Posts Tagged ‘letter writing’

Letters in the mail

Posted January 13, 2012 by
in Beautiful Creations, Cabinet of Curiosities | Add your comment »

On the heels of Snail Mail My Email, Dialogus, and the many pen pal match-making sites comes a new initiative called Letters In The Mail.

Through it, people can subscribe to receive weekly letters from writers like Dave Eggers, Margaret Cho, and Jonathan Ames. (The cost is $5 a month, and each subscriber gets the same letter.)

“I got this urge to get back to sending paper letters, and I also knew a lot of authors who I knew would be really excited about it,” founder Stephen Elliott told MSNBC.

If the author decides to include his or her return address, participants are encouraged to write back.

Thanks to Cecilia for passing this on!

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Guest post: Shlomi Harif on letters and artifacts

Posted January 12, 2010 by
in Editorial, Pens, Paper & People | 4 comments »

Guest blogger Shlomi Harif is a transplanted Austinite, poet, writer, cook, and co-chair of the Austin International Poetry Festival. He also contributes to the the Drashpit.com ‘zine, a weekly odd look at portions of the Bible.

Over the winter break I visited the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin with my eleven year old daughter. It’s a very small museum – a person can browse the entire space in the space of an hour.

What caught her eye, and mine, was the exhibit of Edgar Allan Poe’s writings. There’s a thrill seeing his roll-top writing desk, easily deciphering his script when he wrote out a stanza of “The Raven” for a fan. He used a stick pen; India ink stained parts here and there. Little splotches of ink on the pages pulled his ghostly hand into my field of vision: I could see where he stopped, dipped, blotted. Where he paused, then resumed writing. There were numerous letters to and from friends, memos to publishers, cryptic messages to lovers.

In today’s digital world we’ve lost these physical scraps of our footprint on this world: they’re relegated to inboxes and folders, or printed out in some grim, relentlessly linear typeface like zombie handwriting. I’ve postcards and letters from when I was a summer camper, paper-thin aerogramme envelopes written after I’d moved overseas. Letters my parents received, stamped by military censors. Love letters from my marriage that spanned not quite a generation. Letters from girlfriends whose children are parents. Letters from relatives who’ll never write again.

We’ve lost an amazing connection with our past. Unlike the buggy whip or the clay tablet, written letters are more than just words whose medium has passed. They’re pricelessly annotated: flourishes of the script, cramped little words clearly written in the dark, in haste, stained with tears, grease, or blood. Reducing them to electronic bits, trite acronyms and fractured English sucks the marrow from the bones of their message, leaving a harrowed skeleton without the beauty of a full bodied letter.

Those of us who write in journals, who consecrate our thoughts, ideas and feelings to the printed page are carrying on a sacred tradition, one that blogs, twitter feeds and facebook “walls” can never replace. Nor should they, as the power of our words is diluted, somehow, when they’re cast to the ether’s wind instead of being nestled into an envelope, or blotted into place on a single side of a single page of a singular book.

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The mailbox man

Posted December 4, 2009 by
in Cabinet of Curiosities | 5 comments »

I rediscovered this cute little guy while I was home last week for Thanksgiving. I got him when I was living in Germany; he came in the belly of a Kinder Surprise egg and stayed with me for a couple of years.

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I don’t write or receive as many letters as I did them, but I couldn’t resist bringing him back to New York and giving him a place on my desk. I love how pouty he looks with his mouth closed — here’s what happens when it’s open:

Continue reading »

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Letter openers

Posted April 21, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 6 comments »

letter-opener

When I stopped by Art Brown the other day to pick up some fountain pen supplies, I obviously couldn’t resist having a look around, and I ended up buying something that’s been on my mind for a while: a letter opener. I used to think these were nice, but inessential (and like most city dwellers, I try not to keep too much inessential stuff around the house). Then a couple of weeks ago, I opened an envelope that was taped shut at the top, and almost tore the letter inside.

The carved metal models were cool, but in the end I opted for a light curved wood design. Pretty, right? I figure it might save me a few fingernails, as well.

Do you use a letter opener?

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Fountain pen friendly stationery

Posted March 10, 2009 by
in Pens, Paper & People | 9 comments »

lalo-newsweek

If, as the trend-spotters say, letter writing is making a comeback, I suppose it’s no surprise that our sister company, G. Lalo, was featured recently in a Newsweek roundup of fountain pen-friendly stationery.

I know that many of our you use fountain pens to write on our planners and on Clairefontaine and Rhodia notebooks. Do you ever use them on proper stationery? Karen sent me some blank verge cards last year, which I’ve slowly been going through for thank you notes and special occasions. Using a fountain pen would just make it feel all the more special. Still, I’m not sure I’m ready for a proper “from the desk of” sort of thing…

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