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Contact Our Creative Team for Partnerships and Collaborations

Have a collaboration idea, press question, business inquiry, or delightfully specific creative puzzle for Hearts and Laserbeams? Start here.

We’ d Love to Hear From You

The best messages we receive usually start with a real question, a half-formed idea, or a practical need that has been rattling around someone’ s craft table for a while.

That suits us. Hearts and Laserbeams lives in the space between useful and joyful: printable projects that save a weekday afternoon, creative business notes that came from actual trial and error, lifestyle shortcuts that make room for play, and illustration work with a little wink in the corner.

If you are writing because you found a project on the site and want to ask whether it might work for your classroom, shop display, newsletter, family party, or tiny-but-mighty community event, please say so. Specific context helps us answer like humans instead of guessing in circles.

For general business inquiries, partnership opportunities, press requests, and media questions, please contact Director Garrett Miller at [email protected].

Quick note from the inbox: A helpful message usually includes who you are, what you are hoping to make happen, any relevant timing, and the best way to follow up by email. No need to over-polish it. A clear note beats a sparkly mystery every time.

General Business Inquiries

Use this route for licensing questions, project requests, creative-business conversations, or anything that does not fit neatly into another bucket.

A plain-language summary is welcome. We like useful details more than long decks.

Press and Media

Reach out for interview requests, expert comments, image permissions, publication questions, or background on Hearts and Laserbeams.

Please include your outlet, deadline, topic, and any quote or asset needs.

Partnership Ideas

Send collaboration ideas involving printables, illustration, creative campaigns, educational materials, or hands-on projects with a cheerful pulse.

The more grounded the idea, the easier it is to spot the good fit.

Partnerships, Press, and Business Inquiries

Here is the practical filter we use when reading a collaboration note: can we imagine the person on the other side, the audience it serves, and the thing we would actually make together?

That sounds simple, but it matters. A strong partnership pitch is not always the biggest one. Sometimes it is a classroom resource with a tight seasonal deadline. Sometimes it is a printable bundle for a brand that wants something warmer than a stock template. Sometimes it is a media request from an editor who needs a grounded quote about creative work, home projects, or the small-business side of making things online.

When you write, tell us the shape of the request. If it is a partnership, include the concept, audience, timeline, usage needs, and whether the project involves original art, adapted site content, or a new printable resource. If it is a press inquiry, include your publication, deadline, interview format, and the topic you want to cover. If it is a business question, share the decision you are trying to make and what kind of reply would help.

A Good Fit Often Looks Like This

We tend to lean toward projects with a clear audience and a useful finished piece: a downloadable activity, a visual guide, an illustrated resource, a thoughtful interview, or a campaign that invites people to make something with their hands.

One example: a seasonal printable idea for families works best when the request names the age range, where the printable will appear, how people will use it, and what permissions are needed. With those pieces on the table, the conversation moves from fog machine to workbench.

What Helps Us Reply

  • Your name, organization, and role
  • The type of inquiry: partnership, press, media, licensing, or general business
  • The audience or community the work is meant to serve
  • Your timeline, especially if a deadline is close
  • Any usage details for artwork, printables, quotes, or site content

We do not need a perfect proposal on the first email. We do need enough detail to understand whether the idea belongs in the Hearts and Laserbeams universe: practical, kind, a little playful, and made with the end user in mind.

All partnership, press, and business messages should go to Garrett Miller at [email protected].

The Faces Behind the Lasers

Behind the site is a small creative team that cares about clear instructions, useful files, friendly visuals, and the tiny details that make a project feel doable.

Team photo
The Hearts and Laserbeams team bringing practical creative ideas from sketchbook to screen

Hearts and Laserbeams did not grow out of a boardroom phrase. It grew from the everyday rhythm of making things: sketching, testing, trimming, rewriting instructions, noticing where people get stuck, and trying to make the next version clearer.

That is still the lens we use. If a printable looks cute but creates chaos at the kitchen table, it needs more work. If a tutorial sounds clever but skips the step where everyone actually gets confused, it goes back for another pass. If a collaboration idea has charm but no clear reader benefit, we ask more questions before saying yes.

You can learn more about the people and point of view behind the site on About Steph & Hearts and Laserbeams. For privacy, terms, and site-use questions, the formal pages are here too: Privacy Policy, Terms of Service, and Cookie Policy.

Laserbeam signal: If your note is genuine, specific, and meant for real people, send it our way. Garrett Miller can be reached at [email protected].

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