Monday, September 23, 2024

It’s an Aerogram!

Do you remember aerograms?  Aerograms were a single sheet of paper with gummed edges that had to be folded and sealed.   No enclosures were permitted, and you could not even use tape to seal them.  The cost was less than sending an airmail letter.   

In 1985, aerograms came franked with 36¢ postage.  It cost more than sending a postcard via airmail (33¢) but less than an airmail letter (44¢). The cost difference today seems quite insignificant even considering it was nearly 40 years ago.  But when you’re a student, you’ll always do something to save a few cents. 

 

You could fill the aerogram with as much writing as you could fit — write small or better yet, use a typewriter.  The rule was you just couldn’t put anything inside an aerogram. 

 

In the 1990s, as more people started having access to email, the aerogram was destined to become obsolete.  The U.S. Postal Service discontinued them in 2006.  In Britain they lasted until 2012. Very few countries offer them anymore. Australia still has them for sale. 

At a recent San Francisco Correspondence Co-op meeting I found these unused aerograms on the swap table. I knew I had to take them to do a series of mail art. I wonder if some of my recipients will even know what aerograms are.


  


Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Lead the Way!

 

Monday was Labor Day, and I spent the holiday working. My task was to print over 100 postcards with hand carved rubber stamps reminding everyone to vote for freedom, democracy, sanity and our future.   Vote Kamala Harris!   This batch was dropped off at the post office yesterday.




Friday, July 5, 2024

Via Sea Turtle Mail

Inspired by the new sea turtle postage stamps from the USPS, I started carving some rubber stamps and the results are now on the way.










Thursday, June 27, 2024

Forest Mandala

 

Forest Mandala mixed media on paper, 14”x16”
 
The series continues and now you can imagine looking up into the treetops.

Sunday, June 9, 2024

A new view of a Kelp Forest


 
Kelp Forest, mixed media, ink on paper, 9"x12"

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

A Fragile Planet

Fragile Planet, mixed media on paper, 14”x16”
 
The latest in my new series that includes layers of rubber stamping and ink.   Prints, etc, are available of this image on Society 6.

Saturday, May 25, 2024

Working on a new series....


Rose, (approx. 10"x10", ink on paper)

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

Harriet Tubman


As soon as I saw the USPS’s new series of Underground Railroad stamps, I knew I had to make some mail art. 

Friday, March 8, 2024

Dragons! Dragons! Dragons!



My Year of the Dragon mail art piece has been going around the world. And I have been receiving mail art celebrating the Lunar New Year as well.
  1. Fleur Helsingor has incorporated an Oakland mural into her piece.
  2. Sabela Baña sent a very happy looking dragon card.
  3. Gina Visione created a very regal looking dragon.
  4. Jennie Hinchcliff did a commemorative artist stamp sheet.
  5. R.F. Côté’s latest issue of Circulaire 132 features the set of dragons I mailed off to Québec.   
  6. Ryosuke Cohen newest Brain Cell has my dragon in the mix as well.
I anticipate a few more dragons will be arriving in my P.O. box soon. 

Thursday, February 8, 2024

Happy Year of the Dragon

 

As soon as I got my Lunar New Year’s stamps from the USPS I started carving rubber stamps for a new series of Dragon Mail Art.

Monday, February 5, 2024

Читаю заборонені книги — I Read Banned Books

A sheet of artist stamps on the way to Ukraine for an artist call for an upcoming exhibit.


 

Monday, January 22, 2024

Blue Heron Lake


To celebrate the renaming of Golden Gate Park’s Stow Lake to Blue Heron Lake I created an artist stamp for this month’s meeting of the San Francisco Correspondence Coop.







Wednesday, January 10, 2024

What to do with Add-n-Passes? Make a Zine!


There was a time when I liked add-n-passes as part of receiving and sending mail art.   The idea is that you add something to a piece of mail art and then send it on and so forth.  Eventually it returns to the original sender.   I even started a few myself.   In 2012 I launched an add-n-pass based on geological layers that got a great response.  I have always found the better ones have some sort of theme.
But like many mail artists, I have gone off the add-n-pass. In my opinion, scrawling “add-n-pass” on a piece of paper and mailing it to me, is far from the idea of mail art.  It all reminds me of those cursed chain letters when I was a kid.
I still like doing truly collaborative pieces with other mail artists, but the add-n-pass is usually annoying.  On a rare occasion when I receive one that is all but finished, I will complete it and return to the original sender.  Nowadays I scavenge the good bits for one of mail art, artist scrapbooks (see image below ).
The new year began with a brilliant solution to the add-n-pass problem.   I received this little zine from Josh Ronsen made from add-n-pass scraps and I LOVE it.   Josh has come up with a great way to start my mail art year.