Again I really like the darker art focus in this journal. Good stuff, intriguing.
Category Archives: Uncategorized
New Items on Artfire
I loaded some new items up to my artfire shop. 2 more art covered journals filled with 100% cotton sketchbook paper and original art on the covers.
I listed a dozen new jotter sets with mixed paper inside. The paper ranges from lined paper, graph paper, pink, blue, green, to all sorts of natural shades I usually use. I had a box, a large one, from 10 years of binding of various papers I just didn't have enough of to make a full book. I literally shuffled the pages together to mix them up, and used 15 sheets for each jotter, for a total of 60 pages. Each of these jotters is unique and the mix of papers is individual.
I also listed one NOS or new old stock hedgehog/ moleskine journal. It's covered in this old school leather that reminds me of those old time leather basketballs. I can't find this leather anymore and I used this last piece to make this book, back in 2007. The journal has sat in a wrapper, in a drawer since then. I considered using it, becuase I like the leather that much, but decided against it and listed it again. I've got it up for less than normal.
I also listed 2 more brand new hedgehogs, one with a chocolate brown leather cover filled with cream paper and another with a bomber jacket brown leather filled with pale green paper.
I also re-listed the palomino pencils. These are the last packages I have of the HB and 2b, my favorite sketching softness. After I finish with those I'll list some of the other pencils I have left over from my old website. (Does anyone remember when this used to be a website with stuff for sale? Me either.)
You can follow the links in the text to any of the mentioned items, as always feel free to ask me any questions or for more picture if you're interested.
fall is here

fall is here
Originally uploaded by lessherger
This is my favorite page out of my current art journal. I made it by covering the page in gesso, then writing on it in sharpie, going over that with a very thin coat of gesso. Then I masked out my tree shapes with painters tape, that I cut with an exacto,
I painted over the shapes with yellow acrylic, then put layers of watercolor crayon over the top of that. I used orange red and yellow. I then cut a stencil and a few masks from some old poster I had around. I covered the back in spray glue. I put down the masks where I wanted the yellow colro to stay. I then used the stencil to add layers of green, blue, red, orange, and dark yellow spray inks. My intent was to give the feel of leaves falling.
the layers of color and ink also help to obscure the actual writing with the sharpie, which lifts through the layers of gesso and acrylic to add some visual texture to the painting itself. I like this page a lot because of thes layers of color and meaning.
The journal entry was about how much I love fall but miss being in school.
Lessons Learned the hard way from Selling Online
I've been selling my work online for a long time now, about 10 years. I've sold art, books and even books. I've been the most successful with books. In the early days of eBay I learned a lot; about customer service, how to package for shipping, and creating a listing.
I'm going to write about a failure I had very early in my eBay sales. I had been making books for about 6 months. Religiously. I was single, living alone and was occupying my time with binding books on a daily basis. I was selling the books I was making just to get rid of them so I could make room for new books. I had a problem. Anyway. I had just started working with leather. I had recycled a grey pigskin coat into a cover. I had laminated a really neat Italian printed paper the the inside. I used eyelets on the spine. And thick 100% cotton paper inside. It was one of my first eyelet, long stitch flap closure books (a design that was later stolen from me by an unscrupulous buyer.) I stitched it up, scanned it (the digital camera came later), and listed it on eBay. What I failed to notice was that the leather shrank after binding. I assume it had something to do with the heat activated glue I used to adhere the paper and the humid conditions in my apartment, we'll never know. A week later, the bidding ended and a buyer form Hong Kong wins. I think that he won for a paltry $20. (If I made this book now I'd sell it for close to $50)
As I packaged the journal, I noticed the shrink checked the pics online, it was visible there. So, I mailed it. It wasn't that much- about a millimeter or 2 off the head, or so I told myself.
A week later it arrives to its destination.
I received the most scathing, horrifying and embarrassing email ever. I read the email as the pics downloaded (I was on dial up) and immediately felt awful. The email was completely over the top, included 9 hi res pics, and details about why I sucked both as a binder and as a person as well as some very outlandish requests, the least of which was that I go f*ck myself. I got really really angry. First at him , then at me. I noticed the issue, checked it online, but didn't notify the buyer. Which should have been my first course of action. Secondly I didn't have a return policy. I allowed the guy to return the item and sold it to the next person down the list, with the declaration of the issue. They got a steal and I learned a lesson.
First valuable lesson: Always have a return policy. It must be clear, easily understood and specific. Mine is simple: Don't like it return it in the same condition it arrived. Shipping is not refunded, the cost of item will be refunded after I receive the item and inspect it. I will not refund it someone's kids, pets or elderly parents damage it. (That last bit is not a joke, I am so glad I'm not selling on eBay anymore.)
Second Valuable Lesson: Be honest in the listing. Before listing, inspect the item for imperfections. If there are any, list them. Include a photo that shows the imperfection. Better yet, don't list it. If possible put only top quality merch up. Otherwise you can get a reputation of listing second rate crap. I have a section of my shop called "seconds." If I need to get rid of my seconds I list them there at a discount price. Most of the time though, I use them as promo for my shop.
These lessons are from custom orders, Etsy and Artfire in more recent years:
Third Valuable Lesson: Get a feel for buyers and know your limitations. Just because I CAN make a journal doesn't mean I have time, the energy or the ability to comply with every request that comes into my inbox. I have a list of binders that I know and trust will do great work for people. I send the requests for things I don't do or can't handle at a given moment. (I don't do pink, sparkly, bedazzled stuff, don't even ask.) I am no longer shy about saying no.
Fourth Valuable Lesson: No money yet, no ship. End of story. I have $40 in books essentially stolen from me becuase I believed someone to be honest when she said that she would pay me after a paypal mistake was fixed. My mistake. It'll never happen again. Paypal fouled up? Sorry. I'll hold the books until it clears up. I had a check bounce and I was charged $25, each time the bank tried to cash it. They try 3 times. My $10 sale cost me $75. Personal checks not accepted. I have to remember that to many people I'm a faceless seller on etsy and artfire. I'm not a person. I'm not someone they know. I try and personalize my studio and listings but it can go only so far. In short some people don't care about screwing over someone they don't know.
Fifth Valuable Lesson: Be clear about shipping costs. People love to bitch about shipping costs. Journals are made of paper and paper is heavy, so shipping is going to be high. I charge as close to exact shipping as possible. I add a small amount on to cover packing materials and I try to collect recycled packing materials at work. I gather up large amounts of bubble wrap there and I buy large envelopes by the 500 count case to keep costs down. I try to ship priority more often than not because it's a flat rate. I often return the extra money.
I'm sure I can come up with more lessons learned the hard way, but for now I'm done. Feel free to leave your lessons in the comments.
Technique: Backgrounds multiple techniques using gesso
MIllande has a great video on many different background techniques,watch the video for some inspiration, these are a little more involved than the last dfew techniques I’ve put up here but I like them.
You Are Here

You Are Here
Originally uploaded by Mandy L.
I'm really digging on Mandy's mixed media work. Her collages use a plethora of daily refuse and I'd love to see her work on a glue book but love the individual pieces as much as I'd love them in book form. (hint hint) Her work in fun head over to flickr and check it out. (She also does a zine and is a poet.)
Inspiration: Layers in your journals
This is a basic layers tutorial. I particularly like how she did the back ground. A layer of a flat color and then edges done in black and then rubbed off. then elements are collaged on top of that. then rub on designs over hat and journaling added.
SamanthaKira: Sticking pages
It's a well known issues for art journalers, like myself, who work with heavy body acrylic paints- liquitex and golden that they stick to the previous page if there is one ounce of acrylic on it. And forget it if you apply heat. The pages are done. Samantha gives some good tips. I've got a few of my own. First If you work in acrylic go over the page with watercolor crayons, a think layer spread out with water on a brush helps to keep the pages from sticking. As will a layer of nupastels, artstix or colored pencil. In the art journal I did previous to the current journal I used layers of a 50/50 mix of bee's wax and parafin. I made a palm sized cake of it and would rub it over the top of my dried pages. After that I would buff it into the page with a rag. If I wanted a really heavy layer of the wax I'd heat the page with my heat gun and rub it onto the warmed page, then I'd heat it again and buff. I get very little sticking in that journal and I worked some pages very impasto.
Sketchbuch on flickr

DSC_0248
Originally uploaded by Sketchbuch
I'm in love with this guy's work. I"ve just spent the last 20 minutes clicking through the links on his flickr stream and I really suggest hat you do to, the pages are simply wonderful. I've put his work up here before but that doesn't mean something great shouldn't be repeated, and it's tribute to how much I really like his work. follow the link and check it out.
Formations Art Journaling tumblr feed
My "frustration" art journal page is featured on the formations Tumblr feed. There are lots of other artists too. Head over and check it out here.