Friday, May 1, 2026

GOOD READS FOR THESE TIMES






I love a good mystery, even a thriller, but right now, I I'm picking books that are calming, without too much tension, maybe even a little boring, which means they may not always to be found on a recommended list. Normally, part of writing and reading a novel is to experience conflict, danger, or, at least tension that will touch our emotions and keep the reader turning the page. That just seems too much like real life right now. For the same reason, I never watched "The West Wing" because it seemed too close to the news every day and this was before the present administration. I've watched shows from other countries such as Denmark's "Borgen" and Korean historical dramas and though they cover the same kinds of issues as "The West Wing" does, they seem somewhat removed because they are in a different country and in a different language.

Woodblock print on fabric


I moved to New York City right out of college. My first job was as a floater at Mademoiselle Magazine, a magazine now extinct. As a floater, I went from one department to another filling in and trying to find a spot that fit my meager skills. I started in the fabric department and spent time with the Fabric Editor visiting huge manufacturing plants (now extinct) where fabrics were created on cumbersome machines and massive looms. The Fabric Editor's influence created color and design choice trends for the year, though she always pooh-poohed "dumb little florals," a popular design at that time. I then moved downstairs to work in the travel department of Vogue Magazine (Conde Nast owned both magazines) and laughed my way through the often bizarre antics of the super-rich who seemed to spend their time trying to outdo each other.

My last assignment was with the Fiction Editor at Mademoiselle. Sitting right outside of her office, I became her mail guard. I opened all the manuscripts of unsolicited writers hoping to be published. The fiction department made a point of requesting submissions, but most of the time, they published articles from well-known authors or people suggested by agents. I got to read the unsolicited ones, most of which were often more suited to ladies' magazine such as McCalls and Good Housekeeping instead of  fitting the character of Mademoiselle, with its focus on young women with careers. 

I made two piles each day, one of the rejects, and another slim one for the possibles, none of which, while I was working that desk, were ever published. I looked at the stacks of rejects to remind myself of my own submissions when I was very young and the stacks of slips, some of them with kind notes, that came back to me in the mail. From these submissions, I realized that stories need to fit both time and place. Right now, I need something quiet and thoughtful.




Here are my suggestions for quiet books:

The Paris Novel by Ruth Reichl, the former Gourmet magazine editor. 

Her writing is delicious and revolves around food and the pleasures good food brings. The young woman in the Paris Novel arrives in Paris on a ticket left to her by her frequently absent mother. Because she felt abandoned by her mother while she was growing up, she never took chances and spent her hours concentrating on work. Paris changes her life for the same reasons that so many love Paris.

The Vanishing Cherry Blossom Bookshop by Takuya Asakura

For a while, novels about bookshops came fast and furious to my attention. Once I read one, all the online bookstores offered more and more bookshop-titled books for me to read. The Vanishing Cherry Blossom Bookshop not only includes a bookshop, but a magical one at that. Aren't all bookshops magicial? Where else besides a library can you walk into a room full of thought?

The bookshop appears when the cherry blossoms bloom and reunites people who have regrets to express to each other. The bookshop, its owner and its cat (what's a bookshop without a cat? Think of Shakespeare and Co in Paris) help heal people's sorrow under the branches of the flowering cherry blossoms.

Theo of Golden by Allen Levi

Like the other two books, Theo of Golden is not a book that will become a classic, but it is again a story of reconciliation, of dreams, and connections to other people and places. It's the story of an older man who moves to Golden, Georgia, and who buys the portraits that are hanging in a cafe, and reunites the portraits with the people portrayed in them. A good read for right now.

Let Sleeping Cats Lie, Pet Poems by Brian Biltson

Some silly, thoughtful poems about our relationships with our pets.




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BLOG POST Part 2


Little Bumps in the Road, When All Else Fails....

Here I was last week, feeling good, I just posted my 640th blog post last Friday, sailed through the weekend at the ballet and out to dinner with Bill. Life was good, till I received a concerned note from a friend that she hadn't received my blog post. More and more people expressed the same concern. My blog is handled by Blogger, part of Google's vast digital empire, but the subscribers list is run by an online company called Mailchimp. Since I don't monetize my blog, I've used their free service, designed by bloggers like me, with no problems for the last five years. I started to panic when I tried to get information from Mailchimp. I am sure they are a great help for people who use their blogs/websites to make a living. I'm not one of those. Instead, I've used them since they took over from a previous company and I had no other option.

I asked myself: Do I need to switch to Substack finally or set up a website for my blog? How do I contact readers if they don't get my blog posting? Mailchimp does keep track of subscribers' names and email addresses, but I've never wanted to know that information. I just appreciate all of you who read my blog too much to take advantage of you. I could see the coming nightmare of trying to find my way through a digital maze to correct the problem. I discovered that Mailchimp doesn't offer help to free blogs -- oops! maybe I'd been taking advantage of their services for too long? I finally found a way to contact them by pressing their Sales link. I received an email letting me know that they had had a glitch in their system, which they have corrected. I am counting on them posting my blog to my subscribers today.  A conundrum, a riddle wrapped in an enigma, such is dependency on the digital world, which has moved far beyond my skills.



Friday, April 24, 2026

BLUE SKY AND CLOUDS

Colorado Clouds


Every day since we moved to San Francisco, I've gotten up, walked to the same window and taken a picture of the view across the way. Each month I assemble the month's photos into a mosaic, all of which remind me of the changes in the weather that occur over time. 

This year we have had unusually hot days in March and little rain since last fall. We had a good rainstorm a couple of weeks ago with one bolt of lightning and the accompanying thunder. We don't have either very often in our more usually wet winters. The thunder reminded me of my family's trips to Minnesota in the summer when clouds would gather over the prairie, so the day became as dark as night, sheets of rain pounded the ground and lightning edged the horizon. When storms gathered or trailed off, large thunderclouds rolled across the sky. Minnesotans know weather.

Coastal Californias don't see that kind of weather often. Summers in San Francisco tends to be foggy, which flows over the city until the skyscrapers are hidden away. Fireworks become mere flashes of light in the gloom. When the fog breaks, the edges are soft and wispy, unlike the hard edges of thunderclouds. When a storm is over, the massive clouds drift towards the horizon. Yesterday driving home from across the Bay, I found myself in a gully-washer with the spray from cars and the fierce rain making it hard for me to see the road and lane markings. This week we have been glad of rain.


In drought conditions here, the sky becomes a constant bright blue with no clouds in sight for weeks or months, to the point I yearn for weather other than sunny days. When I see clouds more weighty than the usual wisps that drift by, I look at the clouds with awe and watch how many variations of blue and grey and how they change shape so quickly as the winds blow them through the sky. I try to remember some of the names of clouds that I learned about in science classes: Nimbus, Cumulus, Cirrus, Stratus, Latin names from another era that help define their shape and place in the sky. High up are the Cirrostratus and Altostratus, the thin, brush stroke ones. At mid-level are Nimbostratus, ones full of rain, and closer to the ground, Stratus and Cumulus, all more substantial. And then there is Cumulonimbus, which reaches all levels and is the type of cloud I saw on the prairie before a thunderstorm.


Clouds in San Francisco


Looking at the sky every day reminds me how vast the universe is, how blue the sky, and how something as ethereal and powerful the clouds and wind can be. We can fly through clouds as if they are nothing, yet they can create major destruction.

Clouds make great painting exercises for watercolor. As a watercolor student, I have heard the mantra of painting hard and soft edges. That technique helps to give clouds volume, otherwise, they can appear flat on the page. Mixing cerulean or cobalt blue with a touch of magenta gives the sky depth. Adding a dash of yellow to the blue creates a grey that can darken and lighten to show how full the clouds are with rain. Once the paint is one the paper and still damp, I use a Viva paper towel to dab away some of the paint to create soft, white clouds. Another technique I've learned is to hold the brush so it is facing down towards the bottom of the paper. As I push the brush across the page, I don't get the little dabs that can happen when I hold the brush with the tip of the brush upwards.

Certain objects such as rocks, a tree in full leaf, water, bushes, large pieces of open area, adding the dark values, and the sky  can be difficult objects to paint. Did you notice how long that list is? I find that each time I start a new painting that it feels like a new beginning. I have to remind myself to slow down and think about techniques that work for me. That is a good time for me to look at the sky.


Cloud Practice





Old Barn

Friday, April 17, 2026

A PERFECT DAY

"Something to Think About" mini books

 This year is going by in a flash. Mid April and we've passed Tax Day. I look back through my calendar and wonder where the time went. I was already thinking about what makes a day meaningful and not just another hurried day, when I came across a question in an article in Uppercase, a creativity magazine produced by Janine Vangool, a woman from Canada. The magazine is full of creative ideas and one, this question, asked,

"What would be a perfect day?"

The question made me pause. I started to make a list: exploring with my husband Bill, sitting in a cafe with him, getting together with our son and his girlfriend, walking along the Embaracadero's part of the Bay Trail in the quieter spaces there, being with friends, taking workshops, exercising, writing, sketching in my art journal, taking a ferry boat ride. As the list grew longer and longer, I recalled the time during the Pandemic when we had to give up physical contact with friends and didn't travel, and I found to my surprise, that in giving up activities that I liked to do, I found Time. I found time to concentrate on creative projects that I didn't leave myself time to do when I was rushing around trying to fill each minute of the day with interesting experiences. Bill and I had more time together than we ever had before, which deepened a relationship that had flourished since college. Zoom contacts with friends and our weekly outdoor meet-ups with neighbors sitting six feet apart kept the connections that we needed. I found time to think through creative projects, problems, and ideas. By the end of the Pandemic, Time had give me a chance to explore and develop my creativity in a way that I had never given myself the chance to do. A year and a half long retreat from the world.


A quote from Erling Kagge's book, Silence In the Age of Noise:
 "Silence is about rediscovering through pausing the things that bring us joy."


I looked at my growing list and realized that each item could be a perfect day all by itself. How wonderful it is to spend a full day with friends. How delightful it is to look at Bill with fresh eyes over coffee or to walk with him in new places now that we have moved to San Francisco. How meaningful to find a place that is quiet amidst the hurley-burley cacophony of a city. How energizing it is to work on a project where my mind is focused on the possibilities of creating. I could fill up a year with "Perfect Days" but also could savor the perfect, small moments within an ordinary day that bring me inspiration, awe, and gratitude. With all the hardships that the Pandemic caused all of us, I owe the Pandemic for this new-found understanding of living life to the fullest.

I am glad I found the article about the perfect day. It reminded me to slow down, filter out too many possibilities, and treasure the odd moments as well as the days.


"We will imagine infinity."


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Thank you to all of you readers of my blog. 
April 2026 marks the twelve full year of posting Postcards in the Air.




Friday, April 10, 2026

BIRDS OF MANY COLORS



Do you remember photos of the New Yorker Iris Apfel with her big, black glasses and extravagantly colored outfits? Ms. Apfel was a legendary NYC fashionista, a word that describes someone who takes careful interest in their appearance and has the money to afford the clothes they desire to wear. She died at the age of 103 leaving behind an astounding  collection of clothing, jewelry, shoes, and furniture that eventually the auction house Christie's sold. Apfel is a part of a group of women that I think make an impression on our culture for their clothing choices and sense of style.


The first page of an A to Z sketchbook


In the 1960's, Twiggy, a British model, splashed across the pages of fashion magazines in her short skirts and dresses, tall boots, heavily made-up eyes, and thinness. She changed the style for many young women at the time. In San Francisco, the twins, Marian and Vivian Brown, walked around town arm in arm, enjoying the attention they received for their matching outfits and lifestyle. 

When we lived in Tokyo, natural, neutral colors fit in with the cityscape, except in Harajuku, Omotesando, and Shinjuku, where young people's fashions reigned. Except for teenagers, women tend to dress differently in the suburbs and the cities. When we came back to Danville, I felt out of place in my black city attire among all the bright colors and pastels in town.


Young woman in Harajuku, Tokyo

After moving to San Francisco two years ago, I've noticed a change in fashion. Full-legged pants sprouted on every street replacing the workout gear and tight leggings that women had been wearing. Guys, though, still seem to be strolling in tight jeans or in sweatpants. No statement there.


Airports and parks are great places to observe people




Portland, Oregon, is full of people and other things to draw



I try to capture some of the people who I see around town in my sketchbook. I remember visits to the city growing up. Back then, everyone dressed up, including wearing gloves and hats, to spend a special day in the city. Now, when I see men in suits, I wonder what business they are in. Lawyer? Bankers? Real Estate agents? Politicians? People who deal with the public? The tech-bro look is evident everywhere. When Bill and I go for lunch during the week, we marvel at the techie groups walking together for their lunch hour. They remind me of the flocks of pigeons on the Embarcadero that congregate in groups, following each other arouond, and flying off in unison.

On Sunday, Bill and I were having coffee when we noticed a man in a clown suit with a bright red ball on his nose sitting across the street. We wondered if he was the entertainment for the day somewhere. He became another person to add to my sketchbook. On trips to San Francisco's Museum of Modern Art, I'm delighted to see people dressed up as if they were part of the abstract art on display. 







                          


People-watching is always an interesting hobby. I can make up stories about who the people are and where they are going by what they are wearing. 


Here are two sketches. What do you think are the stories for these people?



Teen Boys on Valencia Street




Older woman on Muni Bus 22



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https://www.vogue.com/article/street-style-harajuku-tokyo


https://onlineonly.christies.com/s/unapologetically-iris-collection-iris-apfel/lots/3819


https://www.sfgate.com/local/article/Marian-and-Vivian-Brown-famous-San-Francisco-twins-16330809.php 




Friday, April 3, 2026

BRAINSTORMING


Practice pages with various types of lettering pencils

How many ways can I write a name? I asked myself this question while I'm sitting at my desk after a calligraphy friend proposed that I hand letter a list of names for a meeting in May. I hesitated. I'm not a professional calligrapher. There are many people in the Bay Area who have honed their calligraphy skills much better than I have, but I said yes anyway. I thought it would be a good challenge, a good way to practice, and I had enough time to figure out my design and alphabet choice for the list. If nothing worked, I could ask someone else to do the work.

I've scrolled through pieces that I've done using various alphabets and various names to come up with a plan. 



I  wanted to produce something more interesting than just a list. I thought of the grand certificates produced by the City of Los Angeles Creative Services Department, which are far more artistic than the certificates you might see hanging on the walls of doctors' offices. The LA Dept. certificates are routinely made by their calligraphers, but I knew I would need much more time than I have to create something as spectacular. (Click on the link at the bottom to see some of their work.)

What kind of format could I use? I thought of making each person's name on a pre-cut circle of watercolor paper, but that would create additional work to figure out a good way to show them on one board. 




I thought of using colored backgrounds so that the letters would be outlined in a different color from the letter itself.




I looked at examples of other lists I have made. I realized how often I make lines of letters touch each other, which makes for an interesting composition, but not particularly legible.




I could make the letters fat so that I could doodle inside them. I could use black paper with white ink or other colored paper with contrasting ink or colored pencil for the letters themselves. I could make the first letter of each name decorative like the medieval monks used to do, and then use monoline letters to complete the rest of the letters.






I could choose my favorite alphabets--Ben Shahn or Neuland--because I am already comfortable writing them. 



Here it is already April and I need to start to work on drafts of my project.


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* Check out some of the work done by the LA City Creative Services Dept:

https://share.google/hnMuoUD4k6NG5tsrk


Window View March 2026



Friday, March 27, 2026

MY FAVORITE WORD




If you walk along the streets of San Francisco or any big city, you will notice buildings with the names either painted on the brick facade or engraved into the concrete of the buildings.  Often the owners whose name adorn the fronts are long gone and long forgotten. I think of my first favorite word when I see these buildings.


First draft of the word Hubris

Hubris is a word that has stayed with me since I studied Ancient Greek Literature and read the Oedipus Rex trilogy, the story of a young royal who meets his father at a crossroads, kills him, and then goes on to marry his mother. Since his parents left him on a rock as a baby, he wasn't aware of their parental relationship  until too late. The trilogy shows the consequences of his early actions.

The definition of hubris, "Exaggerated pride or arrogance, motivated by spite," fits so many powerful, fictional characters such as Shakespeare's Macbeth or Captain Ahab from Moby Dick, but hubris also fits powerful, real people who make choices out of arrogance. We can all think of Napoleon and Hitler as prime examples.

Major religions all have some form of the expression, "pride goeth before a fall," within their teachings. Different cultures also teach universal moral values as described by an Oxford University study. The values include help your family, help others outside of family, return favors, be brave, defer to superiors, divide resources fairly, and respect other people's property.

In turbulent times, we need to remind ourselves of these teachings and phrases that most of us received in childhood. I remember one of the first poems I was asked to memorize. The poem is Ozymandias by Percy Bysshe Shelley and was written in 1817. Yet, its ideas still resonate.


Ozymandias

by Percy Bysshe Shelley

I met a traveler from an antique land

Who said--"Two vast and trunkless legs of stone

Stand in the desert....Near them, on the sand,

Half sunk a shattered visage lies, whose frown,

And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,

Tell that its sculptor well those passions read

Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,

The hand that mocked them, and the heart that fed:

And on the pedestal, these words appear:

My name is Ozymandias, King of Kings:

Look on my Works, ye Mighty, and despair!

Nothing besides remains. Round the decay

Of that colossal Wreck, boundless and bare,

The lone and level sands stretch far away.




See you at a No Kings Rally on Saturday!


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Who is Audiffred? Read his interesting history here:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audiffred_Building


Oxford University study about universal, moral values:

https://www.ox.ac.uk/news/2019-02-11-seven-moral-rules-found-all-around-world





Friday, March 20, 2026

UNFINISHED INSPIRATIONS

Unfinished projects


Like many fellow creatives, I have a stack of unfinished projects. When we lived in the suburbs, my answer was to invite friends to my house once a month for Craft Day. We would all bring something to work on. Friends brought knitting, quilts, jewelry, greeting cards, and photo albums, anything that stared at them from a closet, asking to be finished. We shared a lunch and companionship as well.

I also attend creative workshops, with the result that I come home with new unfinished projects that need time and thought to complete. Some of them are watercolor projects, others are book arts projects, and some are calligraphy. All of them asking me for time.

In front of me is a small completed project, a simple box about two inches by three inches that I covered in marbled paper made by Pietro Accardi, a marbled paper master. All I need to complete the box, which I named "Quote Collector," are some quotes that grab my attention. So far, I have two that relate to creative thinking:



As I look at these two quotes, I realize I have the perfect place for them between scraps of failed watercolors that I had glued on both sides of heavy paper. I love the subtle hues of the cover, these watercolors made, and the pages that I've added inside seem a good place to write new quotes. Did I just add another unfinished project to my collection?




Pages from Landscapes of the Mind, unfinished booklet


At the Letters conference in L.A. last year, I created the beginnings of "A Stamp Book." The pages each contain one stamp. I started the book by writing something in pencil about each stamp or adding a quote from the person featured on the stamp, but I'm only halfway through the book. I still need to add something to the stamps that represent Clara Barton, World Peace Through Law, the Boys Club and Camp Fire Girls, the Lincoln-Douglas Debates, and the Statue of Liberty. Maybe I will just add the phrase carved on the Statue of Liberty to my page. And I need to rewrite the statements in ink. The book is a reminder of my stamp-collecting hobby when I was in grade school, and also that stamps acknowledge, in miniature form, parts of our history.


Stamp Book with quotes ready to be written in pen

I still purchase stamps at the post office. This week, I went to the huge Rincon Post Office building that covers an entire block. The post office has been moved to one corner, but is still city-large. I was one of three people walking towards the teller behind the counter. Our steps echoed against the marble floor. I thought of how busy post offices used to be. I would avoid certain times of the day to miss the long lines. Though the lines may be reduced, I feel the same way about the post office as I do about paying taxes. It's a privilege to have both. The post office is still an important service provided to Americans, no matter where they live.

The original Rincon post office is now a small museum, which has maintained the murals painted around the walls after WWII. The murals depict parts of San Francisco's history, some of them full of labor strife and protests. The murals became controversial during the McCarthy era when some considered them un-American because they didn't depict the celebration of the idea of America. That reminds me of the parts of our history that our government is trying to remove now.

At the counter, I asked for a sheet of the LowRiders stamps with images of the low-rider cars that used to be mocked when I was young, and that represented a side culture of Mexican American resistance to the Hot Rods of the day. Since moving to San Francisco, we noticed on weekends cavalcades of Low-Riders as they drive the Embarcadero towards the Golden Gate Bridge. The cars are amazing to look at, not only for their engineering, but for their meticulous paint jobs. The deYoung Museum now displays two low-rider cars in its main lobby, showcasing their artistry. By acknowledging the creative work found in these cars, our culture has opened up to consider the ideas behind these cars and the people inside them as important and relevant to our mainstream culture. Besides, the stamps also highlight the Low-Riders' use of the Gothic font, a connection to calligraphy, too.


Low-Riders Forever Stamp