Swap Coordinator: | quillandparchment (contact) |
Swap categories: | Letters & Writing Newbie |
Number of people in swap: | 14 |
Location: | International |
Type: | Type 2: Flat mail |
Last day to signup/drop: | February 16, 2015 |
Date items must be sent by: | February 27, 2015 |
Number of swap partners: | 1 |
Description: | |
This swap was well-received a while ago, so I'm offering it again. This is for those of us who have longed to receive and write a crossed letter, also called cross-hatching, like they did in Regency and Victorian England. Now we can all have a tiny piece of Austenland. What, pray tell, is a crossed letter? Paper and postage used to be really expensive (nice paper still is, actually). To save money, letter writers would write on a page using all available space, then turn it 90 degrees and continue writing on top of what they just wrote. If they were really pinching pennies, they would write their third page on the same page by turning it 45 degrees instead of 90 degrees to write diagonally. But…that might be too much for our modern sensibilities. Just think – it’s environmentally-friendly! So! For this swap, please write a crossed letter to your swap partner of at least 2 pages (that is, 1 page, crossed at least once). Write about: • Introducing yourself • What inspired you to write a crossed letter • What other guilty period-inspired wishes or habits you may have • What your favourite Austen story is and do you have a favourite Austen film • PLEASE write legibly. Some people find it helps to use different colours when they change directions, but this isn't a requirement. • Sealing wax is not a requirement, but just keep in mind if you do decide to use it that sealing wax often falls off modern paper in the modern postal system, so just prepare your letter accordingly so it will arrive to your partner safely. A crossed letter, sent on time, deserves a 5. A flake deserves a 1. (Please – no one likes 1s. Don’t flake! Send on time!) I’m not requiring a rating minimum, but I reserve the right to weed out those with suspicious 1s. |
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Click here to log in.