This is the home of some of the most unique and elegant greeting cards that you will find anywhere. Our greeting cards are hand made and packaged in Logan, Utah. Each greeting card starts with a photograph, then is edited into the silhouette images that you see here. Our focus is on avian species, but our cards are branching out. Our newest set of greeting cards features images inspired by climbing. Please take a moment to look through the shop.
All the cards on this site are also available at our Etsy Store!
We are reaching into a new online market today, three of the card sets are now posted on Amazon.com. It seems you can find virtually anything on Amazon so why not greeting cards as well. Who knows why Amazon considers greeting cards to be “health and personal care” items, would then not fit better in the “office supplies” category? But anyway, that is where they are. Check out the In the Trees, Human Landscape, and Climbing collections as they appear on Amazon.
It is the time of year for the Audubon Christmas Bird Count. It is not usually on the 25th, just sometime between December 14 and January 5. The count is a bird annual bird census that has taken place in the same locations for years, some places over 100 of them. It is a great opportunity to get out and see some of those little (or big) fluttery things, while contributing to a valuable long term data set.
A new set of cards is up! A set looking back at our selves and where we fit into the environment. This collections has four cards inspired by images of human changes to the land scape and ingenuity. Included is an image of cranes (the steel kind) perched atop a partially finished sky scraper in Manila, Philippines, and a soaring C-130 cargo plane in the process of dropping supplies. Also in the set is an antenna farm keeping a look out over Albuquerque, New Mexico and a line of grain silos collecting wheat from eastern Washington.
This is a park service video with some amazing footage of rockfall raining down in Yosemite Valley. There is one amazing shot captured by a park visitor where the release of rock is actually visible. It came down just left of Super Slab, a route I was climbing last month. While I was on Super Slab I saw a dust plume rise up from El Cap Meadow resulting from another rockfall releasing from the east wall. Pretty sobering stuff if you have ever spent time below those huge granite walls.
The site is up and running with new store front software. There are 3 card sets available, and all of the cards in those sets are available individually as well. The store front software works through PayPal for safe and secure transactions.