Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own? Yes.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game? Carving came first, a decade or so ago; letterboxing followed a couple of years later. It has taken me years to make space to try letterboxing--not to mention to find letterboxes in my area.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp? Because I have teenboys, we started with geocaching, which appeals to them more. A friend who runs a gradeschool caching club told me about the little pottery rocks she leaves in caches--glazed and with neat words like "imagine" or "grow" imprinted in them--as a signature trade item. The kids and I wanted a signature of our own, something handmade, not too involved, but that looked really good. We stumbled on some embroidered bugs in a craft book and knew we'd found it--not too hard, really awesome-looking, and sort of offbeat, like us. Plus, buggy for my boys and shiny for my girl (we use iridescent flosses). When we decided to add a letterbox or two to our hunts, a bug sig stamp seemed like the perfect thing. The stamp itself has yet to be designed or carved, but I'll get to it in the next few days.
4. How did your first carving experiences go? I carved my first stamps in amber-yellow gum erasers--very crumbly--and Pink Pearls. I still have some of those. Most are pretty rough. Around my fifth stamp, I used a Mars eraser and carved a formal, stylized floral that still leaves me feeling amazed at myself. Nothing since has quite measured up, though I've been carving for years!
5. What's a favorite image you've carved? The floral, above. I also have a little Halloweenish cat stamp I like. And I carved my own fake mail-cancellation stamp to use on mail art envelopes. Little squiggly cancellation lines, "mejaka mail" in a circle, pine trees. I like to use red ink with that one.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing? By the end of this week, there will be one...
jmauldinheiner@verizon.net
Simon says: stop breathing. ... You do realize you can't win, right?
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
For fun--stamp tell-all
9 messages in this thread |
Started on 2006-08-07
For fun--stamp tell-all
From: Janna Mauldin Heiner (jmauldinheiner@verizon.net) |
Date: 2006-08-07 15:12:58 UTC-07:00
Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: R (ontario_cacher@yahoo.ca) |
Date: 2006-08-07 20:13:48 UTC-04:00
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
Yes I do because I enjoy the process.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
Carving came first (in the mid 1990s), while I was learning about rubberstamping I found out about carving. I got a lot of my inspiration from Tabloid Trash, Rusty Clark's site (now defunct). Learned about letterboxing via Carving Consortium.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
My signature stamp has changed over the years. It was a word quote one year, a cartoon image of my poodle the next year, an exact replica of my geocaching sticker another year, now it is reflects my letterboxing trailname.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
The Carving Consortium group suggested white erasers, so that's what I started using and continue to use for the most part. But most erasers are on the small side so I also use Nasco Safety-Kut (another Carving Consortium suggestion) because Safety Kut comes in different sizes and I can buy it online and have it shipped to me. I buy the postcard size and cut out what I need. I started carving with a hobby blade and did OK with it but moved on to linoleum cutters and continue to use those.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
Dogs - all kinds.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I carve stamps for both my real letterboxes and virtual letterboxes, so far I've carved over 72 just for letterboxes (a few I've had to carve again to replace missing boxes).._,___
Lone R
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Yes I do because I enjoy the process.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
Carving came first (in the mid 1990s), while I was learning about rubberstamping I found out about carving. I got a lot of my inspiration from Tabloid Trash, Rusty Clark's site (now defunct). Learned about letterboxing via Carving Consortium.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
My signature stamp has changed over the years. It was a word quote one year, a cartoon image of my poodle the next year, an exact replica of my geocaching sticker another year, now it is reflects my letterboxing trailname.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
The Carving Consortium group suggested white erasers, so that's what I started using and continue to use for the most part. But most erasers are on the small side so I also use Nasco Safety-Kut (another Carving Consortium suggestion) because Safety Kut comes in different sizes and I can buy it online and have it shipped to me. I buy the postcard size and cut out what I need. I started carving with a hobby blade and did OK with it but moved on to linoleum cutters and continue to use those.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
Dogs - all kinds.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I carve stamps for both my real letterboxes and virtual letterboxes, so far I've carved over 72 just for letterboxes (a few I've had to carve again to replace missing boxes).._,___
Lone R
---------------------------------
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: For fun--stamp tell-all
From: Paula Collins (boxer@cinemaboxers.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 00:21:56 UTC
Q1. Do you hand-carve your own?
A1: Yes.
Q2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing,
or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
A1:I'm an artist/Photographer, so Ive sculpted, painted, and drawn,
but never carved. I think each next one I do gets better and better.
Q3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
A3: We breed and show Boxer dogs under the name CinemaBoxers - it just
fit that we incorporate the dogs & a Cinema theme into it!
Q4. How did your first carving experiences go?
A4: Very well! One of my first was an eraser, and then I wanted
something better. But, my FIRST 'eraser' carved stamp is now
our 'Traveller'.
Q5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
A5: Captain Jack Sparrow!
Q6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in
letterboxing?
A6: So far? 15 (In two weeks! LOL)
Re: For fun--stamp tell-all
From: jojoma22 (jojoma22@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 02:07:14 UTC
--- In letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com, "Janna Mauldin Heiner"
wrote:
>
>>
> 1. Do you hand-carve your own? Yes.
>
> 2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in
letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever
heard of the game? Letterboxing came first, but carving a very close
second! I found that carving stamps and hiding boxes is as much or
more fun than finding them.
>
> 3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
> I chose my trail name from my first love, quilting. My favorite
quilting block pattern is called Wild Goose Chase. I thought that
looking for letterboxes sounded like a perfectly fun wild goose
chase to me, and I have a history of taking my sisters and my Girl
Scouts on wild goose chases, so...how perfect. I'm Goose Chaser.
My first signature stamp was the quilt block, wild goose chase.
But, it's gone through a metamorphesis since then. I love my little
wild goose stamp that runs across the page.
> 4. How did your first carving experiences go? First was my
first signature stamp, on a pink eraser. It went pretty well. Second
went well except for those backward letters! Oops. Lesson in
reverse learned.
>
> 5. What's a favorite image you've carved? Hmm, tough question,
probably the one I carved with my puppy's face. It looks just like
him.
>
> 6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in
letterboxing? 24, I think, but not all are hiding yet.
>
>>
> 1. Do you hand-carve your own? Yes.
>
> 2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in
letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever
heard of the game? Letterboxing came first, but carving a very close
second! I found that carving stamps and hiding boxes is as much or
more fun than finding them.
>
> 3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
> I chose my trail name from my first love, quilting. My favorite
quilting block pattern is called Wild Goose Chase. I thought that
looking for letterboxes sounded like a perfectly fun wild goose
chase to me, and I have a history of taking my sisters and my Girl
Scouts on wild goose chases, so...how perfect. I'm Goose Chaser.
My first signature stamp was the quilt block, wild goose chase.
But, it's gone through a metamorphesis since then. I love my little
wild goose stamp that runs across the page.
> 4. How did your first carving experiences go? First was my
first signature stamp, on a pink eraser. It went pretty well. Second
went well except for those backward letters! Oops. Lesson in
reverse learned.
>
> 5. What's a favorite image you've carved? Hmm, tough question,
probably the one I carved with my puppy's face. It looks just like
him.
>
> 6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in
letterboxing? 24, I think, but not all are hiding yet.
Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: (RMORGAN762@aol.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 01:52:08 UTC-04:00
-----Original Message-----
From: jmauldinheiner@verizon.net
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Mon, 7 Aug 2006 6:12 PM
Subject: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
Yes, that's half of the game.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I wasn't aware of the material until I visted the web sites. I carved wooden whirlygigs and other things before and use only wood backings on all of my stamps. I made my stamp in March before I found my first box.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
Back in March I made a large stamp for use until I ran into microboxes and realized that the suggested size of 2 1/2 inches square for stamps was too large. So I found Wild Willy in the clip art and carved a nice replica of better size.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Carving was easy, my lack of a good subject was the problem. By the third stamp, I was a-ok.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
I made some nice presidental portraits. I was inspired by the 'Sherman' box stamp and went after that style along with the coloring book style.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have 29 planted boxes with almost that many carved and riding around in my truck all Summer.
Pioneer Spirit
P29 F385 X14
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Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: david baril (gingerbreadjunk@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 09:09:05 UTC-07:00
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
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Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: (kyba@insightbb.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 13:20:29 UTC-05:00
speedball and mastercarve???
huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
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huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: Janna Mauldin Heiner (jmauldinheiner@verizon.net) |
Date: 2006-08-08 11:32:34 UTC-07:00
www.dickblick.com Artists supply where you can look this stuff up.
Speedball linoleum carving tools; Mastercarve carving medium. These are the tools and media most used by people who carve their own stamps as an art form in itself. Other media are Safety-Cut (cheaper but less fine-grained) and the pink Speedball medium which seems to be of equally fine grain and a bit cheaper--I just got my first bit of it.
See also
http://www.negia.net/~unity/ The Carving Consortium where stampcarving artists congregate
mejaka, longtime mail artist
jmauldinheiner@verizon.net
Simon says: stop breathing. ... You do realize you can't win, right?
----- Original Message -----
From: kyba@insightbb.com
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
speedball and mastercarve???
huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Speedball linoleum carving tools; Mastercarve carving medium. These are the tools and media most used by people who carve their own stamps as an art form in itself. Other media are Safety-Cut (cheaper but less fine-grained) and the pink Speedball medium which seems to be of equally fine grain and a bit cheaper--I just got my first bit of it.
See also
http://www.negia.net/~unity/ The Carving Consortium where stampcarving artists congregate
mejaka, longtime mail artist
jmauldinheiner@verizon.net
Simon says: stop breathing. ... You do realize you can't win, right?
----- Original Message -----
From: kyba@insightbb.com
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:20 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
speedball and mastercarve???
huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
From: david baril (gingerbreadjunk@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2006-08-08 19:14:42 UTC-07:00
speedball carving tools and mastercarve rubber.
david (team new hampshire)
kyba@insightbb.com wrote:
speedball and mastercarve???
huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
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Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
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david (team new hampshire)
kyba@insightbb.com wrote:
speedball and mastercarve???
huntyr
----- Original Message -----
From: david baril
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tuesday, August 08, 2006 11:09 AM
Subject: Re: [LbNA] For fun--stamp tell-all
Some questions that I've been curious about since I first heard of letterboxing, and my responses. Feel free to reply with your own responses.
1. Do you hand-carve your own?
For the most part yes. About 90% of them are hand-carved by me and the other 10%, store bought.
2. Did you carve a stamp after becoming interested in letterboxing, or were you already a stamp carver before you ever heard of the game?
I had no idea you could carve a stamp yourself until after we got involved with letterboxing.
3. How did you decide on the image on your main signature stamp?
The main image for my signature stamp is a Nittany Lion. Go Penn State! Living in New Hamphire, we have some mountian lions up here i'm sure, so it seemed like a wonderful match.
4. How did your first carving experiences go?
Well, my first stamp was made out of a eraser. I used an xacto knife. After a few stamps that way, I was introduced to Speedball and Mastercarve.
5. What's a favorite image you've carved?
So far, as of 8/8/06, my favorite stamp would have to be Portsmouth Alarm. It is a stamp carved from a painting of Paul Revere's ride. I would suggest everyone to visit the box and see the stamp.
6. How many stamps have you carved exclusively for use in letterboxing?
I have i think 40 planted and another 12 looking for a home.
David (team new hampshire)
P52 F264 X73
http://teamnewhampshire.blogspot.com
__________________________________________________________
Check out AOL.com today. Breaking news, video search, pictures, email and IM. All on demand. Always Free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
Yahoo! Music Unlimited - Access over 1 million songs.Try it free.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
---------------------------------
Do you Yahoo!?
Get on board. You're invited to try the new Yahoo! Mail Beta.
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