Get Well Cards

It’s that time of year: cold and flu season. The days may finally be getting longer, but it’s still pretty cold out there and summer is still a long way away. (Insert crying face emoji). If you have a loved one suffering from the common cold now or preparing to confront seasonal allergies in a few weeks, it’s a good time to stock up on get well cards! If possible, we highly recommend hand delivering these cards with a bowl of chicken noodle soup. From clever puns to bunnies dressed as nurses, here are twelve get well cards to provide the perfect pick-me-up for those in need.

Get Well Cards

From top right:

1. Well, that’s a bummer. This cat cone is sure to put any ailment in perspective. Hand-painted from Idlewild Co.

2. Don’t let the inception confuse you in your already feverish state; it’s just a card within a card…(within a puzzle, wrapped in an enigma). From Ash and Chess.

3. Everyone needs some good juju every now and then, especially when feeling under the weather. From Farewell Paperie.

4. Good soup cures most ailments (I’ve even seen matzo ball soup marketed as “Jewish penicillin”). Illustrated by Everyday Balloons Print Shop.

5. This beautiful bouquet from Wild Hart Paper is sure to cheer anyone up.

6. If there was ever a time to binge watch episodes of Scandal, this is it. From Ladyfingers Letterpress.

7. I’ve never seen quite so artistic a slug before. Those ladies at Hello!Lucky can make anything look good – this get well card is no exception.

8. Who says get well cards have to be a bummer? The Social Type proves otherwise with this design that’s pretty much guaranteed to cheer anyone up.

9. Nurse Bunny? Yes, please! From Dear Hancock.

10. If I owned a handkerchief this beautiful, I can assure you I certainly wouldn’t be using it to blow my nose. From Antiquaria.

11. I’m pretty sure rainbows are scientifically proven to cheer people up and Fugu Fugu Press agrees.

12. If only cupcakes could cure illnesses! From Mr. Boddington’s Studio.

 

p.s. Ten sweet thank you cards and ten encouragement cards

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

I’m so excited to introduce our first hand-carved woodblock designer that we’re featuring on the Behind the Stationery column! Rachel from Heartell Press is here to take us through her processes – from the intricacies of designing and carving each block, to growing her business, to ensuring her team is self-sufficient enough for her to take some time to adjust to being a new mom. She started Heartell Press in Brooklyn, but has since moved to Indiana with her husband and into a beautiful spacious studio. Here’s Rachel! —Megan Soh

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

From Rachel: Heartell Press cards are printed from hand-carved woodblocks. Woodcut was always my favorite of the printmaking processes, and the folksy look of the carved images and the organic textures created by the woodgrain are a good fit for our warm, sincere designs and messages. There are great designers who use linoleum blocks (Katharine Watson, Ghost Academy, and Kaibelle Designs are my favorites), but as far as I know we are the only line printed from wood. It has taken lots of trial and error to learn to print our blocks consistently and at scale using letterpress equipment, but I think our customers appreciate that each card is truly handmade on every level.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

The carving is time-consuming, especially because each color we add to a design means carving a separate block. I’m always working on ways to preserve the look and feel of what we make while streamlining the process for producing our products. For the new spring collection we’re working on now, I’m carving the key block — the part of the image that has the most detail and information — and experimenting with photopolymer plates to add lots of additional color. I’m excited because if it works we’ll be able to release new cards with lots of color and add new types of products to our line more frequently while still offering cards and prints that are true to the Heartell aesthetic and unique in our industry.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

My path to stationery was long and winding. It took doing a lot of the wrong things to find the right thing. I went to grad school twice, first to earn an academic degree in religion and art history from Yale Divinity School and then an MFA in printmaking from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. After I finished school in 2009, I moved to New York and cobbled together a living with multiple part-time jobs. I worked in a church, as a nanny, and eventually ran a non-profit. All the while I was renting a (super expensive and tiny) art studio in Gowanus, Brooklyn, and trying to squeeze in as many hours per week there as possible making paintings and prints. I had a few shows in Brooklyn and Manhattan, but it was tough trying to build an art career and pay rent in New York.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

In 2012 my mom was diagnosed with cancer, and that experience made me question the chaotic existence I was living and inspired me to find a way to do the creative work I love full time. Since I was having a hard time finding sympathy cards that I liked enough to send to my mom between visits, I started having ideas for making my own cards. People in my life and my community in Brooklyn were responding to them in a way that made me think there might be something there.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

I began to look more closely at the stationery industry, and when I discovered that there was a wholesale market for handmade stationery, especially at the National Stationery Show (through the OSBP blog!), the idea for Heartell Press was born. I did research and worked on developing my line and launched the website in 2014. I exhibited for the first time at NSS in 2016 and that is when the wholesale part of Heartell took off and I was able to leave my day jobs and focus on the business full time.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

In 2016, my husband and I decided to leave Brooklyn and move to Fort Wayne, Indiana, where he grew up. The move has been great for us and for Heartell, giving me lots more time and space to devote to it. In November 2017, we moved the business into a new studio space here in Fort Wayne. It is two-thirds less expensive than the space I rented in Brooklyn and eight times bigger! We have room for our presses, including a new (to us) 10×15 Chandler and Price that we added to our shop when we moved, as well as inventory, a shipping and fulfillment space, office space for me to do my designing and carving, and plenty of storage. The building has a beautiful atrium full of tropical plants that is like a greenhouse, and I love being able to walk around it when I need to think or stretch after lots of drawing or carving.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

Heartell designs start with bits of text or images that I collect in lists for each card and product category (I use Trello for organizing all my lists, plans and tasks). My best cards are inspired by experiences I’m having in my own life and relationships. The earliest Heartell cards are all sympathy, love, and encouragement cards that I made when my mom first got sick. It will be pretty obvious when the new collection comes out that many of the designs I’m working on now have been inspired by the experience of being pregnant (and also watching friends and family members who have had children).

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

I try to make cards that I would genuinely want to give or receive. There are lots of funny cards right now about all the (sometimes unwelcome) changes that come when you have a baby, like having to deal with tons of poo, and those definitely serve an important purpose in the process of preparing to be a parent. Funny isn’t really my forte though, and I tend to swing toward more sincere, emotional messages. When I do retail markets I almost always have a customer tear up at my booth at some point during the event. I’m not sure if making people cry is something I should be proud of but I’m glad that I’ve found a way to put all my feelings to good use!

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

When I’m ready to design a new collection, I go through our current catalog to see which parts of our line could use fleshing out or freshening up. Then I comb through my stockpile of ideas and draw thumbnails with colored pencils to begin mapping out new designs. Once I have an idea of the collection as a whole, I use my Wacom tablet and Photoshop and Illustrator to draw the full scale images and lay out the text. I used to do this with pencils and markers on vellum, doing lots of tracing and scanning to come up with the final designs, but the tablet has made the process much faster and more fun.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

When the designs have been edited and vetted by as many people as I can get to look at them and I’m satisfied with my plans, I print guides using a laser printer and transfer them to blocks of Shina plywood (a wood that is both soft for easy carving and strong enough to hold detail that is harvested sustainably in Japan specifically for printmaking). I use Japanese carving tools to carve the blocks, and then we mount them in the presses for printing.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

Since there is a separate block for each color, including the scoring run, some cards pass through the press up to four times! I love seeing the new designs printed for the first time. It is always a thrill to see something I’ve dreamed up become a finished product.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

Like many of the business owners I’ve read about in this column, I spend a lot of my time these days running the business end of things. Fortunately I’ve discovered that I enjoy communicating with customers, managing cash flow, looking at numbers and planning for growth. But now that I have help with fulfillment and printing, I am finding lots more time for drawing and designing and carving blocks for new products, which are my favorite parts of my job. I love working on marketing projects too, and I do all our product photography, design our catalogs, and prepare for trade shows.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

I set different goals for each year, and my big one for 2018 is to get Heartell ready to run without my constant attention for a few months while I take some time to welcome our new baby and adjust to being a parent. I feel grateful to have lots of inspiration from other business owners in our field (Nole included!) who have families, and while I’m sure it will be a big transition I feel confident that we’ll be able to find a good equilibrium over time.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

I’ve come to find that stationery is a better fit for me than fine art for a lot of reasons, but one of the things I love most about this industry is how generous and open people are. The fine art world in New York has a deeply competitive culture, and it has been a gift for me to connect with other designers and retailers who are willing to share information, encouragement and support. The more variety there is in terms of design, the more letters people will write and the more connected they’ll be to each other. It feels like we are all part of something that is bigger than any one company or store individually and I love looking at things that way.

Behind the Stationery: Heartell Press

Photo Credits: Product photos by Heartell Press // Studio photos by Ruth Yaro.

Want to be featured in the Behind the Stationery column? Reach out to Megan at megan [at] ohsobeautifulpaper [dot] com for more details.

International Women’s Day

March is Women’s History Month, and today is International Women’s Day. Last year, we marked the occasion with A Day Without a Woman, but this year I wanted to focus on something a bit more proactive. So I’m sharing a stationery round up focused on supporting and empowering women, from art prints to notebooks to greeting cards. Dear Hancock just released this stunning print with illustrations of the imagined desks of twelve historical women who provided great contributions to Fashion, Science, Astronomy, Art, Design, Aviation, Literature, Primatology and Women’s History. Dear Hancock worked with the foundations of each woman to create the illustrations, and prints with some of the individual illustrations (like the Georgia O’Keeffe desk) are being carried in their museum gift shops. Proceeds from the print will be donated to Time’s Up!

Historical Women's Desks Art Print by Dear Hancock

From the top, left to right; Sonia Delaunay, Dian Fossey, Vera Rubin, Amelia Earhart, Rosie the Riveter, Marie Curie, Frida Kahlo, Ray Eames, Athena, Georgia O’Keeffe, Jane Austen and Mary Shelley.

Dear Hancock

And even more lady power stationery for International Women’s Day:

International Women's Day Round Up

From top right:

1. One of four illustrated cards from Paper Parade celebrating International Women’s Day, with messages of women’s empowerment, friendship, and encouragement.

2. I’m absolutely loving the entire International Women’s Day collection from Cardtorial, with notebooks and cards featuring different quotes and phrases in collaboration with several lettering artists – like this design in collaboration with Anne Robin!

3. The Kiss My Pumps collection from Paper Epiphanies is dedicated to empowering women. I love this art print so much!

4. We all get by with a little help from our friends – and I need at least half a dozen of these cards from Emily McDowell

5. Kathryn from Blackbird Press comes up with the most creative ways to celebrate inspiring women in history, like this fold-out card and this Brillian Women Spinner.

6. Dahlia Press has so many fantastic cards and art prints celebrating women’s empowerment, including this beautiful silhouette card with hand lettering. I also love this set of illustrated postcards for political advocacy.

7. Pick your favorite inspiring female figure in this Boss Ladies series from Boss Dotty

8. Pink power suits and an Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt reference in this card from Party Sally

9. The future is female indeed, from Dahlia Press

10. The perfect card for your favorite boss lady from Ladyfingers Letterpress

Behind the Stationery: Dahlia Press

Our next installment of Behind the Stationery bring us to Seattle, Washington to chat with Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press. Stephanie shares about how she transitioned from moonlighting as an entrepreneur to investing full-time in Dahlia Press, how sketching on an iPad has expedited her overall process, and how her custom client workflow differs from designing a wholesale line. Here’s Stephanie! —Megan Soh

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

From Stephanie: I first fell in love with letterpress in a typography class. My instructor was a printer and would make all of the students letterpress flashcards of the typefaces we should all know by heart. Fast forward a couple years and by day I was a Graphic Designer for a retail branding firm designing everything from logos and interior environments to websites and packaging, and by night I was printing on a 1912 Golding Pearl platen press in my basement.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

For 6 years, Dahlia Press was a side hustle. Named after the flowers in my front yard, I spent my evenings printing wedding invitations and custom stationery. To say that I started with a formal business plan and a vision for what Dahlia Press would eventually become wouldn’t be entirely correct. I knew that the entrepreneur in me wanted my own business, but I also knew that it was best for me to grow slowly and carefully, trying not to grow too fast to where I couldn’t sustain my full-time job (which I loved), and not too slow that the business wasn’t gaining momentum.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Eventually with hard work and late nights, Dahlia Press grew to a size where I could no longer sustain both jobs. Knowing Dahlia Press needed my full attention, I left my day job to focus on it entirely. It was at this time that we expanded our offerings to include a line of letterpress greeting cards for the retail and wholesale market.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Shortly after we started our wholesale line and prepared to debut at the National Stationery Show, we outgrew the basement area. We were lucky enough to find an amazing brick and mortar space in Seattle’s Portage Bay neighborhood, where we have worked for the past 3 years. Our bright, sun-filled studio houses our three letterpress printing presses, a small retail area with a meeting counter for consultations with custom clients, work desks and a stock/shipping room in the back.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

A typical work day starts with coffee and packing up the shop-dog Chloe to head to the studio. Once I arrive, normally around 9:30am, a second cup of coffee is poured and I check in with George (our press operator who also happens to be my older brother) to see what’s on our print list for the day. Emails are answered and I work with our team to fill orders in the back. I try to reserve the afternoon for tackling custom projects or writing quotes and sending invoices.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

There’s always an ongoing list of items to do that normally consists of social media photos, mocking up new designs, editing art files, ordering supplies or packaging products. Around 6pm, I close up shop and pack up the dog to head home. Evenings are typically spent tackling whatever administrative tasks didn’t get done throughout the day, but occasionally I’ll use that time to sketch new concepts and ideas. It’s a labor of love, to say the least.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Depending on what I’m working on, the design and production process really varies. The process of designing our greeting card line always starts in a notebook. I’m an avid list maker, so I always have an ongoing list of phrases, ideas, sayings, and concepts jotted down. As much as I try to draw every day, there isn’t always time. If I have an initial idea, I’ll create a quick doodle or sketch in my notebook so I can come back to it later. For years, all of my lettering and illustrations were done on stacks and stacks of tracing paper using my favorite Micron or Tombow brush pens. Once the design was fine-tuned, I would scan it into Illustrator and prepare it for platemaking.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

This past year my process changed slightly as I started experimenting with drawing software on my iPad Pro. Today I rarely use pens (although for finer details, it’s still preferred), and the majority of my drawings are done directly on the iPad. I then AirDrop the file to my computer and prep the file for the plate-making process. This change has shaved off hours of time, not to mention ink and paper! Once the plates arrive from the platemakers, we mix ink by hand and prep Ruby (our 1926 Chandler and Price press) for printing. My favorite moment is when that first print comes off the press. It’s so satisfying to see a design come to life and to feel that one of a kind impression.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

The process of working with our custom clients is a little more extensive. It always starts with a consultation (hopefully in person, but often over the phone too) where I get the all the details of their event and their overall vision. After the administrative details are worked out (quotes and contracts), we pull samples and swatches and start initial sketches of the design concept. Those sketches turn into a digitally mocked-up design, which we send to the client for review. We’ll go through a series of revisions and once the final design is approved, we finalize the art files and prep them for printing.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

As we print all of our greetings in house, we’ve relied on a list of trusted vendors to help us when it comes to printing our custom projects. They offer additional services such as foil stamping and die cutting, which allows us to expand our list of offerings and frees up our schedule to work on more projects.

Behind the Stationery: Stephanie Clarke of Dahlia Press

Studio images are by Krista Welch Creative. All other photos are by Dahlia Press.

Want to be featured in the Behind the Stationery column? Reach out to Megan at megan [at] ohsobeautifulpaper [dot] com for more details.

Ten Awesome Valentine’s Day Cards!

Valentine’s Day is less than a month away, and love is in the air! Now for me, Valentine’s Day isn’t necessarily about being involved in a romantic relationship; it’s about telling all the people that matter in your life that you love them – from spouses and significant others to family members and dear friends. And if you can bring a smile to their faces by sending them a special card on Valentine’s Day, all the better! Here are a few favorite (and mostly non-sappy) Valentine’s Day cards for sharing the love!

Valentine's Day Card Round Up!

From top right:

1. Lovely letterpress printed card with a sweet and simple message from Dahlia Press

2. A very dapper lion from Rifle Paper Co. – my 3 year-old is obsessed with lions and would love this card!

3. This sarcastic candy heart card from Ash & Chess is the perfect card to give to your BFF

4. Beautiful hand drawn moons and stars in shiny hologram foil from Hello!Lucky

5. Goodness, if I love you even before I’ve had my coffee in the morning, then I must REALLY love you – from Pinwheel Print Shop.

6. Give this card from In the Daylight to the person that you love more than anything in the world! 

7. A modern black and white design with a sweet message in gold foil text from Ramona & Ruth

8. The sweetest rainbow card from Printerette Press! I also really love these letter writing sheets with “My Love” in gold foil – perfect for leaving little love notes around the house!

9. Telling someone they’re better than pizza is pretty much the highest compliment, yes? Give this Ashkahn card to your boyfriend, husband, or best friend!

10. Is there anything cuter than hand painted hearts? Love this colorful heart design from Lana’s Shop!

 

p.s. Last year’s Valentine’s Day card round ups: Valentines Day Cards for Friends and Romantic Valentines Day Cards