Latest COVID Cards

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COVID Card #341

COVID Card #341

Charles Winstanley Thwaites spent the first half-ish of his life in the midwest, where he worked...

COVID Card #340

COVID Card #340

If you are a regular COVID Card post reader, you have probably figured out that I don't spend a...

COVID Card #339

COVID Card #339

Robert Lepper was an artist, designer, and educator. As an educator, he is said to have encouraged...

COVID Card #338

COVID Card #338

How on earth (or any other planet) could I possibly fail to share a paper in which the first word...

COVID Card #337

COVID Card #337

The best online bio I found for William Lester Stevens is both fantastic and disappointing. It...

COVID Card #336

COVID Card #336

If I am correct, and I rarely am, William Riseman was better known as an interior designer, than a...

COVID Card #335

COVID Card #335

Muralist Saul Levine may be a victim of a second artist named Saul Levine, as far as web-based...

COVID Card #334

COVID Card #334

A long month's worth of COVID Cards and this game is over. It's been fun. Hollis Holbrook how...

COVID Card #333

COVID Card #333

It never fails that, when you give up the search, the goal presents itself willingly. Okay, so...

COVID Card #332

COVID Card #332

Today's card was almost about Peter Blume. Almost. I don't know if I can do a Peter Blume card. I...

COVID Card #331

COVID Card #331

No fooling. Sometimes, one has to return to the beginning. Sort of like when you've lost something...

COVID Card #330

COVID Card #330

I can't tell you much about Alice Reynolds. The Old Jail Art Center (how great is that name?)...

COVID Card FAQs

What is a COVID Card?

A COVID Card is a postcard featuring a hand drawn image inspired by something related to mail/post. Every day from May 5, 2020 to May 4, 2021, I created a card and mailed it to someone the following day (Saturday’s and Sunday’s cards were mailed on Monday). The day after a card was made, I made a small blog post about it, sharing what inspired the card.

Why COVID Cards?

This project was not planned. It just happened. One day, I received an invite to a Facebook “event.” It turns out that it wasn’t really an event, but a plea to people to try to save the United State Postal Service (USPS) by pledging to write and mail one postcard or letter per week. Being the over-achiever that I am (I’m actually nothing of the sort), I mailed 7 cards the first day. They were all postcards and greetings cards that I had on hand. As everything was on lockdown, I couldn’t just dash off to the Hallmark store once a week (as if). Nor did I look forward to the prospect of spending hours shopping for cards online and either sending the same designs over and over again, or spending a small fortune on one-of-a-kind cards. And, with the pandemic making everyone a little less eager to spend money on web development (that’s my day job), I found I had some extra time. So, I decided to draw a card every day. My hope was to bring awareness to the dire financial situation the USPS is in (yes, I know, the problems didn’t start with the pandemic — but it has drastically hurt it and the government has offered no assistance). I haven’t done a very good job of that. There’s no room on the back of a small postcard to tell the tale (oops, next time there’s a pandemic, I’ll draw greeting cards — kidding; I won’t do that at all, it had to be postcards).

Why postcards?

At first, I didn’t even think about it. It’s just what I wanted to send. No reason at all. I don’t even use postcard postage. I use regular, first class stamps. As time went on and I learned more and more about the post office (see the next toggle), I began to really love the idea of these little original drawings being fed through cancellation machines and sorting machines, getting the postnet slapped on them, and having the (usually) gentle wear and tear that comes with the process of moving a piece of paper from one part of the world to another. With just one exception, if a COVID Card does not have postal marks and scuffs, it’s not real. The one exception is the card I gave my letter carrier, Ian. I thought it would be weird to ask for his mailing address.

What are the images all about?

Since the project is about bringing awareness to the struggles of the USPS, I wanted each card to have a drawing that had something to do with mail/post. As my “thing” is drawing Sketchy Spaces, whatever the inspiration was for a particular card, it would be used in a (often) strange landscape. The first 3 cards feature vintage mailboxes turned into buildings. While mailboxes appeared again in later stamps, it was clear that drawing mailbox buildings was likely to get real old, rather fast. The 4th card uses a stamp motif from card 3. As I searched the web for interesting mailboxes, I found other images: catcher pouches used by trains, lampposts with mailboxes, etc. Then I remembered the pails used to deliver mail from small boats to large ships in the Detroit river. Finally, I stumbled upon this great (and free) publication documenting much of US postal history. Every day, I read until something inspires me. I then either have my idea or I research the inspiration more. This often leads to the usually-dreaded rabbit hole of seemingly endless bits of trivia. As I don’t know when this project will end, a glut of inspiration is a very welcome problem.

Do I really mail originals?

Yes. I really mail originals. If one gets lost in the mail (so far, it looks like #62 may be lost), the real, original drawing may be gone forever (or you may be able to get a sweet deal on it at a Dead Letter auction). I’m no scanning or photographing genius, but I do my best to document each card before it gets entrusted to the USPS. I scan each card with two different scan profiles,and I take a photo of it.

Why mail originals?

Why not? It’s just part of the project. A genuine COVID Card will bear evidence of having travelled through the postal system. The “art” of the project is not (for me) in the drawing, it’s in the project as a whole. To try (not too successfully) to bring awareness to the USPS, I make “art” and put it, open face for the world to see, in the mail. I spend an hour (or two or three or four) drawing, then I document it, address it, stamp it, and trust it to greater forces. I let it go. I’m actually a little exicted to think that card #62 will never reach its destination (it turns out, the wrong zip code was used). It makes it special. The one card that did not go through the mail (it was given to my letter carrier) is also special. I am so very easily amused. These things amuse me. It’s like a game.

When will it end?

I don’t know. It is over. I decided to stop at card 365. Sketchy Spaces will go on. I still have a lot of postcard sktechbooks, so more postcards will be drawn, they just won’t be daily occurences nor will they be called COVID Cards.

How can you get a card?

Beg, borrow, or steal from someone who was sent one.

2022

2022. Days 301-312.

2022. Day 301. Rishi Sunak. 2022. Day 302. Halloween Tragedy in Korea. 2022. Day 303. Brazilian Election. 2022. Day 304. Bridge collapse in India. 2022. Day 305. Julie Powell. 2022. Day 306. US to move Natives again. 2022. Day 307. Campaign spending. 2022. Day 308....

2022. Days 282-293.

2022. Day 282. Grace Glueck. 2022. Day 283. Douglas Kirkland. 2022. Day 284. Angela Lansbury. 2022. Day 285. Trump's boxes. 2022. Day 286. Nika Shakarami and Sarina Esmailzadeh. 2022. Day 287. War on education. 2022. Day 288. Raleigh shootings. 2022. Day 289. Reverend...

2022. Days 267-281.

2022. Day 270. Italy / Meloni. 2022. Day 271. Hurricane Ian. 2022. Day 272. Coolio. 2022. Day 273. Kabul education center attack. 2022. Day 274. Soccer in Indonesia. 2022. Day 275. Weighted walleye. 2022. Day 276. Election in Brazil. 2022. Day 277. Loretta Lynn. 2022....

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