Wednesday, December 05, 2007

the rest turned blue...

Come and see our current exhibition either in person or online. It is a really lovely collaborative work that will give you a moment to pause during this hectic holiday season.

the rest turned blue

Elizabeth De Arcos & Adam Draper

November 10 - December 15, 2007

This collaborative work between writer Elizabeth De Arcos and visual artist Adam Draper explores the relationship between the ethereal existence of memories and the tactile processes to retain them. Photography and poetry are means to preserve memory--capturing a single moment where both serve to communicate and commemorate. The artists enlist the mediums poetry and photography to savor their impressions and give outsiders a glimpse of memory. The images are inkjet prints of both “found” photography from family slide collections and digital pinholes with original writings letterpressed into the surface of the print.




Monday, December 03, 2007

New Demo Videos Online!

We just launched six new videos in the past month--4 of them just in the past week--that you can view online right now!
1. Basic Tools for Book and Paper Arts. We get asked all the time about basic tools--how to use them, which ones should you get, what ones do we like, etc. so we thought we'd do a video to talk about the basics.


2. Making Paper Flower Ornaments. Recycle your paper-towel tubes just in time for the holidays. Add some decorative papers and you'll have a way cool ornament for the holidays, birthdays, weddings or home decor!


3. Ornament Accordion Book. Gary and I did this fun little book as our holiday card one year and it was so well received. Friends of our loved them so much they asked us to help them make 200 of them for their wedding favors. These are a simple, fun and great little piece that can be used as a book, ornament or favor. So many possibilities!
4. Basic Grey Holiday Card Kit. See following post for fun card making kit!

5. Making Paper Butterflies. Using handmade India printed papers, learn how you can make these simply amazing little gems to brighten up a table, wall or package!

6. Spray dying with Glimmer Mists. Here's a cool way to make your own unique papers with a simple and easy technique using Glimmer Mists.

Wanna Make Cards?

We just finished a couple rounds of holiday card making classes using the Basic Grey line. It is a really fun line that has a lot of great ideas for interesting structures, 3-d elements, cut-outs, tags, openings, pockets, magnets, layering, etc. I got some great ideas to apply in future book projects!

We put up a video on our blog about this card class and we demo one of the cards--you can view it online. We do have a few kits left over so if you are interested in one, get them while they are still around--they come with a plethora of stuff--decorative paper, 6-pk of ribbon, cardstock, 4 adhesive alphabets, 2 sets of shaped tags. Yay!

I see London, I see France...

It rained for two days in AZ which is practically newsworthy. I can't remember the last time it rained for two days in a row--it had to be a year and half ago or so. With the rain brought really cool weather (probably the last weekend for sandals--well, it is December after all!) and all sorts of pesky mesquite leaf bits into the studio all weekend long so I spent 45 minutes vacuuming and mopping on Sunday trying to get rid off all the crap. See all that itsy bitsy stuff on the floor and rug? It's just maddening to pick up!

My artist pal Donna says you shouldn't use "fresh energy" to do such mundane tasks so I figured with half the day gone my energy was not super fresh so it was a better time to do the dreaded vacuuming task than put it off till Monday morning.

Vacuuming in our studio shop is a little tricky because it is easy to blow papers all over the place or accidentally suck up ribbons or do dads if you are not paying attention. As I was working away, I was noticing how everything looks so pretty, Christmas & winter holiday-ish. We have been just bombarded with all the holiday merchandise arriving lately.



And then I saw the Friday Panties letterpress cards sitting nonchalantly along the wall and I burst out laughing!


The cards had arrived other day when I was out of the studio and I completely forgot that I had ordered them. They just make me laugh. Gotta love those letterpress folks over at Yee Haw Industries. Nothing says the weekend like a an enormous pair of monogramed briefs.

You can see more of Yee Haw's cards on our site at: http://www.paperstudio.com/catalog2.php?category=Yee%20Haw These cards in addition to their beautiful series of blue trees cards for the holidays.

Friday, November 02, 2007

Cool Design Blog--Spagat

I saw these shirts for breast cancer and I was obsessed with getting one for a friend of mine. I love the hip and contemporary design and the fact that it does not have a pink ribbon on it! The graphic is this year's design for the Danish Cancer Society. It was designed by Sidsel, a graphic designer in Denmark who has the blog called spagat. Spagat means doing the splits in Danish, and it's also the name of her Graphic Design Studio. You must check out her blog--it's way cool and so inspiring!! We ended up exchanging emails--she really likes paper--so yay!--and I got a couple of the shirts. How cool to have your designs worn around the world? (by the way, the shirts are sold out, I got mine a couple of weeks ago and am now just getting time to do this post)

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Bird & Pumpkin go to Boot Camp

My arms feel like limp spaghetti noodles. I do an exercise boot camp at 5:30 in the morning. It's really hard to get up at 4:40 am everyday (and most days it takes a lot of convincing myself to get out of bed) but I always feel better and have more energy AFTERWARDS. Today (Halloween) we needed to bring a pumpkin to work out with--think medicine ball. Well of course, I had to decorate mine with paper since we were restricted to not carve out the inside--it would make it too light! This is my favorite bird from our Migration of Junk Mail exhibition and I thought he was such a nice complementary color for the pumpkin so the whole scheme was driven by him. I like decorating pumpkins but I hardly ever do it so I'm glad I had a reason to do it. Here's what I learned about decorating pumpkins this go around:

  1. Pumpkin surfaces are too uneven to use rubber stamps cleanly
  2. Stickles work great (even tho the pumpkins are a little waxy) and make them sparkly!
  3. Handmade paper glued on with PVA lays on nicely
  4. To double make sure the paper circles didn't pop up, I used a matte gel medium over them
  5. Most pumpkins don't need so much reinforcing unless you are using them as a medicine ball--the stickles even stayed on with all the handling!
  6. It is hard to figure out how to attach a bird to a pumpkin that you'll be using as a medicine ball. (Especially at 11 pm the night before) Gary used some sort of long eye screw that was open on one side to go around the bird's leg and into the pumpkin stem
  7. Weigh the pumpkin in advance next time before using as a medicine ball--11 pounds feels like 800 lbs after lifting it above your head 50 times while doing squats. 3 lbs sounds like a better number!

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Left brain or right brain?

Are you left brained or right brained? You've got to see this, it's kind of mind boggling. I looked at it and called Gary in to see it to ask him which way he was the dancer moving--clockwise or counterclockwise.

Initially, we were total opposites! But I realized as I started to read the article, the dancer changed directions. It is totally wild. (Click on the dancer and it will take you to the site)

Monday, October 29, 2007

Where did the time go?

Wow, I can't believe I'm so behind on posting. Yikes! October came and went in the blink on an eye.

October has been a crazy roller coaster of amazing highs and a few quirky hiccups.

One of the best highlights of the of a month was being named Best Paper Shop 2007 in the Best of Phoenix by the Phoenix New Times. This is the third year in a row we have received that designation and it thrills us beyond belief because we work really hard to bring you the best selection of papers, innovative products, tremendously talented instructors and way cool exhibitions. Thank you to the New Times and all of you who keep us inspired and on our toes!

We did have to note a teensy weensy exception to the wonderful write up--where they were describing the studio--"Shelves and racks brim with Japanese paper...decorative papers sporting patterns from country checks to preening cats." Country checks and preening cats? We had to scratch our heads on that line. We do have papers with images in checked patterns--cats in costumes, pigs on ladders, circus poodles and women hitting each other with whisk brooms but there is nary a country check or a preening cat found on any of our papers that we can think of. (we had pictures of our real cats on our blog...maybe that was it)

The first weekend of October was a blast with Teesha and Tracy Moore. They are such talented artists and terrific people as well. It is always a rollicking good time when they are here. Two journal creating days and an artist reception kicked off our 3rd Visual Journal Show--Under the Covers III. The show will come down at the end of the week so trot over if you haven't had a chance to see it yet. You can also view it online of course!

In the middle of the visual journaling project we worked like major crazy bees to finish a huge project in 12 days--from concept to execution--including ordering, designing, letterpressing and assembling till the cows came home. Several really late nights and tons of adhesive!

Last weekend we had Cecile Webster here from Chicago teaching papermaking from the garden and grocery for two days. Everyone up to their elbows in pulp and fabulous paper from rosemary, milkweed, corn, banana leaves, oats, papyrus and more. Fun was had by all and no one ate the paper!

Well life at The Paper Studio is by no means perfect and we seemed to have lots of annoying hiccups to deal with this month--mainly those pesky annoyances that comes with owning a building & business. It started with our security system going off several times a day for 3 weeks for no reason and no one being able to fix it! After 3 phone service people and 6 security system people being at our building for hours at a time it is finally fixed. I could have pulled my hair out! That was only one of the issues we had to contend with--glitchy things with the AC, our sign, lights and more. Egads. We are such "get it fixed NOW" fanatics--being at the mercy of repair folks has been a bit wearing on our nerves. Thankfully we can see the light at the end of the tunnel!

But on a really fun note, we got some way cool orders from some really interesting companies that we can't really reveal but talk about 6 degrees of separation--down to one degree from major, major icons. Whoo hoo! (And be on the lookout for The Paper Studio's name in some national publications--we'll post them as soon as they become official. )

This weekend, we wrapped up the month with a really fun Polaroid Transfer class. Talk about renegade students. They made amazing transfer and emulsion lift images and tons of them! Everyone worked until the very last minute. Such fun especially since most of them didn't have any experience with this medium! Don't you just love LuAnne's cow image?

Well, that pretty much wraps up October! Looking sooooooooo forward to November!

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Book Autopsies--Brian Dettmer

Everyone has been blogging about Brian Dettmer and his book autopsies over the past couple of weeks. His work is fabulous and I got a kick out of that he went to Columbia College Chicago (although not at the Book and Paper Center) but still...wow! none the less...

His work involves the alteration of preexisting books to transform their physical form and/or to selectively remove and reveal content to create amazing works of art. A significant and notable body of Dettmer's work is created by altering books without inserting or moving any of the books' contents. Dettmer seals, then slices and carves into older textbooks, dictionaries, encyclopedias, medical guides, science books, engineering books, history books, comic books, and others, exposing select images and text to create intricate works that impart or reveal new or alternative interpretations of the book.

So inspiring! Scalpel please!

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Misprint Type--This Site Rocks!

I know this site has blogged about for months but I wanted to make sure our readers were aware of it. I love the collage work of Eduardo Recife, an artist who was born in 1980, Belo Horizonte (MG) Brazil. He started his own site project back in 1998, titled Misprinted Type. The site consisted in basically showcasing his experimental typefaces and artwork. Things got bigger and in 2003, Recife launched the 2nd version of Misprinted Type and for that he won recognition in lots of magazines, books and websites.

There is so much fun stuff on this site--collage, fonts, drawings, photos... you'll get deliriously lost! Plus there is lots of fab free fonts (say that 3 times really fast) that you can download. Go to his link on projects and watch Invisible--a scrolling poem with music--I just love it!


Here's a couple of pieces that are on his commercial site that were commissioned by HBO's Assume the Position.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Visual Journaling Exhibition

The Visual Journaling show--Under The Covers III is now in our gallery! Oh what a visual delight it is! I love visual journaling--it's like extreme diary-ing or graphic journals filled with vivid colors, crazy text forms and interesting images. As a book artist, I'm always more restrained--I can never let loose on the page the way these artists can! I tried to keep a visual journal once--it became more of food and exercise log and somewhere along the line, all the images fell by the wayside...sigh...I'll stick to artist books and live vicariously through these bunch of talented journalers! (stay tuned, it will be in our gallery section on our website soon!)

The artist reception at The Paper Studio is Saturday, October 6th from 6:00-7:30 pm. Here's your chance to look through the journals and chat with the artists!



Wednesday, September 26, 2007

The Paper Studio Featured in Wavelength Magazine!

We love NPR (national public radio) and we felt honored when our local station wanted to do a story on us based on recommendations from their listeners. We were really surprised when we saw we would be in their new magazine Wavelength. It is so wonderfully photographed and written. I guess we wouldn't expect less from the folks at NPR. But the really groovy thing about being in the magazine is all the new people who are finding out about us! And these folks are way cool! Lots of interesting people stopping by the Studio to see us and one woman called me to let me know she just removed a lot of bamboo from her yard and asked if we could use it. Boy o' boy that is like getting birthday presents! I cajoled Adam, who was working on the web in comfy cool air conditioning, into helping me during the hottest part of the day and off we went to retrieve a truck load of bamboo from the alley. I was so excited even though it was 108 degrees outside! Adam was not quite as thrilled...bamboo paper will be forthcoming!

The Complex Beauty of Japanese Papers

Japanese papers are so exquisite and we are adding new styles every week. You can check out our ever expanding Japanese paper section! I love the way Japanese papers look, feel and cooperate when making books, boxes and invites. But I find it totally mind boggling that it takes six silkscreen runs to print the designs on a sheet of paper. SIX--can you believe it??? SIX print runs and perfect registration to boot! (Now, we no longer have room to grouse when we have to do three colors in letterpress or silk screening!).

The red flowers are the first print run on a light off-white mulberry base.

The 2nd run is adding pink flowers and pink dots.

The third run is adding the grey branches and dots.

The 4th run is adding ochre colors dots.

The 5th print run is adding the beige background color. Now this surprised me. I thought that layer would have been an earlier color run. The sheet no longer feels like the raw mulberry on the top surface--it is fully filled in by the silkscreen inks.

The 6th and final layer is the delicate metallic gold accents that encircles the dots and flowers and runs along the grey branches. It really does give you a whole new appreciation of the beauty and complexity of these papers!

Going Round in Circles

Our lives at The Paper Studio really do go in warp speed and I usually forget to show you the outcomes of the projects we do. I'll grab my camera only when I think of it so you end up getting teeny bits and blabs of what we work on (the stuff besides running a physical store & web shop!)

I showed you the buckets upon buckets of the chocolate and oatmeal color pulp we beat for a recycled invite project. Once the paper was made, more work began! We cut about a bazillion circles--well it seemed like that--and printed and glued like maniacs. 10 printing plates later (only 9 survived--we had a "N" casualty on one plate) and probably 25oo print passes, the final project looked like this. We didn't even get to oooh and ahhh over them too long, they left the nest the day they got assembled.

Paper Studio Artists Work Featured on Tempe's 2008 Call For Entry

Tempe Cultural Services has their 2008 call for entry out and we were totally thrilled to see our exhibition work on their postcard! How fun is that? Yay! Those junkmail birds live on and on! We had such fun doing that show--it's at the post office right in the heart of downtown Tempe right by Arizona State University. Such a great & funky space and the arts staff are super great to work with.

Well, here's your chance to get your work seen by the thousands who traverse through Tempe Arizona.
Applications for the 2008 shows are due at 5:00 pm on October 12th so don't dilly dally around. See http://www.tempe.gov/arts/exhibitions/call.pdf

Wanna Go To Italy and Make Art?

Our very talented artist/professor friends, Carol Panaro Smith and Jim Hajicek along with 3 other artists are taking their 2nd trip to Italy in June 2008 for nine days of art making!

Art Intersection is series of workshops in northern Tuscany that will cover multi-disciplines of bookmaking, photography, writing, drawing, performance and even yoga.
2008 Workshop Dates are June 4 - 13. Each day will consist of an intersection of interdisciplinary arts: yoga, drawing, poetry, photography, bookmaking, performance, and writing.
Gary and I stopped over to their studio--Alchemy Studios on Sunday where they were showing slides of the trip, talking about the workshops and sampling bruschetta.
I was delirious just seeing the images of the region. So beautiful and no tourists! They stay in the most beautiful countryside towns--one area that has no commerce (although there are nearby towns).

What would that be like to have no cellphones, no interruptions, gorgeous surroundings, fabulous food and the luxury of time to contemplate and make art for 9 days?
I just want to go there and wander around for days and days inhaling and touching everything from the beautiful stone buildings, lush meadows and freshly picked cherries from the nearby orchard.

It really looks like an experience of a lifetime...hmmmm....9 months to figure out how to leave a very demanding paper studio for 9+ days...think, think, think...

Dard Hunter Papermaking Keepsakes

Life really is a series of deja vu's, you know? I'm always the last minute creative with my personal artwork around here. It's the way I always work and it's maddening not only for me but it usually impinges on everyone within a 5 mile radius. This type of last minute creative rush was a killer in grad school when you had to create on demand! So anyhow, the Dard Hunter Papermaking Conference is approaching and while I can't attend this year, I wanted to participate by sending in a keepsake which is 200 of something delicious with handmade paper. Our papermaker, Donna had her paper made--banana, banana and it was beautiful--printed and mailed off before I even got started with mine. She was great at gently reminding me to get busy!

So of course, there I was with the deadline so close I could feel it breathing down my neck when I finally got my idea. Then I had to cut a bazillion circles, letterpress print them, bag them and ship them under extreme pressure. So Gary and Anne got sucked into the whirlwind and we found ourselves stuffing packages and fighting the clock before either Fedex or the post office closed. The post office won since it is open 15 minutes later! Anne was a hoot, she said she felt energized when we just made it under the finish line and that it wouldn't have been the same if I had finished early. Oh yes Anne, that would have been LESS STRESSFUL, oh what a concept.

I had to take of photo of my red press with red ink. I love this little sigwalt press. It is such a happy and cooperative little press!