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Posts Tagged ‘wedding stationery’

Here come the Brides!  And your guests!  As we head into June – and early Summer Fêtes,  I thought I’d share a few ideas…

Artist Ryan Haugh upcycles champagne cork Cages into whimsical chairs.  They are a sweet keepsake and a clever way to display your Escort Cards at your own Champagne affair.  His shop and his chairs are found on Etsy.

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Speaking of Spirits, you can recycle your own wine and champagne corks or upcycle them as I did here with a little pen and paint.  You’ll need to slice the cork at the top with a serrated knife for the card to slip into.  The kind folks of Brooklyn’s own Smith & Vine donated these corks, but it’ll be much more fun to stock up on corks the old-fashioned way…

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If your event dares to be a bit more wild, why not try some Animal Magnets? .   These customizable wedding favors, sold on Etsy, come in array of animals and colors.

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And why not put your tchotchkes to work?   These sweet felt chairs are Anthropologie Christmas ornaments.

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Go vintage!  These are vintage cup cake toppers, which I also found on Etsy.

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You can always add a little elegance to your own small parties and events by adding a special touch – yours!  This is my own place mat sketch, but the folks at Cake Vintage are the masters of beautiful paper placemats and serving papers.  Printed on recycled paper with soy ink, the papers give any simple meal, an elegant feel.

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Recent work for a client.  Ephemera and Sundries courtesy of Myers of Keswick.  

What would we Anglophiles do without such a shop?  They even carry Fairy Dish Soap.

However, still miss the individual instant porridge packets.

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“We need a witness to our lives. There’s a billion people on the planet… I mean, what does any one life really mean? But in a marriage, you’re promising to care about everything.

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The good things, the bad things, the terrible things, the mundane things… all of it, all of the time,

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every day. You’re saying ‘Your life will not go unnoticed because I will notice it.

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Your life will not go un-witnessed because I will be your witness’.”

– Shall We Dance

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I had the pleasure of working with Gillian Simon, one of the masterminds behind the stationery line, Quotable.

Gillian started this line twenty years ago, born out of a simple frustration for finding cards that would inspire friends and loved ones.  The line now includes calendars, mugs, magnets and other sweet ephemera.  ’Each item features a quotation or proverb written in a distinctive style and script.’

IMG_0739As I do, you probably have one of those cards hanging on your refrigerator right now!

As Ms. Simon says, “They’re inspirational, everyday cards. They have universal sayings, but depending on what place you’re in mentally, the quotes mean different things to different people.”

Avid surfers, Simon and her betrothed used a Bob Marley quote for their Wedding Invitation.  {In high tide or in low tide, I’ll by your side.} It is the first Wedding Invitation of its Quotable kind!  So I was honored to add my white cursive style to her simple and classic quotable style.

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My recent client chose red and gold envelopes for her Wedding Invitations, both colors in traditional Indian Wedding Ceremonies represent luck and wealth for the future couple!

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Officially listed in the 2013 Winter Edition of the New York Magazine Weddings Issue.

On stands now!

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One of my recent clients chose a pretty lavender ink and a condensed version of my signature style.  Shot at the über cool Lavender Lake Lounge.  Perfect spot  for a pre or post wedding planning cocktail.    {I recommend the St. Basil.}

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My client chose blue for her invitations, kind of apropos to feel the blues as I write them as Summer begins to wane and the Olympics are no longer my background music!    

As you can see she chose the classic outer and inner envelope style.  You can find out more about how to address these two envelopes from both Martha Stewart  and Crane & Company.  As Crane & Co.’s blog explains, long ago, Wedding Invites were delivered by the Bride’s footmen to guests homes.  The guests’ servant removed the pristine inner envelope bearing only the guest name from the outer envelope. 

“Though footmen have since been replaced by postmen, the inside envelope is still de rigueur. It gives something as important as your wedding invitation a certain je ne sais quoi.”

Having addressed many envelopes, both formal and informal, I often tell my clients, that this is the first opportunity to present your guests with the ‘style’ of your Wedding, whether formal or casual.  If your Wedding is informal, the inner envelope is an opportunity to write your guest’s nickname or the name you’ve come to know and love them as.

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A recent frugalista client used the “Love In Bloom” collection from  VistaPrint for her invites and envelopes.  The envelopes and invite were not only inexpensive, but surprisingly vintage looking!  Photographed at the incredible Opalia Flowers in Brooklyn.

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My Summer is certainly feeling Olympic!  My first International client, Áine hails from Northwestern Ireland, from the city of Sligo.  Her invitation was done by the über romantic Rifle Paper Company.  Stay tuned for more posts from the Summer of Love.


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My calligraphy got to Italy before I did!

My client Ravenel, used Olive Branches with my work on her place cards for her Wedding in La Selva, Tuscany.   Olive branches are one of the traditional symbols of an Italian Wedding.  It’s often given from the Bride to her Mother in Law.  Brides are also known to wear olive branches in their hair, as a sign of fertility, peace and perhaps like an Olympic Athlete – victory!   Some strange and some lovely Italian traditions are listed here.

The photography is by the incomparable Italian artist, Leila Scarfiotti.

More of this amazing wedding on Leila’s blog under the “The Sacred Veil.”

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{The best recipes are always handwritten}

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