At Sirenella Press, we live to author beautiful e/books, design with soul, and make art that blends the best of analog and digital.
About Our Shop
Northern Virginia is home
Based in Loudoun County, our small family-run press and art studio crafts everything from visual memoirs to handmade journals — and we do it all with an admiration for paper, poetry, and artistic purpose.
We specialize in:
• Graphic nonfiction
• Visual memoir and illustrated prose
• Mixed media-inspired designs & goods
Our author-artist collections include:
📚 Independent Publications
Zines, eBooks, print books, and digital magazines
🎨 Mixed Media Paper Goods
Handmade journals, stamped stationery, art cards, and keepsakes designed for analog lovers and journaling souls
🖥 Digital Downloads
Templates, printables, collage kits, and digital assets perfect for artists, designers, and content creators seeking something unique — never cookie-cutter
Eco-friendly matters
We believe in analog-first everything; from art to writing — not mass-generated content or designs.
Our studio centers:
• traditional mediums,
• creative reuse,
• and eco-conscious materials.
In other words, #analoglove #sustainableart is how we (mostly) roll.
The Sirenella Way
A tariff-free word about our handcrafted items
For customers of our handmade, handcrafted & physical items:
Please note that most handmade and/or handcrafted, physical items listed on our site are:
- often limited in quantity; some are single-runs or only have a quantity of one so when the item is gone, it’s way gone;
- use thrifted and second-hand supplies, which we’ve sourced right from our own neighborhoods and domestic travels throughout the US
What this means for handmade, handcrafted customers:
• We’re not as reliant on international manufacturing or mass production
• Tariffs and foreign shipping delays don’t disrupt our offerings
• One-of-a-kind items are extremely limited so don’t wait, they run out fast
In short, we believe in creative reuse and eco-friendly approaches, not supply chain headaches 🙏🏽
This ethos, however, impacts the idea of inventory for most items, which we don’t often have much of, if any.