• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
    • About Jessika Hepburn
      • Press/Publications
  • Entrepreneurship
    • Branding
    • Ethics
    • Health
    • Legal
    • Marketing
    • Planning
  • Fellow Makers
    • Community
    • Interviews
    • Resources
  • For the Hands
    • DIY
    • Handmade Goodness
  • For the Head
  • For the Heart
    • 365 Days of Presence
Oh My! Handmade

Oh My! Handmade

Making a good life since 2010

Getting To Know – Yas Imamura of Quill & Fox

Monday, September 8, 2014 by Marisa Edghill

Quill Fox Products

The Getting To Know series features interviews with makers, artists, designers and small business owners at all different stages of their careers. I’m always interested in how other adventurers in the world of creative entrepreneurship run their businesses, get inspired and how they got started in the first place.

As a stationery lover, I’ve been a long time fan of Quill & Fox. Yas Imamura’s illustrated products are modern with a hint of vintage flair, clever with a decent dose of quirk and oh-so-lustworthy. Let’s get to know Yas…

Quill Fox Profile Photo

Hi Yas! To start with, I’d love to know a little bit about you and your business.
I’m Yas Imamura, creator of Quill & Fox, an Oregon-based paper company. I grew up in the Philippines, moved here to study design and further a career in marketing. It was also how I met my now husband Andrew, the same person who got me back into illustration—a passion of mine that stuck through until I began college, until pressure to find a more “viable” career became a more pressing thing. I always loved art in story books and vintage illustration, which is why I’m eternally thankful to be able to make my own art and make a living out of it as well. I run the Quill & Fox shop from home with my Andrew who takes care of a lot of the day-to-day business operations.  It’s been a great ride!

Quill Fox in progressHow did you get started as a stationery designer?
I started getting into the art of paper and stationery when we got married. I was eager to create something truly unique. It was such a fun process, choosing paper, creating illustrations and layouts that were much more personal, something people would like to keep as mementos.

What’s the story behind the name “Quill & Fox”?
I’ve always loved foxes; there’s always a mystery to them in folklores, and they are really beautiful creatures in the wild. I also grew up reading the Little Prince, and a quote from the fox has stuck to me since; “..here is my secret, a very simple secret: It is only with the heart that one can see rightly; what is essential is invisible to the eye.”

I wish I had more profound reason for Quill. It was just such a pretty and word; I adore the aesthetic anatomy of the letter Q. The meaning fit rather nicely too for being a stationery shop.

Typewriter NotepadWhere do you find inspiration for each new line of products?
I like sifting through old adages and idioms, there’s always a classic spirit to an old saying that you can constantly reinvent visually. It’s definitely a huge inspiration for me.

Do you have a favourite piece in your latest collection?
Right now, I really love our Typewriter Notepad, just the vibrant colors and the clever placement of the typewriter and the blank paper on top of it.

Quill Fox Studio SpaceWhat does your typical work day look like?
We usually try to get all the orders out of the way. It can be hard to get creative and illustrate when there are little odds and ends that need to be dealt with first. Most of the day is spent on production, order processing and emails.

Yas ImamuraWhat do you love about running your own business?
I love that I work on my own time, elbow to elbow with my husband (he co-owns an animation company called What Now? Exactly! from home as well). I also enjoy dealing with customers directly, we’ve garnered a really supportive consumer base that appreciates small shops. I’m very thankful for them!

What do you find the hardest?
Keeping up with the rigid schedule of the industry can be hard, especially when it constitutes illustrating christmas in the middle of June. I just have to constantly find a way to get into the mood of things, no matter the season.

Notepad_Mag_New1-1024x737Your products are sold in shops big and small all around the world. Any advice for other makers on expanding into wholesale?
It’s important to have a clear set of guidelines and terms for your wholesale business and be absolutely friendly and helpful to your accounts. It goes a long way–I promise!

Do you have any secrets to balancing business and life while working from home?
That’s still a work in progress, even for me. Time managing yourself can be really challenging. I think it helps to have a regimen, something you can follow for a whole week that involves different areas of work and downtime. Don’t hesitate to kickback, have a day off in the middle of the week if your body and mind simply just need it. It’s one of the perks of being your own boss after all!

Quill Fox Products

What does your ideal Saturday look like?
At this time of the year, it’s waking up in the morning to go to the Saturday Market, which is a lovely 10 minute walk from where we live. Have some arepas, a small picnic with the dog and hubby.

terr_setWho are some other creators/designers/makers that you love?
I love Alfred Mahlau, Roger Duvoisin, and Wes Anderson.

What’s your favourite social media platform?
This is quite decisively Instagram. I’m a visually driven person, so it was the most fun for me to use versus platforms like twitter, and facebook. The interface is much simpler, interaction is much more straightforward. It also doubles as a really inspiring visual grid when you follow really great IGers too.

Treat Yourself To Quill & Fox Stationery

Quill & Fox Shop

Connect With Yas

Blog – Quill & Fox

Instagram – @quillandfox

Facebook – Quill & Fox

Twitter – @quillandfox

Filed Under: For the Heart, Interviews Tagged With: Getting To Know, interview, stationery

Primary Sidebar

Articles

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

Mine-Mill organizers claimed that the first of four concerts, held at the Peace Arch in Blaine, WA, in 1952, attracted 40,000 admirers, mostly from the Canadian side of the border near Vancouver. Source: Pacific Tribune Archive.

On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance

New Year's Revolution, illustration of hands breaking free from shackles

A New Year’s Revolution

Go Do Some Great Thing, Lawrence Hill

Go Do Some Great Thing

Dr. Pauli Murray, "I intend to destroy segregation by positive and embracing methods. When my brothers try to draw a circle to exclude me, I shall draw a larger circle to include them." An American Credo

Draw a Larger Circle

Fellow Makers, young Italian immigrant garment worker in Brooklyn

#FellowMakers History & the Triangle Factory Fire

Seventy Ways to Build Community, Save Your Sanity, and Change the World

70 Ways to Build Community

Stop the Hustle | Oh My! Handmade

Stop the Hustle: On Slowing Down, Stepping Up & Paying Attention

Community Is Not Clubs: How We’re Segregating the Internet & What We Can Do

Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike

Categories

Read More

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)
  • Press Release: Concern over Changes to Etsy Values Leads to #EtsyStrike
  • Community Statements on Changes to Values at Etsy #etsystrike
  • CALL FOR COMMUNITY STATEMENTS: Do changes to values at Etsy matter to you?
  • Et Tu, Etsy? A call for fellow makers to strike.
  • A Thousand and One Reasons to Hope

Footer

Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’

In June of 2016 I supported my love Chris as we dealt with the death of both his parents and a co-worker over a three week period. This essay written the summer of those deaths is my attempt to make sense of grief and the struggle to carry all that I care for. Originally published […]

Archives

  • On Distance: Paul Robeson and the Rolling River of Resistance
  • Care/Carry/Cure an essay from ‘You Care Too Much’
  • Letter to Etsy Board of Directors on Behalf of #EtsyStrike
  • The #EtsyStrike begins today July 16, 2018. Learn Why!
  • Des préoccupations liées aux changements aux valeurs Etsy mènent à l’appel à une grève Etsy (#GreveEtsy)

Search

Copyright © 2025 · Log in