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Mary Engelbreit
Rubber Stamping & Card Making
With a range of licensed products that stretches
from dinnerware to screensavers, an award-winning magazine,
150 book titles in print and hundreds of millions of greeting
cards sold, the most apt description of artist Mary Engelbreit
may be a line pulled from one of her well-known greeting card
designs …she truly is The Queen of Everything. Mary's unmistakable
illustration style-imbued with spirited wit and nostalgic
warmth-has won her fans the world over.
It all began with a young girl who just had to draw pictures.
Mary moved into her first "studio," a hastily vacated linen
closet in the St. Louis home where she grew up, when she was
just 11 years old. "We jammed a desk and chair in there, and
I'm sure it was 110 degrees," she remembers. "But I would
happily sit in that closet for hours at a time and draw pictures."
Mary went to work directly out of high school
at an art supply store in St. Louis. Over the next few years
she worked for a small ad agency, accepted freelance projects
on the side, held independent art showings, and even worked
for a short time as an editorial cartoonist for the St. Louis
Post-Dispatch, but what she truly wanted was to be a children's
book illustrator.
In 1977, she took her portfolio to New York to try her luck
at some well-known publishing houses. She received a "mild
reception" from publishers and a suggestion from one art director
that she try her hand illustrating greeting cards. "I was
kind of crushed at the time," she recalls.
But soon enough, Mary realized that the suggestion had merit.
Once Mary shifted her talent and energy to greeting cards,
success came quickly. As her greeting card line grew in size
and popularity, it drew attention from other companies anxious
to license Mary's artwork on a wide range of products including
Counted Cross Stitch, calendars, T-shirts, mugs, gift books,
rubber stamps, ceramic figurines and a list that's grown to
include nearly 6,500 products in all.
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