Last March I joined the first year of the Portland Correspondence Club (PDXCC). It was started in January of 2015 by two mail artists and it's held at the
IPRC in Portland.
I met
Niko, one of the founders, at the
Portland Zine Symposium the summer before and he somehow knew I would love mail art, even though I had never done it before and I didn't think I was that into it. Niko invited me to join and finally after missing the first three months I went to a meeting and found my people and a fun new hobby.
Mail Art people are into mail, envelopes, office supplies, stationary, stamps, stamp pads, typewriters, history, snail mail, writing letters. They're the kind of people who squeal with excitement over a box filled with vintage penny stamps and who hoot and applaud a mailman when he's introduced to the group.
Mail Art people understand when I swoon over a certain washi tape or a get a little obsessed with fountain pens. They get me.
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A banner I made and sent to each member for a Meet Make Mail themed project |
The club meets once a month and each meeting usually includes a few to several vintage typewriters you can use, often there is a skill share or project, but mainly we visit and exchange our faux postage made for that month. Each member gets a passport book and people who make stamps each month put them in your book and often cancel them. It's damn official and fun to see what everyone makes.
Every month members can choose to be a part of the monthly mail art exchange based on a theme.
Here are a few I did in 2015
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This was my first project. The theme was food and this was a study on the different menus on The Titanic. It folds and I sealed the sides before sending. |
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Postcards of a Tea House with images from old photos. The other side has a fake stamp and Tea themed address. This theme was collage |
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October's Mail Art Project
Here are a few of the mail art projects that I received from other members.
Everyone likes getting fun things in the mail. If this interests you, there might be a correspondence club near you. I know there is one in San Francisco and Olympia, Wa.
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