Handmade Greeting Cards

I think you will find this to be a very useful and inspiring article about Linda’s approach to handmade greeting cards. I encourage you to follow her links to her useful website.

My handmade greeting cards are the result of my deep trust in Spirit. Each one is always different and unique, and they are all imbued with great love and attention to detail. Following is an explanation of what I call the “Pace Process:”

After creating an environment of peace and tranquility, I begin with prayer and meditation, invoking assistance from Spirit, and letting go of self-doubt, worry and self-criticism. I paint with my heart and soul, not my head. I reach for colors that attract me, and I use brush strokes that feel good.

Losing track of time and space, I often paint for hours, sometimes filling the room with sheets of art-filled paper. I know when I’m done, so I stop and leave the works to dry overnight. I am always amazed and delighted when I return the next morning.

The sheets of paper take on an entirely new look once they are dry. This is the first step in the process of creating my handmade greeting cards.

The second step begins with cutting the large sheets into the smaller versions that fit on the card stock. Again I invoke Spirit, and trust that I will cut the pieces at just the right place. Then I assemble the artwork onto cards, and leave them to dry overnight.

I begin the third day, and step three, by again invoking Spirit with great trust and love. I take each card and look deeply into what it’s trying to convey, and if guided to do so, I assist it with little additions of paint, ‘pen-work,’ or glitter. As I do this, I meditate on the message it wants to express. I simply ask for the message, and then write whatever first pops into my head.

I know and trust that this message, or the name of the artwork, is just perfect for the person whose hand receives it. Sometimes these messages are quite profound, or mysterious, or downright irreverent! Step four, the last step, begins with signing and numbering if appropriate.

I ask for an “angel word” for each card. Again, I write whatever word first comes to mind, trusting that it is exactly the perfect word for the receiver.  This completes the “Pace Process” of creating my handmade greeting cards.

The original article, Handmade Greeting Cards, can be found in PDF format, at ArborAria.com

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About the Author

Currently working in watercolors, Linda Pace focuses primarily on abstractions expressing her emotional, psychological and spiritual life journey. Many of her works have been inspired from her native Oregon upbringing, her love and respect of trees, the natural environment, and her ever-evolving spiritual beliefs. Linda Blog is a spiritual journey of discovery, creating Handmade Note Cards.

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