• Art Supply Posse

    58: Snail Mail Superstar Sara McNally

    Sara McNally talks to Kim about snail mail, letterpress printing, and writing in both the bad and the good times.

    Sara McNally is a snail mail enthusiast, letterpress printer, stationery shop owner, and designer.

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    Sara runs her own stationery shop in Seattle, Washington together with currently four employees.

    Visit Sara‘s YouTube channel to get an idea of the diverse activities she gets up to. Hear her read out snail mail letters, and get a view inside her shop with its large printing press.

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    Links

    T-shirt by Snail Mail Superstar

    Constellation Co stationery shop

    Sara‘s YouTube channel

    About Snail Mail Superstar

    Art Supply Posse Mail Art Episode

    InCoWriMo

    Art Supply Posse Website
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    57: Find Your People with Naomi Bulger

    This interview with letter writing enthusiast, and all round creative person Naomi Bulger, is a realist’s take on becoming an artist. It’s very refreshing and inspiring. Give it a listen!

    Audio note: this interview was recorded via Skype, before we were able to improve our audio quality.

    Naomi Bulger is a writer, illustrator and teacher from Melbourne, Australia. Her love for illustration started with reading illustrated children’s books. However, that kind of art was discouraged during her school days. It took a long time for her to find her way back to illustration.

    Naomi has worked in journalism and copywriting, and continues with creative writing in different forms. Mail art is what finally got her back into illustrating. It was a creative outlet during a stressful time. In this interview she tells her story, and shares her thoughts on making your creative pursuits a career. She describes some “dos and don’ts” about creative work and how to get started as an illustrator.

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    ##Topics

    • Naomi’s start as an illustrator

    • Other creative outlets before illustration

    • Going from journalism to illustration and freelancing

    • The positive impact of the Internet

    • Making your creativity a career

    • Pressure and creativity

    • Making time for creativity in everyday life

    • What teaching gives back

    • Preferred mediums

    • Mail art

    • How to get started in illustration

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    Links

    Naomi’s website

    Real Artists Don’t Starve by Jeff Goins

    Elizabeth Gilbert — Big Magic

    Big Magic Review by The Art History Babes — starts at 14:12

    Art Supply Posse Mail Art Episode

    InCoWriMo

    Art Supply Posse Website
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    56: Combing Analogue and Digital Art in Procreate with Brooke Glaser

    A talk about combining analogue and digital art, using the Procreate app, with Brooke Glaser.

    Have you ever scanned your analog artwork, only to be disappointed because the textures and imperfections that made it special have disappeared or been smoothed out?

    Have you tried to create textured backgrounds, like watercolours, with software? This is particularly true for hand lettering imported to vector apps, which tend to make everything look the same.

    Brooke is an illustrator, surface designer, and art teacher. She tells us how particularly the Procreate app has changed the way she creates illustrations, and compares it to the “olden days“ using Photoshop.

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    Procreate is currently only available for the iPad, where it has become the most popular drawing application among professionals. It’s so affordable though at $10 currently that anyone who can afford an iPad can also afford the app. Photoshop costs more than that per month.

    Brooke has several classes, currently on Skillshare. She has an excellent beginners introduction to Procreate, and a class showing how to combine analogue with digital art in Procreate.

    Brooke’s website:
    https://www.brookeglaser.com/

    YouTube:
    https://www.youtube.com/channel/UChfjFIaQtd514PWnPzfj8xg

    Instagram:
    http://instagram.com/paperplaygrounds

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    Get a two month free Skillshare trial using Brooke’s affiliate link:

    https://www.skillshare.com/r/profile/Brooke-Glaser/406861

    Credits

    Interview by Kim Cofield.
    Audio editing and show notes by Marcus Clearspring.

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    55: All the Colours and Beyond – Tetrachromacy with Concetta Antico

    ​​All the Colours and Beyond – Tetrachromacy with Concetta Antico

    ​​
    Kim Interviews Concetta Antico. Artist, art teacher and true tetrachromat. Concetta can see up to 100 million more colours than almost anyone else in the world. Concetta’s abilities have been verified scientifically, and researched for six years, at the time of this interview.

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    Concetta has been using her unique gift for 25 years to teach others how to see more colours and to paint in oils.

    Most people have three colour receptors. We are generally trichromats. Tetrachromacy is a genetic mutation, resulting in a fourth colour receptor. However, having the fourth colour receptor does not make someone a true tetrachromat. Among the very few tetrachromats there are differences as to how many colours each person perceives. Concetta also has an extraordinarily high luminance factor, meaning she sees a lot more light. She sees more colours in low light, or semi darkness.

    The physical ability is only the beginning. As Concetta explains, most of her extraordinary colour perception results from her environment and “visual training” as an artist. She has been painting continuously since the age of six.

    Originally from Australia, Concetta shares her time between San Diego, California and Australia. Concetta mainly works in oils because she finds she can mix greater nuances of colour with oil paints.

    Concetta didn’t discover her tetrachromacy until her daughter started reporting signs of colour deficiency. Tetrachromats can genetically pass on their fourth colour receptor, as Concetta’s mother presumably did to Concetta and her sister, but it can also result in colour deficiency, as with Concetta ‘s daughter. Concetta tells the fascinating story of how she started realising she might not be like everyone else and how that lead to university research studies being done today. Kim and Concetta also discuss how tetrachromacy is part genetics, part learned and environmental.

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    Episode Topics

    • Oil painting
    • Oil paints and tetrachromacy
    • Tetrachromacy, life, and science
    • Discovering tetrachromacy
    • Early support
    • Teaching colour based on light values
    • Teaching, art shows, and press
    • Seeing tetrachromacy in other artists’ work
    • Artistic “style” versus actually seeing colours differently
    • Could trichromats (“normal people”) learn to use colour like a true tetrachromat?
    • How living in both US and Australia has affected her art
    • Advice to new oil painters
    • Contact information and final words

    Website

    home

    Facebook

    https://www.facebook.com/ConcettaKAntico/

    Instagram

    https://www.instagram.com/concettaantico/

    Scientific information on tetrachromacy

    The mystery of tetrachromacy

    Credits

    Interview by Kim Cofield.
    Audio editing, show notes and intro by Marcus Clearspring
    Show notes by Ylva Staberg

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    54: Rachel Hazell The Travelling Bookbinder

    Kim interviews Rachel Hazell “The Travelling Bookbinder”, who teaches how to make artist books.

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    About Rachel Hazell

    Rachel Hazell travels the world teaching people how to make artist books. She has built a giant two meter tall book for a fashion design exhibit which visitors wrote in, and which travelled the world. Rachel has visited Antarctica three times, teaching sailors to write poetry on a Navy ship, and working as “Postmistress and Penguin Monitor” (her official job title, obviously).

    Artist Books

    Artist books vary from regular books in their materials which are often customised with hand drawn or hand printed designs. The materials can be very diverse and even feature found objects. Artist books can be unique one-off books, or handmade by a book bindery in small runs, but are generally not mass produced. Artist books push the boundaries of bookbinding and challenge your expectations of what a book can be.

    Rachel’s book titled “Bound” has easy to follow projects showing you how to make artist books. It is available from your local bookshop and online.

    Links

    Rachel’s website and courses: https://www.thetravellingbookbinder.com/

    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetravellingbookbinder/

    Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/travellingbookbinder

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    Credits

    Photography: Susan Bell, Jane Massey.