megan at [email protected].

Behind the Stationery: Hello!Lucky

The ladies of Hello!Lucky are busy moms and stationers based in beautiful San Francisco. These savvy business women are here sharing their experiences in partnering with a printer and expert tips on hiring staff. As a former stationery studio manager myself, I think their advice is so crucial for small businesses looking to attract top talent amongst the big corporations.  â€“Megan

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Eunice: I was a freelance illustrator and graphic designer. I was working retail in a boutique pet store on the weekends and designing the store’s windows. I offered to create a line of dog and pet-themed cards for the owners because the existing options were pretty skimpy, and it was from there that Hello!Lucky was born. Searching for a way to print my own work, which would allow for more ability to experiment and keep initial overhead low, I took a class at the San Francisco Center for the Book and was immediately hooked. Having some issues with restraint, I bought a press on eBay the next week and our letterpress card business was born.

Sabrina: I was working as an education strategy consultant having just gotten my MBA from Stanford Business School. I have a degree in Art History and had focused professionally on arts education and helping emerging artists access funding and build their careers. I offered to help Eunice, the most talented artist I knew at the time, start the card business and quickly fell in love with being an entrepreneur and returned to my passion for merging creativity and business.

We’re based in San Francisco, in a studio space in Eunice’s home, a historic Edwardian in the Haight Ashbury district. We’re lucky to have sweeping views of the city, a couple friendly studio dogs, and a few studio babies to keep things entertaining!

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Eunice: I am constantly juggling work and kids and everything else. My day starts at 6:30 in the morning (yay, kids!) and ends around midnight. The first order of business is a giant mocha to get the gears turning! A double shot of espresso may be the most critical element in my creative workflow. Most of my time is spent designing new cards and working on other client projects. I’ve been slowly but surely moving beyond just cards, so as of late, there are always a new and exciting things in the works, like designing textiles for a swimwear line (I spent a whole day drawing bitchy looking persian cats on a background of diamonds – it really doesn’t get better than that!). My job is, at times, ridiculous in the best way possible. In between design projects, we are constantly working on bits and bobs for marketing and brainstorming the next batch of card ideas.

My biggest struggle is juggling my kids, life and work – luckily, I’m the queen of multi-tasking and Imogen is a reasonable studio baby (Alex is remarkably tolerant of the endless episodes of Elmo and constant and thorough destruction of the studio). I also have an awesome nanny a couple days a week and a great (and patient!) husband who, at the moment, is at home and spends a lot of time with Gigi so that I can beaver away in peace.

Sabrina: I work weekday mornings and all day on Thursdays; my day typically consists of checking email, brainstorming / reviewing card designs with Eunice and Alex, and then working on various marketing and advocacy campaigns such as Write_On and Share Trade, and the book I am writing. As a busy mom of three, I get a lot of my work done in the “spaces in between.” For example, I “write” via voice memo during my commute, and use any moments of downtime to cross things off my to-do list so that I can be fully engaged with work during work time and kids during kid time.

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We work in collaboration with the fabulous Egg Press in Portland, Oregon. They do all our printing (letterpress) and distribution. We used to do all of our own letterpress printing in our San Francisco studio and we also offered custom digital printing through a trade printer in the Bay Area. Once we decided to stop doing custom printing (e.g. wedding invitations) and focus exclusively on our greeting card business and licensing our designs, we realized it made sense to partner. Egg Press is a company that we love and it’s been a great, mutually beneficial experience collaborating with them: they have a large studio, a wonderful production staff, and complementary products, customers, and distribution. We share similar values and vision and have found that, working together, we can grow both our businesses more effectively than they could have developed on their own.

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We started hiring employees in 2003. Our first employees were friends, including Eunice’s roommate, Sabrina’s old room mate, Eunice’s cleaner, and Sabrina’s old friend who was living in London and offered to start our London office out of her apartment. We didn’t have a recognizable brand to attract employees, so we relied on hiring people who already knew us and had faith in what we were doing. Later on, we started hiring people for real by posting jobs on Craigslist and using our growing network of business acquaintances to get the word out (this was pre-Facebook and LinkedIn).

Over the years, we’ve hired dozens of people and been fortunate to get great employees across the board. The process typically has was handled by Sabrina and consisted of putting together a job description and posting it / sharing via email with friends and acquaintances.

Here are 5 things we’ve learned about hiring and attracting great employees:

1) Have a compelling vision for your business.
Communicate where your business is going and the values that you stand for.
2) Have confidence in yourself as a small business.
Small business owners often lack confidence because they can’t afford to pay big corporate salaries. The reality is that there are tons of people who *want* to work in a small business environment where they’re not just some replaceable cog in the wheel, and will have opportunities to see how running a business works up close and wear multiple hats.
3) Give your employees a lot of responsibility and treat them like co-owners of your business.
This is totally win-win – they get great leadership experience and a sense of ownership and engagement that leads to higher productivity, creativity, and commitment.
4) Make your small business a fantastic stepping stone to bigger / better opportunities by giving your employees lots of responsibility.
Many of our employees went on to great jobs at large companies like Paperless Post and Williams-Sonoma, started their own small businesses, or got admitted to top-tier business schools (Cornell and Kellogg).
5) Make up for what you can’t pay in salary with an awesome work environment.
Encourage people to have fun, be positive, and be a flexible and compassionate manager. Liking the people you work with and looking forward to going to work every day is harder to find than you think – that alone will attract great candidates and get them to stay.

In the interview process:

1) Pay attention to passion, intelligence, communication skills, desire to learn, and self-awareness.
If someone has these attributes, their past work experience becomes practically irrelevant since they can quickly learn what needs to be done on the job and will be a great team player and contributor.
2) Find out why the person made the key decisions in their life.
How they chose their college and major, or how and why they chose their past jobs and/or chose to leave them reveals a ton about whether their values and motivations are aligned with those of your business and the rest of your staff.
3) Get to know the candidate on a personal level as much as you can during the interview.
Their personal character traits will matter more in the long run than their most recent job experience. If the person is someone you’d want to be friends with, or who you might have a professional crush on, that’s a great sign.
4) Trust your intuition.
Don’t pay too much attention to surface level resume details like working at sexy or well-known large corporations, fancy-sounding job titles, etc. Hire the whole person, not the image they project on paper.

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We count ourselves so lucky to get to spend every day doing what we do. Doing the creative work is definitely the most interesting part of the business! There has been more than one occasion when we’ve stopped to laugh at the fact that we spend a good part of each day trying to come up with butt and unicorn related puns and marveled at the ridiculousness that is our job. Working out new concepts and figuring out new collaborations keeps things interesting. We love exploring new outlets for our designs and collaborating with other cool and inspirational brands.

Eunice: We get inspiration everywhere! I love to travel and do as much traveling as two kids and our crazy busy lives allow. I’ve done some of my best work on the road. I’m a sponge for texture, pattern, color and trend inspiration. Valencia Street in San Francisco is one of my favorite places to pick up on visual inspiration; there’s so much creativity happening here right now. I’m also heavily influenced by French and Japanese style and culture.

That being said, I think our most creative space is really our studio – the three of us get together, bringing our individual influences to the table and the creative juices really get going. I do my best work when I have Alex and Sabrina around for feedback and brainstorming!

Sabrina: I get a lot of my inspiration from reading and writing. I read a new book every couple of days. I also do a lot of brainstorming while driving, and I keep my phone with a dark screen (so I don’t wake up my husband) by my bedside so I can capture ideas in the middle of the night in Evernote

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We also love figuring out new ways to connect with and inspire our customers. The Write_On campaign is a great example: it’s a campaign to challenge our fans to write 30 letters in 30 days for National Letter Writing month in April. The campaign has inspired our customers and fans to connect with friends and family and to give thought to people that they might not normally stop to thank. It’s also great for our brand and greeting card sales – this year we brought on Paper Source and a handful of our independent boutique customers on board, and it’s been great for their businesses as well.

All photos by Hello!Lucky

Interested in participating in the Behind the Stationery column? Reach out to Megan at [email protected].

Behind the Stationery: Papillon Press

We’re going up north into Canada for today’s post from Chantal at Papillon Press! Transitioning their wedding line into something for everyone, this duo of illustrators started wholesaling their greeting cards a few years into their business. –Megan
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I’m Chantal Bennett, owner and founder behind Papillon Press, a letterpress stationery studio based out of the village of Westport, Ontario, Canada. Papillon Press began in 2009 when I saw an ad on Kijiji (the Canadian Craigslist) selling a 10×15 new style Chandler & Price letterpress, along with 110 typecases, cabinets, and shop supplies. My co-founder/husband Joel Kimmel and I picked it up and moved it 7 hours north to our first studio, which was then located in our home in Sudbury, Ontario. Papillon Press, the illustrated press, was born.

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Joel and I both studied illustration in art school. I attended Parsons The New School for Design in New York while Joel attended Sheridan College in Oakville, Ontario. We use our drawing skills to create greeting cards with a sprightly sense of humour, told in an illustrative manner but without hitting you over the head with a punchline. We hope our approach to life, which is to not take ourselves too seriously, is reflected in our cards and passed on to the person who buys that card.

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Letterpress printing was a natural extension of our drawing styles. Both Joel and I excel at pen and ink drawings, and we discovered that our line works and prints very well with letterpress. For the first few years of the business we focused mostly on wedding invitations, then we began focusing more on selling our collection of greeting cards in 2012. We felt that greeting cards afforded us more creative freedom to draw the things we wanted to draw, like a gorilla high-fiving a kitten, rather than just decorative borders.  Our cards often feature animals (including extinct ones like dinosaurs) in ridiculous situations – most often wearing party hats – and most of our wedding clients weren’t down with animals in party hats on their invitations (except for a select, awesome few).

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We moved our studio, home, and beagle to Westport in 2013. Our studio building is behind our circa 1877 house on our property, located in the village. I love being able to walk 50 feet from my house and I’m at work. I also love that our studio is two stories, 1000 square feet on each level (right?!) so I have room for all my printing equipment, inventory, drafting tables, and even a little showroom area with a sofa for all those much needed workday naps (ok, sometimes). My computer desk faces a window where I frequently get distracted watching birds land on the birdfeeder.

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Joel shared the Papillon Press workload for the first two years of the business, but now contributes only to the illustration portion of the design process because he’s too busy working for clients like TIME, Nike, and the Royal Canadian Mint (They pay better than I do. Shocker!). The majority of illustration & design duties, as well as the printing and managing of the business fall to me, which makes Papillion Press mostly a one-woman-show, save for the packaging and packing of orders which is the job of my studio assistant, Lynda. This year we introduced offset printed cards into our collection making use of the four-colour process to add more colours to our designs, but without adding to my workload.

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I always knew I would be an entrepreneur of some kind, whether it be an illustrator or something else involving drawing, so I’m very glad I’ve managed to make this my full-time job. Papillon Press has been steadily growing over the years and I hope to keep expanding our current list of 50+ retailers in Canada and the USA.

All photos by Papillon Press

Interested in participating in the Behind the Stationery column? Reach out to Megan at [email protected].