Invitation - Finishing

Heather,
The kid who shot the image above went to Hopkins from '96 to 2000, so Pia and Jon's year. Then ended up at MICA from '04 to '05.
Know him?
I don't.
A.
i dont think i do. but you should ask pia or jon. between them, they knew everybody worth knowing.
his pictures are very decay-heavy. i guess that's the work you make when you live in bmore.
In the same vein - Modern Art Notes on the Whitney's Biennial advertising.
A.
oh! how elaborate! how many are you making?
Well, we thought we were keeping it simple. But I guess this is just what happens when a printmaker weds a writer...
We are making about 75 or 80, but only need to actually mail about 55. We figure we'll want some overage for the figurative "scrapbook" and that given this many passes through the press, there will be significant shrinkage.
A.
Element,
I thought so too, so I swiped it from Cavalier of Odds. The version Jana posted is much too low-res to scale up--but drop her a line, she might take you up on your offer to buy.
A.
this product does nothing other than cause fear (and rip you off).
Syl, you think that's bad?
I saw an ad on American Inventor last night for another new Clorox product--this one, truly terrifying. It's called Clorox Anywhere and the ad depicts a mom running around spraying this "sanitizing spray" on EVERYTHING in her home.
And I mean EVERYTHING--on fruit inside her fridge--on her kid's highchair while the kid is in it (overspray clearly hits his/her face)--on computer equipment--everywhere.
They claim that it's "as gentle as water, yet strong enough to kill 99.9% of bacteria".
Which sounds to me like, "consume our chemical water and the new mass-fear prevelant in our society (bankrolled by a corrupt government), will just melt away".
What a sad and dark age we're entering,
A.
4 Comments:
I can't even begin to understand all the steps involved in these invitations, but they have now made me feel like I can never ever settle for generic invatiations when I plan my own wedding....
*the bar has been set!*
Oh, and they look beautiful!!
just a warning, paige. as soon as you begin saying to yourself that you will not "ever settle for generic [insert generic item here]" when planning a wedding, you embark on a journey 193487502976546845 times more treacherous and exhausting. at every turn, andy and i have insisted on not settling for that which can be had on theknot.com. while it has already begun to make a difference (and we've still got six and a half weeks to go), it has also enslaved us.
i am beginning to see why people write how-to wedding guides after getting married--they cant stand the thought of all those lessons learned going to waste. it feels tragic.
Thanks Paige.
Only problem with making them so beautiful? None of our guests will return the RSVP cards--they just won't give them up.
But happy to set any bar,
A.
This is great info, Very helpful. Thanks for sharing.
Ergonomic Office Chair
Post a Comment
Hide Comments