COLLABORATION WITH: MARCO, ELIZABETH, AMANDA + COSMO

Last year Elizabeth got in touch to discuss a collaboration for her husband, Marco. As an anniversary gift, she gave him a tattoo by the incomparable Amanda Wachob (please check out her work here and a profile over at Design*Sponge here.) Marco chose the Latin phrase "Ut Amen Et Foveam" which means "So that I love and cherish." Elizabeth writes: "It's a memorial to our sweet little chihuahua Cosmo who tragically passed away last March at only 7 years old." (Shrine to Cosmo on the left.) Amanda weilds a tattoo needle like a paintbrush and I love her interpretation of my calligraphy: fluid and, in Elizabeth's words  "masculine, charming and romantic." Thanks so much to Elizabeth, Marco, Amanda, Loris and the late and beloved Cosmo.

{Photo of tattoo by Loris Guzzetta}

JENNY + ANDREW

Today Design*Sponge featured the design details of Jenny and Andrew's Colorado wedding. I worked with the couple, Mr. Boddington's and designer/stylist Jolene Sullivan for almost a year, from addressing the save-the-dates to creating a custom seating "star" chart and countless goodies in between. As you can tell from the glorious photos by Tec Petaja, it was an intimate affair. By the time I finished the last star place card, I felt as though each and every guest was a personal friend. Jolene Sullivan is a gifted planner, who has such a delicate and understated touch (as I attest!). Hop over to her site to see more photos of the rehearsal dinner and the big day. Thank you go Grace, Jolene, Jenny + Andrew and all of the stellar vendors who created such a special day.

Venue: DUNTON HOT SPRINGS in Colorado
Photography by TEC PETAJA
Event Planning, Design + Styling by JOLENE SULLIVAN
Fine China Rentals by Les Tableaux
(The fine china included: DAVID STARK for WEST ELM “Wood Slices” china + HERMAR brushed-gold flatware + ROOST “Birch” glassware)
Gold Zig-Zag Tray + Paper Bowls + Vases by Chicago ceramicist UP IN THE AIR SOMEWHERE
Flowers by STUDIO CHOO + SAIPUA + NICOLETTE CAMILLE + MAGPIE & RYE
Paper goods by MR. BODDINGTON’S STUDIO

KATE + MARTIN

Kate and Martin sent over these pretty photos of their bucolic outdoor wedding. They put such thought and care into each invite, dip-dying them, then screenprinting the text and wrapping everything up with twine and a dip-dyed card with the guests' name. I adore the pen and ink drawing and watercolor of the venue by their architect friend Don Briggs (and would like to move in to one of the cabins he designed). What a stunning idea! Many thanks to Kate and Ryan Wilcox of You Look Nice Today photography.

{Photos 1 and 2 by Kate; photo 3 by You Look Nice Today}

BRIE + DAVID

Style Me Pretty was kind enough to share these photos of Brie and David's Jamaican wedding by the ace photographer Raquel Reis.  I worked with the couple to create an entirely hand-calligraphed invitation suite (thanks to Nina + Jon for setting the trend) with a silkscreened muslin bag. It looks like such a fun, intimate beach party, and I just can't get over the moon behind the clouds. Thanks to the happy bride and groom, Raquel and SMP!

KATIE + JOSH

How thrilling to share these photos from Katie and Josh's summer wedding. The couple + Suann of Simplesong Design + Ritzybee Events + photographer Bryan Johnson + florist Sidra Forman = what a vision! It was delightful working with them.

As I was thumbing through the photos let me tell you what blew my mind. The breakfast pictured above. I didn't know what the menu and place cards would be used for at the time but now I get it. And if I have surmised correctly, somebody had the foresight to arrange for a quiet moment the morning of the big day on a grassy lawn where the couple could enjoy each other's company, and a delicious meal-- the calm before the storm. Genius. I won't get into what I was doing the morning of my wedding but let's just say it involved floral tape and chalk pens.

Huge props to the folks responsible for this idea, and for executing it -- and the entire day -- so beautifully. And heaps of thanks to Suann, Ritzybee, Bryan and Southern Weddings (which featured the day over here).

{Photos courtesy of A. Bryan Johnson Photo}

NORRINDA + FAREED

When Norrinda passed along these shots of her envelopes taken by the gifted Max Wagner it sent me on a surprisingly emotional trip down memory lane.

I worked with Norrinda and Fareed over two years ago-- they were some of my first clients, and Philadelphia locals. This is what I remember: 1. The couple had the most specific and beautiful ideas about stamps. They wanted a collage of marigold and fuschia and were committed to showcasing the spectrum of beautiful black heritage postage. These Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and W.C. Handy stamps were the perfect fit (along with a slew of others). 2. Norrinda is just a wildly radiant person, and this radiance has been well-documented in the tremendous press she's garnered from the cupcake empire she started with her mother and grandmother, Brown Betty Dessert Boutique. Every time she appeared at the door it was as though I was being visited by the Patron Saint of Creative and Intellectual Pursuits (she is also a practicing attorney).

And finally, as you can read on their wedding blog, Norrinda and Fareed both come from tight-knit families who are bedrocks of their urban communities. This was immediately apparent as I started in calligraphing the guestlist and, as I've snapped above (but changed the house numbers), guests literally lived right next door to one another, or down the street, or around the block. Envelope after envelope of the same zip code. At a certain point I put down my pen and -- this is one of the few times I remember this happening -- and I teared up thinking about these two communities on both coasts who, with their love and support, shaped these two remarkable, visionary young people.

So! You can see more photos of the celebration of this love and community on Max Wagner's blog. And, next up, a little collaboration with Brown Betty. Thank you, Norrinda, Fareed, Max, 90047 and 19131.

Collaboration with: Dagstani + Sons

I am over the moon happy to share this project with Raj Dagstani of Dagstani and Sons: A Very Fine Fruit Company (who is a collaborator par excellence and found me through Ingrid).

Raj got in touch to collaborate on a little thank you card that would be sent along with his small batch, artisanal preserves, marmalades and jams. Once in a blue moon a collaborator comes along whose craft and passion is so obvious that it doesn't make sense to exchange money. And so, we traded "jam sessions" subscriptions (for us, for friends) for calligraphy. I waited to open this month's box, which included the card printed by the talented Thomas Printers, until the morning before I left for Santa Fe. It was my reward for completing a heap of projects before the new year. Every aspect - from the packaging to the three color + one blind press labels-- is so thoughtful. As I was readying to dig in to the Cranberry Raspberry it occurred to me that it'd be much better shared which meant swaddling it in my suitcase and bringing it to New Mexico where Andrew and I savored it on toast from Sage Bakery in celebration of our 10 year anniversary. (We are saving the Pear Vanilla).

I'm not sure what magic Raj possess, but every spoonful contains an alchemical mix of delight, comfort, and love.  I can think of no better gift to give or receive, and no more worthy enterprise to support. Here's to another year of satisfying, inspiring collaborations

SABINE

Here's what happened: Tumblr has been incredibly good to me. Many Tumblrs have kindly posted about my work, very often this tattoo. I am, and remain, grateful. Curious, I crawled out from underneath my rock and clicked about. I was startled. Image after image of really thin girls. Girls from the back, with jutting shoulder-blades. Girls from the side, with emaciated ribs. Girls lounging on yachts, with hip bones taking up most of the frame. Quotes about being skinny, then getting skinnier. Apparently this is called "thinspiration" -- thinspo for short. I can't bring myself to explore this topic any further. I once scrolled through this discussion over at The Sartorialist and vowed never again. It has nothing to do with big or small. Rather, it is how we see and notice and document beauty in the world. There's no reason to defend what we see and notice and document, but what we see and notice and document speaks volumes about who we are.

Overwhelmed, I retreated back under my rock shaking my head, feeling out of touch with this particular audience and what they chose to notice. I love Andrea's story, and the much larger sentiment she so eloquently expressed transcended the immaterial coincidence that she has a slender frame.

So you can imagine my whoop of happiness when Sabine offered to share these photos of her tattoo, and the touching story below. This is what I know from reading lifestyle and fashion blogs over the years: this tattoo may not tumble its way through the internet, it will not be reposted and "liked" and tweeted and integrated into an inspiration board and cooed over in the comments. And I could care less. To me, it is perfect, it is heartfelt, and it possess a quality lacking in those scores of skeletal women. A quality that Andrea identified, that they both embody, and that we can all recognize, intuitively, when we see it: a spark, a soul.

A few years ago my first panic-attack struck me and to make a long story short: I ended up in a psychosomatic clinic to learn how to deal with the panic and how to trust again in my body, in my heart. Learning, that it's not necessary to maniacally observe the own heartbeat. And now, some years later, I can finally deal with that. This year was quite a good year, with loads of challenges and great adventures. I travelled to Latin America and Africa (and to those that know me in person: two years ago that would have been an impossible idea even to think about!!), my job is challenging but good, I feel healthy and strong, I love my life, my husband, my friends and family. It's not that the panic is gone forever, but I am stronger than the panic. and that's why I wanted to get inked again, with a kind of mantra: live&breathe. no fear. That should accompany me, visible for me, on my belly.
 
And then I somehow (via) stumbled upon Mara's blog and the first thing I saw was this lovely and adorable picture. And after that it was clear to me that I want "my" mantra in calligraphy, done by Mara. For me, the first (and also the second and third) sight was breathtaking! I loved to see the words written so beautifully! it took us some drafts and actually I changed some words (the first version has bee too long: live - love - think - breathe. no fear) - but I immediately fell in love with this piece of art!
 
But still: which tattoo artist? And Bastian, my husband, was not so keen on my idea.  At the end, I let fortune decide. In October I had some days off, was cruising in my quarter in Munich and passed Wild at Heart. I showed Anna, the tattoo artist, the draft and asked if she can make it. And she could. Immediately afterwards, I was sure, that I would regret it ("I am 41, a grown-up, why do I need a tattoo?!"; "Oh my god, I got inked on my chubby belly... How will the tattoo look, after having lost weight?" [not so very likely...] etc.). But 2 days later, after the healing began and I could see the beauty, I loved it and I still do! In contrast to my tattoo on my shoulder, I can see this one every day and it reminds me of - and I know that sounds over dramatic - living and breathing! And of the most important: no fear! Thank you so much, Mara!