Swap Coordinator: | KarlaKC (contact) |
Swap categories: | Miscellaneous Letters & Writing Mail Art |
Number of people in swap: | 2 |
Location: | Regional - USA |
Type: | Type 3: Package or craft |
Last day to signup/drop: | November 8, 2010 |
Date items must be sent by: | November 23, 2010 |
Number of swap partners: | 1 |
Description: | |
~This is a Private Swap between KarlaKC and Anneress.~ For this swap, you will use a clear plastic water or juice bottle, around 16 or 20 oz sized. Make sure it is clean and DRY before putting anything inside. Then write a letter to your partner. There is a minimum page requirement of 2 pages on 5x7 sized paper. You may use 8.5x11 sized paper if you want to write a 1 page letter. Please do not write obviously large just to fill up your page(s) more quickly. Use your best handwriting and if you write large naturally, then let your minimum page requirement be 3 pages. Roll up your letter, tie it with a ribbon, and insert it in the neck of your bottle. To finish off your message in a bottle, let's put some "fun stuff" in there. For this round of the swap, let's think "Holidays"! You can include Thanksgiving or Fall themed items or Christmas/Winter themed items or both! Read your partner's profile to get some ideas. Use these ideas to drop in things your partner might enjoy. For example, confetti shapes, beads, brads, marble or two, charms, stickers ... use your imagination! Just make it FUN! :-) As a side note, if there is something you want to include in your bottle, but it is too big to insert into the neck of the bottle, you can cut a "flap" into the side of your bottle, a little door large enough to insert the item(s), and when you are done filling your bottle, use clear packing tape to seal this flap well. Also before mailing your bottle, use packing tape to wrap around the neck and cap of your bottle. You can decorate the outside of your bottle with stickers or whatever you think will survive the "handling" of the postal system. Be creative! Securely affix your partner's address to the outside of the bottle, take it to your post office and put the correct amount of postage on it. As a stamp lover, may I encourage you to use actual stamps to decorate your bottle rather than the metered postage label? As a side note, let me add that if your post office gives you grief about sending a plastic bottle in the mail, go to another post office. Most of us had no problems mailing our bottles in the last round, though I think someone did have to go to another post office where they encountered no trouble in sending. |
You must be logged in to leave a comment. Click here to log in.