Humorous Get Well E Cards
Homespun Kids Birthday Invitations
12.11.09 / lifestyle / Author: admin
When it comes to the kids’ birthday, the invitations have to be imaginative, colorful and humorous. One can easily get scores of thoughts about kids birthday invitations online, that too on the foundation of different factors such as theme, colors and designs.
There are so many websites that furnish customers with e-greeting cards or printable invitations that they can shop. Yet, one is also free to pick a premade card which is available easily at any nearby store. Birthday invitations need to be sent out 2 to 4 weeks before the party date so that guests can get a opportunity to act in answer and alter their agenda accordingly.
No matter what kind of birthday party one wants to host for his child, determining a theme really does a lot to make the chore easy. Using any famous cartoon character as superior theme is an excellent thought because some websites provide invites geared up to integrate a customized message. Moreover, the invitation cards should involve all important details about the party.
A child’s party is constantly destined to please kids, so you can make invitation cards colorful, bright and even attach a photo to party cards. Most of kids know something which is eye catching and bright, and invitation cards are no exemption. When you are setting for a kid’s birthday party, invitation cards are an super medium to incorporate them in process. Still, before any designing, ask your child what he wants his birthday idea to be and then plan beforehand.
Homemade kids birthday invitations
Creating kid’s party invitation card at home can be as easy as cutting an bright figure on a small piece of crinkled construction paper. If one wants to be a bit more fresh, just take out a photo of child and put it down on envelop of invitation. For example, for a circus themed party, the kids can wear costumes such as clown, completed with bulb nose, make up and red wig. Attempt writing all party details over a balloon, then deflate it and, mail to all party guests. It is merely a idyllic idea for any kid’s birthday party. For more tips and information on how to construct invitation cards at home, you can surf distinct websites on the internet.
Be certain to check out that everything is in sequence before party starts. Spare your money as well as time by creating ‘sheet cookie’ with frosting over it in place of conventional birthday cake.
Jim Langford lived across the state in Kansas City. He’s a gifted artist and had been hired out of college to work in Hallmark’s Lettering Department. Jim gave me a tour of Hallmark’s Corporate Headquarters and it was then that the light came on in my head, “I can do this!”
I came home inspired and determined to get a job at Hallmark. At the time, the sign company was not doing well, and it was only a matter of time before it would go bankrupt and I’d be out of a job. It did not feel at home there anyway. The kinds of things I saw Jim working on at Hallmark were exactly what I wanted.
What were the main things you learned at Hallmark?
So many people at Hallmark are world class professionals who know how to create styles to express a specific social situation. I gleaned knowledge and skill from the experts in a number of styles. I think the most important thing I learned at Hallmark was what makes a strong letterform. We learned how to take a piece of type, and add embellishments with a pencil on tracing vellum. From there, the pencil marks were cleaned up and eventually inked. A separate group of artists were given the task of taking the lettering artist’s penciled work and inking it to completion.
About a week later, I got a nice letter from the Director of Creative Recruitment that basically said, “Thank you for coming to interview,” and that they would keep me on file. So I waited. Four months went by and the sign company where I worked filed for bankruptcy. I was a bit desperate. So, I called Hallmark and asked if there was a way I could progress my file, “perhaps by creating another portfolio?” Yes, another portfolio would be helpful. “Gee whiz,” I thought. “I wish I had known that when I was first declined.” The third portfolio took about a month to put together and my work was finally up to Hallmark’s standards. I began working in the Lettering Department in July of 1983, and that’s when I really began to learn how to do lettering. Working at Hallmark Cards was like going to graduate school and getting paid for it. It was fantastic you’ve drawn hundreds alphabets for greeting cards. How does that work? Do you get a brief, or some guidelines? Who decides whether a piece of lettering is “right”?
So, I put together my portfolio, drove back to Kansas City and talked my way into an interview with the Creative Recruitment Director at Hallmark. He was very nice, but basically told me there was nothing about my work that Hallmark would be interested in. It was too graphic in nature. The disappointment was there, but so was the determination. I began putting together a whole new portfolio of artwork, focusing on lettering. It worked. They flew me to K.C. where I stayed at the Crown Center Hotel and was treated like royalty. I interviewed for two days and all seemed as if I was sure to be hired. Then came my last interview with the vice-president of the company. He thumbed through my portfolio very quickly and said something like, “This work is awful, what makes you think you deserve a job at Hallmark?” I was dumbfounded. Up to that point everything had gone so well! Needless to say, I came home a bit discouraged, but still hopeful that that last interview was not the final say.
Styles depended on the product. A juvenile card (the industry term for children’s cards) required a completely different look than other products like masculine, feminine or humorous cards. Sometimes there were specific instructions from the designer or art director that required a departure from the norm. After a few months it became easy to look at a piece of artwork and know what kind of style to use with it. After leaving Hallmark, you made your living creating hand lettering. What got you focusing on font development?
I didn’t really design complete typefaces at the time. That task was left to a sub-department of typographers. But I did put the lettering on hundreds of greeting cards. The challenge was to create lettering that would match the artwork I was working with. Hallmark had a very complete review process. For lettering, it was a matter of finding a lettering style that complemented the feel of the product. Once the lettering artist had completed his work, it went to “Committee” for review. Supervisors and directors were very good at determining when a style worked and when it didn’t. If a style got rejected, there was usually very good commentary from the committee as to what was needed or lacking. Any revisions the committee asked for were completed and returned for a second and hopefully final review. When I first started making fonts in the 1980s, all of my fonts were designed for my greeting card work. I made fonts that looked like my hand lettering. Some fonts were based on examples my clients sent me of looks they would like to have access to. I didn’t sell my fonts back then for two reasons: First, there weren’t many commercial fonts available to my clients that catered to the specific needs of greeting cards; Second, since they were only for my private use, most of the fonts I made didn’t have complete character sets. I simply didn’t have a need for diacritics and some fonts had special characters in the incorrect glyph so I could make more custom designs for the cards.
After 9/11, the economy slowed considerably, and the greeting card work began to dry up. I needed to do something to continue making a living. Not knowing what to do, one day I got an e-mail asking about the word LOVE on my web site. Then I got another e-mail, and then several more. People apparently were talking and wanted that font. The problem was, it wasn’t a font. It was hand lettering that I had created for a client on a project where I had collaborated with Michael Clark, another former Hallmark artist. He and I had done a series of 12 words expressing different emotions. After receiving so many emails, I decided to create a whole font based on the single word LOVE. It was a success, and I decided that other fonts that I’d made over the years might do well, too. So I began finishing fonts with all the characters and diacritics and put them on the market for the public to use. That’s how it got started, and I’ve been creating fonts for the public since
Much of your digital work is apparently based on hand-rendered lettering as well as handwriting. Is there a marked difference for you between those two techniques, lettering and writing? What are your favorite instruments to write or draw with? Most all my work is hand-lettered as opposed to hand-writing because there is almost always a certain amount of design in each character. As for techniques and tools… with flourished formal scripts, I usually start out with a pencil on slick stock to draw the forms. From there, I overlay a piece of vellum and ink the outlines with a mechanical pen. For calligraphy, my favorite tool is a Braus flat nib pen. It gives me the best quality of all the brands I’ve tried. Usually my calligraphy is of such mediocre quality, I retouch it with a mechanical pen.
When I do brush lettering, I like to use a Pentel Color Brush, using black ink. I often just dip it in india ink. But much of what looks like brush lettering is actually created with an architectural ruling pen. It’s normally used to draw consistent line work on mechanical drawings. I don’t use my ruling pen for such purposes. Instead, I dip the pen in an ink bottle, turn it on its side and do very loose lettering with it. I can’t take credit for the technique. Guy Guinta at Hallmark first showed me how to use the ruling pen for creating lettering. With the ruling pen, one can load the pen with paint or ink and create beautiful loose lettering. And with a textured paper, the creations take on even more dramatic effects. Unique thick and thin lines are created when the pen is used on its edge. Once the lettering is created, I use a mechanical pen to retouch areas.
Your font Gideon is a very elegant hand-drawn Roman. I could imagine a complete family in that vein, with small caps, old style figures, italics, bolder weights… have you ever considered designing a large family like that?
When Julian Waters released his Waters Titling, I was blown away by its classic beauty. The only thing for me that it missed were the lowercase letterforms to match the beautiful Roman capitals. Gideon was one of those designs I decided to tackle because it is such a departure from my other work. I mentioned that I stink at formal uppercase Roman letterforms. Gideon was a challenge I placed on myself to design a nice Roman style that I would consider using should the need arise. It was a laborious process for me. In fact, I worked on it off and on for months. By comparison, Babylonica took me three days to complete from start to finish. Though I feel out of my comfort zone with a style like Gideon, I think it’s important as an artist to challenge myself and work outside of what’s comfortable.
Funny you should ask about a whole family. I’ve been working for many months on a text family. The intent is to complete a set of serif and sans-serif fonts complete with italic/oblique versions in as many as six weights. It’s a monumental undertaking. I’m in awe of the work from folks like Adrian Frutiger, Sumner Stone, and Hermann Zapf who make typographic design look so easy. This family I’m working on will be my namesake, “Leuschke.” It feels less like a labor of love and more an exercise in futility, but I’m determined to eventually complete it. Being a bit of a perfectionist, and since it will have my name attached to it, I want it to be my absolute best effort.
Since your namesake family is down the road, do you have any other ideas you’ve been working on? Oh, and how do you pronounce your name?
I have a lot of work that is more for social expression, or scrapbooking, but lately, I’ve been focusing on creating fonts that have more commercial applications. I’ve recently come back to beautiful italics with the thought that I could make an italic font that would be good for packaging and advertising. I’m working on a font now called Italianno. Most of my script fonts have elaborate uppercase forms. I decided I would make Italianno with more simple Roman uppercase forms. Most italic fonts have non-connecting serifs, but I decided to add the twist of creating connectors between the lowercase forms. So, Italianno is an italic in form, but a script in style.
My name is not a common one. My ancestry traces back to eastern Germany. The correct pronunciation is Loysh-kah. My family “Americanized” it a long time ago, so we pronounce it Lusk-ee (rhymes with husky).
Thanks, Rob. I’m sure many people will look at your work with different eyes after reading this interview.
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