Sunday, January 25, 2009

My favorite image



This photo-montage was created a couple of years ago using a photo of Mt Hood and a cherry tree taken at David Douglas High School, which is right across the street from our apartment. When you come out our front door, you can see Mt Hood looming over the roof of the high school. Very "Portlandian." So I cropped out the backgrounds of the mountain and the cherry tree, slapped 'em together on a sky-blue background, and airbrushed a happy cloud in, adding the caption "Home Sweet Home," in the font Arid.

To me, this image just breathes "Portland." It's so fresh and springy, you can almost smell the blossoms on the tree. Portland Chamber of Commerce, could you use a new marketing image??

Makes a great souvenir! Go get yours a www.cafepress.com/feelgoodgraphix

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Getting the word out

First I was a graphic designer.

No, that's not strictly true. First I was a clerical worker, a drone who took dictation, cut paychecks and answered office phones. When I was in my mid-30s and realized that I had already spent 15 years of my life doing work I hated, I put some real thought into where I wanted the rest of my life to go. I spent hours at the library researching careers, and decided that art was really the only subject that interested me deeply and exhaustively. Anything else -- business, journalism, cosmetology -- might hold my interest for periods, but not really set my life on fire, you know?

So I decided to go back to school and become a graphic artist. I got an associate's degree in 1993 in Visual Communications. I got a job at the Salem, Oregon, Statesman Journal newspaper and worked there for 11 years, creating ads, flyers and catalogs.

And then I moved from Salem to Portland, a distance of about 50 miles. I commuted that distance (actually 106 miles round trip per day) for two years. When gas prices reached $2.00 per gallon and mileage was costing me $200 per month, I finally resigned.

Fortunately, I had a Mac computer, and could still design, if only on my own time. I was creating some pretty cool images and had no outlet for them until I found CafePress. It felt like a marriage made in heaven. Here was a site that would let me upload all my designs, would do all the work printing them up for me and shipping them, and would pay me money besides!

So I signed up. I decided that the point of creating my shop was to make people feel good, so I called it FeelGood Graphics. I created a benign, grandmotherly logo to convey the idea that my designs were like little cinnamon rolls of joy being served up for your delight. I went on a tear uploading everything I had on my computer, creating coffee mugs, t-shirts, tote bags and posters by the dozen. I had found my niche.

Now all I needed was to get the word out.

I don't think of myself as a blogger.

But new challenges require new solutions.

I am a 54-year-old married woman living in Portland, Oregon. I have recently begun selling products on CafePress.com, and I would love to make a profit on this venture.

So I've decided to write about the experience of setting up a shop, designing products, and the stories behind the designs. I hope to give readers some insight into my goals, why I create the things I do, and to convince at least some of you to support me and my products.

The name of the shop is FeelGood Graphix at http://www.cafepress.com/feelgoodgraphix
It's a labor of love in every sense of the word; combining my love of graphics with my desire to communicate the love and beauty I see in the world. I want to let everyone know that if they believe, they can achieve. I want people to see the beauty in each other, across party and across religious lines. I want to Save the World One Mousepad at a Time.