Showing posts with label stamps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stamps. Show all posts

Monday, September 30, 2013

Creative Energy

I stumbled across this article on the internet, about the paradoxical traits of creative people.  I very much relate to these traits, especially this one:

Creative people have a great deal of physical energy, but they're also often quiet and at rest.

In the flurry of busyness leading up to a huge concert this weekend, I find myself working on cards.  I enjoy looking at the stamps as mini artworks and thinking about their journey on a letter, from Japan to someone here.  From that person who carefully kept them and gave them to me, and from me to someone else buying the cards to yet another person.  They may take one short look and toss in the recycling or keep it in a box, who knows?  That part doesn't bother me.  I just like the idea of the creative energy that is released into the universe.








Wednesday, March 19, 2008

How long does it take to make a card?



People often ask, "How long does it take to make a card?"

That's a hard question to answer. Rarely do I start making one card and finish it and that's it. I usually work them in batches - sometimes up to 100 at once. Some cards take a loooong time, if you consider how I acquire the materials to make them.

I started making "Kitte Kimono" cards years ago when I found I had inadvertently started a stamp collection from all the letters I sent and received in Japan. I love Japanese stamps, but do not consider myself a collector. My interest is purely aesthetic. I also love that these stamps came from somewhere far away, some time long ago and was the link between people.

When friends and acquaintences found out that I make these cards, they started giving me more stamps. Some are very old. I imagine they came on letters from Japan, like the ones my grandmother used to send to my mother in the days before email and when phone calls were only for emergencies. This was the only connection between them. Letter-writing used to be an artform, not to be taken lightly. People used to think carefully before they would write things down, penmanship was valued. As much as I love the convenience of email, I miss getting letters from friends.

Anyway, back to cards... Each card is unique, each stamp chosen carefully. And I haven't even talked about the "kimono" part of the card - each stamp is mounted on silk fabric from vintage kimono from Japan... Maybe an even longer story there.

Maybe it is a lot of work for just a card. But someone will buy this card to send a message to someone else, and that makes me happy.

Monday, January 21, 2008

Why I Make Art


I make art for the same reasons I play taiko. I can't help it.

So I found out that people are making my art into clothing. Emi thought I would be mad, but I was delighted! (I make stuff out of other people's art all of the time.)

Why I make cards...

When I first moved to Japan, I lived in a tiny fishing village. I was 22 and terribly lonely. It was the first time that I lived alone, and I discovered that mail became my obsession (this was the days before email - yes, I'm that old). Every day I would check the mailbox for a precious letter, a message from home, a reminder from the universe that I was still alive!

I love to send mail. I love everything about mail. Stamps, envelopes, putting pen to paper, cards. (Actually my obsession with envelopes started really early, but that's a story for another day.)

I make art so that I can send mail.