Mailart 365 has moved
Thanks for visiting Mailart 365. This site is an archive of mailart produced by artists doing mailart 365 from December 2010 to August 2016. As of July 2016, we moved to a new and more modern site at www.mailart365.com. Come on over and check us out there
Showing posts with label graph paper. Show all posts
@craftgasm, week 32
Tuesday, August 21, 2012
225/365, a vanilla creamer bottle with confetti and a birthday note. Sent to Kim in DC.
226/365, handmade postcard with graph paper, a receipt, product instructions in Japanese, washi tape, sticker selvage, and ephemera. Sent to Fay in Taiwan.
227/365, handmade postcard with graph paper, Chinese fortune, washi tape, packaging, and Ikea instructions. Sent to Dewi in Toronto.
228/365, handmade postcard with reclaimed notebook and ledger papers, stencils, and rubber stamps with coordinating postage (which makes sense if you saw the postcard she sent me). Sent to Bonnie Jeanne in Pittsburgh.
229/365, handmade postcard with neon labeling stickers and reclaimed notebook and ledger papers. Sent to Becky in Pennsylvania.
230/365, handmade postcard made with reclaimed notebook and ledger papers, a circus rubber stamp (which didn't show up too well on the scanner, but is clearer in person), and neon labeling stickers (which, as it turns out, don't show up as neon no matter how much you play with color settings), with coordinating postage. Sent to Meigh in Maryland.
226/365, handmade postcard with graph paper, a receipt, product instructions in Japanese, washi tape, sticker selvage, and ephemera. Sent to Fay in Taiwan.
227/365, handmade postcard with graph paper, Chinese fortune, washi tape, packaging, and Ikea instructions. Sent to Dewi in Toronto.
228/365, handmade postcard with reclaimed notebook and ledger papers, stencils, and rubber stamps with coordinating postage (which makes sense if you saw the postcard she sent me). Sent to Bonnie Jeanne in Pittsburgh.
229/365, handmade postcard with neon labeling stickers and reclaimed notebook and ledger papers. Sent to Becky in Pennsylvania.
230/365, handmade postcard made with reclaimed notebook and ledger papers, a circus rubber stamp (which didn't show up too well on the scanner, but is clearer in person), and neon labeling stickers (which, as it turns out, don't show up as neon no matter how much you play with color settings), with coordinating postage. Sent to Meigh in Maryland.
@craftgasm, week 31
Monday, August 13, 2012
220/365, remade security envelope with reclaimed notebook paper, stickers, washi tape, packaging, other paper scraps, and strategically positioned window/stationery combination. Sent to Liz in The Other Washington.
221/365, handmade envelope collaged with newspaper ephemera, faux Mexican money, stickers, and a Chinese fortune. Sent to Laura in Palo Alto, CA.
222/365, handmade postcard, with washi tape, reclaimed notebook paper, a receipt, ephemera, sticker selvage, and foreign language cautions from some Ikea product. Sent to Jennie in San Francisco.
223/365, handmade postcard made from a postcard book cover, with reclaimed notebook paper, washi tape, catalog cut-outs, an old letter (one I typed for someone else with a typo in it), and some eastern European ephemera from a swap (of the man in the rocker). Sent to Kerri in Arizona.
224/365, a handmade envelope heading into the military mail system, and thus kept simple. Addresses are on filing labels from Martha.
221/365, handmade envelope collaged with newspaper ephemera, faux Mexican money, stickers, and a Chinese fortune. Sent to Laura in Palo Alto, CA.
222/365, handmade postcard, with washi tape, reclaimed notebook paper, a receipt, ephemera, sticker selvage, and foreign language cautions from some Ikea product. Sent to Jennie in San Francisco.
223/365, handmade postcard made from a postcard book cover, with reclaimed notebook paper, washi tape, catalog cut-outs, an old letter (one I typed for someone else with a typo in it), and some eastern European ephemera from a swap (of the man in the rocker). Sent to Kerri in Arizona.
224/365, a handmade envelope heading into the military mail system, and thus kept simple. Addresses are on filing labels from Martha.











