Showing posts with label Wedding- Stationary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wedding- Stationary. Show all posts

Crystal's Invitations

My cousin Crystal is getting married July 4th (free fireworks! cool right?) and I worked with her to design/layout her invitations. I helped with the layout and some of the graphics and then she mailed me the hole punched paper and I Gocco'd the text on. After I Gocco'd the text, I embossed it as well to raise the texture. (This is also how I did my invitations.)

I sent them back to her as this:


Today I got the invitation, so it is time for the big reveal!


Jaq wanted to help. He was definitely a fan of the raffia.









And, the actual invitation:Click on the picture to enlarge it- you can really see
the shimmer in the paper and the texture of the embossed text.


Closeups:


The end.

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Sneak Peak..

A sneak peak of what I was busy with this weekend...


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The ACTUAL Last Wedding Post - Thank you notes

Finally, we have come to the wedding end. Hallelujah.

The last wedding project was our thank you cards. My mom had found kraft folded cards and envelopes on clearance at Target months ago. I decided to use them for the thank you cards.

When we got the CD of high res images from Keira, I chose a few favorites to include on the thank you card. I created a 4x6 (standard photo size) layout with the images.


I ordered red photo corners from Paper-Source, in addition to some more linen paper from paperandmore.com. I cut the linen paper down to fold inside the kraft paper. I was worried about ink being seen on the kraft, and this allowed us to write on white paper and eliminate any contrast issues w/pen and the kraft.

To hold the paper in the card, I punched two holes at the top of each card (like the programs) and tied it up with leftover red ribbon.


Then we were left with a huge pile on thank you cards. Unfortunately, making them wasn't the hardest/most time-consuming part of the project.. we had to fill all of these with individual, loving thank you notes..


We did it (not without some whining on a certain boy's part) and I mailed them out this week!

The wedding is OFFICIALLY over. I'm sad, but also super glad to have my time back and not be thinking about all of the stuff I have left to do still.

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Giving Away STD's!

..Save the dates that is. John thinks its hilarious to call them STDs.

We wanted to do save the dates since John's family and most of our friends are from out of town. We needed a way to get people the information regarding the hotel blocks and the timing of the events. I created a website that has timing, the hotel blocks, activities to do in the area, driving directions and information about flying, etc. To get this information out, I designed a save the date. (These also served as a bit of an engagement announcement since I'm sure most of my family hadn't even known I was engaged prior to receiving the STD.)

First, some inspiration:

I have no idea where I got most of these from- sorry :(


I love these photostrip save the dates!



For my save the dates, I decided to do a booklet style. The outside is kraft paper (receycled!). I wanted to use as many recycled paper items as possible, since we are using so much paper. Kraft will show up in several places throughout the wedding stationary- it adds a nice touch of brown too!

Inside of the booklet is a magnet with our date. Underneath the magnet guests found a note letting them know that the actual invitation will follow, along with our website containing all of the important stuff.

How did we make them?
After I designed the magnets, I set up as many as possible on an 8.5x11 sheet and then made them a PDF so that John could print them (he doesn't have Adobe InDesign on his computer).


I bought 8.5x11 magnetic paper (from Paper Source) which John fed through the printer and then I cut them with my craft rotary paper cutter.

We ended up with around 70 of these:


As you can see, the color came out really nice, which I wasn't really expecting. Yay!

The next step was cutting the kraft paper for the outside of the booklets. I designed the STDs so that I would get two booklets/8.5x11 sheet, and they would fit into an A2 envelope (4x5 I think). I designed the inside in Adobe InDesign (just like the magnets) and the John printed those as well.


After that, all I had to do was cut the kraft paper in half length-wise and fold it in half:


After I cut the booklet covers, John stamped them with a custom s&j stamp and some red ink.


After all of the booklets were stamped, John used adhesive plastic corners to place the magnet over the text on the inside of the book.


Lastly, I tied the booklet up with a red ribbon:



We put the STDs in a little kraft envelope, put on a custom wraparound label that I designed and printed on 8.5x11 label sheets and applied the awesome new Eames stamps.

I don't have any pictures of the envelopes all did up, but here is a picture of the wraparound label- the s&j return address is on the back (sealing) side of the envelope and the "please deliver to" is on the front left.

Boo all of the blurries. :(


From what we have heard, they have been received well. The only issue with them has been that people didn't realize there was a magnet on the inside (thus, they didn't see the information which was the reason to send them out!). I'm not sure WHY people didn't realize this- the magnet made the STD heavy in that spot, the magnet is a completely different paper/texture/thickness than the kraft paper, and there are those clear plastic corners on the booklet.

Oh well. We have been trying to spread the word when we can.

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