My print studio, which used to be my breakfast nook, is just 57.13 square feet. Yes, I measured it. Yes, it’s tiny. But it is enough space for 12 screens, almost as many squeegees, a printing table, a chest of drawers that holds paper and fabric, and a shelves that contain miscellaneous supplies. I recently […]

Sometimes you work on a complex repeat print and realize – after you’ve printed it – that you prefer a simpler version. That’s what happened here. This weekend was like that, too. I had a number of activities planned, but I woke up on Sunday morning exhausted. I needed the simpler version of a weekend.

After last week’s post about the figuring out the best ways and places to sell my work, a few people directed me to information about selling wholesale. But they didn’t realize that I’ve sold wholesale before – and in a big way. From 2000-2004, I had a wholesale stationery business. I sold nationally, to stores

I’ve long wanted a studio of my own, one separate from my home and all to myself. But San Francisco is expensive. A friend’s studio rent increased by 50% in one year; there is nothing close to public transportation or my home (I find driving daily wasteful) that is affordable. And, honestly, I’m not making

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