counter on myspace

here...
about
archive
comment

& elsewhere!
website
shop
twitter
pinterest
instagram
facebook
last.fm
wishlist

/////////////////////


myrtle
museum of craft & folk art

/////////////////////


artists / designers
books
correspondence
etsy
events
favorites
flowers
handmade
los angeles
loveliness
music
paper & type
patterns
type
wishlist
work in progress

/////////////////////


3191 miles apart
blue pool road
bonnie tsang
design*sponge
grain edit
grtsctt
jennifer young
jessica comingore
jia-chi
justina blakeney
lauren lists
mint design blog
oh joy!
oh so beautiful paper
old brand new
paper pastries
present & correct
ra architecture
satsuki shibuya
studio sweet studio
sweet fine day
under consideration
uppercase magazine
watchwork

  • December 30, 2011

    Writing regularly to several people—a parent, a friend who’s moved to another coast, a daughter or son away at college—requires one to keep separate mental ledgers, storing up the weather or the idle thoughts or the disasters we need to pass on. We’re always getting ready to write. The letters out and back become a correspondence, and mysteriously take on a tone of their own: some rambly and comfortably boring; others cool and funny; some financial; some confessional. They stick in the mind and seem worth the trouble.

    –from “Life and Letters” by Roger Angell for The New Yorker