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Monthly Archives: September 2012

I was recently listening to The Story podcast, in particular, the segment on Evan Kalish’s quest to visit as many post offices as he can.  He started visiting as many post offices as he could in order to maybe, kind of, help save them, or at least commemorate them in some way.  And hey, I like that idea!  I think I might like to try something similar as I also am rather fond of the USPS.

Apparently, if the post office is open, Evan will go in and request a hand stamp cancellation.  Normally, that would mean the post office would have to collect it and deliver it to the address, which I guess they’re not doing as Evan walks out with the hand cancelled whatever he brought.  The post office makes an exception if you’re asking for a hand stamp for philatelic reasons.  If the post office is not open, I guess he counts it as “visited” if he actually touches the building.

Welp, I think this could be more interesting if the post office were actually going to deliver the stuff they’re hand cancelling.  So, what if I were to get postcards of the area the post office is located and then send them to myself?  Maybe I could get whoever was hand stamping it to also sign it?  And then, if I couldn’t be at the post office while it was open, I could drop off the postcard in a mailbox?  It wouldn’t be hand stamped, but that’s ok.  I would get mail!  I could get so much mail!  Never mind that I would really just be sending myself mail.

I think…I might actually do this.

I also like asking myself rhetorical questions.

Yes, I participated in another swap.  It’s been a long time.  This particular swap was interesting too.  It was a flat mail swap over six weeks, i.e. one piece of flat mail each week for six weeks.  But…I ended up making something that was not flat for the last week.  Enter the mini petunia card!

Why petunias?  My swap partner is a fan of them.  I have rather fond memories of petunias as well.  I remember my mother used to have petunias in her garden when I was little.  I realized early on that petunias give a satisfying pop feeling when you pull the petals off from the rest of the plant.  My mother did not grow petunias after that.

Anyway, petunias blossoms are interesting in that they have five or so petals that are fused together (which is why they’re so satisfying to pop off the rest of the plant), so you can’t construct them like other flowers.  It’s hard to get that fused look if you paste a bunch of different petals together.  But!  I found this site, which specializes in making dollhouse furnishings and they had a tutorial on how to make a tiny pot of petunias.  It was perfect for what I was thinking of, size and everything.

You can find the directions on the site I linked.  They have pretty good instructions and photos documenting the whole process.  I did change a few things.  I used various weights of paper.  I didn’t do a paint dot in the middle.  I just used more white pen.  Or whatever colored pen I was using.  I made some various blues and golds as well.  My heart punch actually has a couple (which means “two” and is not synonymous with “a few”) different sizes on it, which meant I could have different sized leaves.  I also used green pipe cleaners instead of floral wire because I had it on hand.  And since I didn’t use a quick drying glue, but instead my normal stupid tacky glue (that takes forever to dry and that I’m trying to get rid of but for some reason it’s a bottomless bottle), the fuzz on the pipe cleaners helped keep flowers and leaves in place while the glue dried.  The fuzz also meant that I didn’t have to use any “soil” in my flower pot, which kept the card front nice and light and capable of standing up on its own.  Also, I like the fuzziness of pipe cleaners.

Confetti!

Assembled flowers. I do realize that petunias don’t grow on vines, but it’s easier to assemble when you pretend they do.

I didn’t get a shot of the flowers drying in the foam. I actually lost a few (more than two) of them in the foam when I accidentally pressed too hard with my stylus (it came with my Silhouette) and the foam swallowed up the flower.  The foam I used is actually marketed for making your own seat cushions.  It’s pretty cheap to get and I cut it up for various purposes, such as drying petunias or needle felting.

The pot for the flowers was made out of paper and some calculating (arc lengths, segments of radii)  in order to get the correct size for an enclosed bottom and some tabs for gluing everything down.  I think I even saved the template I made for future use.  I was going to make a more traditional looking terracotta flower pot originally, but I decided it took up too much space.  The card is only 4″x6″, after all.

Now remember how I said this was for a swap?  You know how swaps are mailed?  I didn’t have a small box so I devised this to get it through the mail.

I stuffed that into a manilla envelope sandwiched between two thin pieces of cardboard.  Arrived at the destination just fine.