Inspiration Found | Save the Date Cards

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

So, after searching and pondering and a few sheets of idle doodling, it finally clicked. The map cards weren’t quite right for us, but I had the idea to do a timeline, instead. Something like this:

Timeline Save the Date by Etsy seller Peaches Bonnema

Timeline Save the Date by Etsy seller Peaches Bonnema

And then it hit me:

Vintage!

No, not that kind of vintage. Not the vintage that everyone and her bridesmaid are absolutely head-over-heels for, I’m talking wine vintages. After all, the wedding is wine-themed, it makes perfect sense!

Front and back (side by side) of what would be considered a "rack card" or insert, about 1/3 of a standard letter-sized sheet, landscape oriented.

Front and back (side by side) of what would be considered a “rack card” or insert, about 1/3 of a standard letter-sized sheet, landscape oriented.

After a bit of playing around with ideas, I decided on this mock-up. The timeline down the right side starts with our birth years and goes to the present. Why so far back? Well, one of the things that prompted me to message Mr. Road Trip back on SoulGeek was that I noticed he lived in the town I was born in. Considering it’s not that big a town, I figured I had to say something about it. And then while he’d unknowingly “followed” me from his home town to mine, he very knowingly followed me to my (now our) adopted town not too long after.

Which is where those vertical lines along the left side come into play–in this mock-up they’re a placeholder for the grape vines I’ll draw in over them. The diagonal bridges, meanwhile, represent location shifts. (The left-most line is T’s Nebraska line, the middle our shared Louisiana line, and the right the Florida line… make sense now?) Since we’ll be doing a wine blending ritual during our ceremony, this visual “blending” of our vines over the course of our lives appeals to me. The frame around the dates is also a place-holder; I blended together some standard Photoshop frames to get something like what I was after, but the finished version will be hand-drawn by moi and then scanned and cleaned up enough for printing.

In addition to the drawing bits, I still have to decide if I’m going to print them myself or upload them for printing elsewhere. I originally designed them to be printed at home, 3-up on pretty card stock, but my home printer is starting to show signs of age when it prints (some draggy bits here and there), not to mention I’d really love this on some nice, thick stock, thicker than it could easily handle. I even considered printing each side separately and gluing the two pieces together to create the heft I was after. Printing elsewhere would cost me around $15 plus shipping, so that’s not too bad, plus it would mean I could easily add more color to the finished product, rather than just printing in dark brown ink on cream stock.

And why not have them printed at my office? It is a commercial print shop, after all. Simple: I’m not inviting the vast majority of my coworkers, so I’d like to keep the details private as far as they’re concerned.

You know the really sad thing? I’ve had this idea in mind for months, but kept putting it off because I couldn’t get my sketches to look just right. After all that, it only took a couple of hours to bang out this mock-up tonight and now most of the job is done. That’s what I get for over-thinking things, isn’t it?

How long did it take you to decide on/design your Save the Date cards?

Searching for Inspiration | Save the Dates

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

Save-the-Date cards are one of those nice but totally unnecessary bits of wedding stationery. They used to be used only during long engagements, or when a wedding was falling on a known-to-be-busy weekend or in a place that would require above-average travel arrangements for guests.

Now it seems like the wedding world (aka the Wedding Industrial Complex) considers them de rigueur for any but the quickest of locals-only weddings. I don’t mind this, of course, since I love anything and everything to do with paper products. Even before I started working at the printing company, when I’d have to go there on afternoons with Mom I’d love looking through the wedding books–all those wonderful designs, all those fairy tale weddings to go with them.

And with an engagement of 2 years+, I figured we’d send ours out at the beginning of this year, even though it was a little early, but before I knew it March was here and I hadn’t finished designing them much less sent them!

I could blame the delay on our long search for a photographer and the necessary delay of our engagement photos–after all, many StD* cards feature a cute picture of the happy couple. You know, just in case the recipient forgets who you are just by your first names…

Rustic Overlay Save the Date design by Fine and Dandy Paperie (via Zazzle)

Rustic Overlay Save the Date design by Fine & Dandy Paperie (via Zazzle)

But I wasn’t really planning on going that route. The silhouette trend is really nice, and I do like drawing profiles (they used to be one of my weaker skills, so I included them in a lot of my comics and finally got the hang of it), but that direction still didn’t feel like us.

Silhouette Save the Date by Hello! Lucky

Silhouette Save the Date by Hello! Lucky

And neither of us are ever very far from our planners (Mr Road Trip is a Franklin-Covey devotee, while I lean more towards The Planner Pad), so a calendar-style Save the Date would certainly make sense.

Calendar Save the Date by Etsy seller Ever After Design Studio

Calendar Save the Date by Etsy seller Ever After Design Studio

But what was really catching my eye were the hand-drawn map cards. Unfortunately, our “map” would have to span half the country and that would take some of the charm out of it. On the other hand we could map our wedding venue, but it’s kind of in the boonies, so landmarks–especially ones pertinent to us–would be non-existent.

Custom Wedding Map by Etsy seller Efinestationery

Custom Wedding Map by Etsy seller Efinestationery

 

Still, the images were charming, and the idea of plotting out places led me to another idea, the one I ultimately settled on.

*Most bloggers shorten Save the Date to STD, which brings up so many unfortunate mental images and is the butt of many a joke. Just by following the title-capitalization rules and making it StD looks a lot less like a social disease, you know?

How did you decide on your Save the Date Design?

A Tale of Two Notecards

64 Arts
Thirty-one Notecard

my Thirty-One Notecard

I love stationery.

Actually, it might be that I love getting cards and letters in the mail (bills, not so much). I still have ones I received as a child from family members and a few Mom saved that I wrote to her while away at the dreaded summer camp.

My high school English teacher (I had her 3 of the 4 years for one thing or another and was her teacher’s aide during my Senior Year) gifted me a gorgeous box of personalized note cards just before graduation. I loved them dearly and felt oh so posh sending out my graduation gift thank-yous on those heavy white cards.

Over the years I’ve dabbled in making my own stationery but, as I’m sure we can all agree, we just don’t write cards and letters very much any more. Email, cell phones, texting–it makes the time a message spends traveling over physical miles positively glacial. No wonder we call it snail mail!

Still, there’s something thrilling about seeing an envelope in the mailbox, hand-addressed and obviously not junk mail! I even have a pen-pal these days and it’s been a real treat to get the letters she sends. Sure, I read her blog and can keep up with her that way, but our written correspondence is different.

Reviving the Passion

Just recently I was invited to a thirty-one party by a friend. Their purses may not be my thing, but they have personalized note cards in a variety of styles. Happy to be able to support my friend’s shopping habit I gladly attended the party and ordered my cards (and a purse and a new lunch-tote; I’m a good friend).

Then, a couple weeks after the thirty-one party, I received an email from a representative of Modern Postcard, offering me the chance to try out their service and get a set of note cards or postcards. Was I interested? You bet! (And, yes, I do see the irony in a card company emailing me… first contact doesn’t always happen on the ground, right?)

Cards with Matching Envelopes

The grey goes so well with the pink, don't you think?

Now that both orders have come in and I’ve had a chance to hang out with the finished product for a bit, a review is definitely in order.

Thirty-One, Notecards & Envelopes

  • Variety: 15 different patterns available, including one where you pick your characters to represent you or your family.
  • Ease of Ordering: Through a consultant or the consultants website
  • Personalization Options: Each design determines how many lines and characters per line are allowed. Font selection is what is shown on the sample, no changing from the pre-set designs.
  • Packaging: Delivered by your consultant or the party hostess, they came in a clear plastic snap-closed pouch that makes keeping them from getting crushed very easy. I could see carrying the pouch in my purse if I were travelling and wanted to leave a little note or something.
  • Extras: Envelopes are printed in a color that coordinates with the card design, even on the inside to look like they’re lined. It’s a nice touch!
  • Usability: The cards are nice and sturdy but completely uncoated, which means that pretty much any writing instrument will work–pencil, pen, gel, etc.
  • Price: $18 for 20 cards and envelopes ($0.90 each, before tax and shipping)

Cute cards. I got the Pixie Pink Medallion design because it seemed fun. The only thing, design-wise, I would have liked was an option to have my name printed down in the lower right corner instead of front and center but I understand why offering that many options would make the process unwieldy for the company.

Modern Postcard, Postcards

Photo Postcard by Modern Postcard

Photo by Qedrin, Postcard by Modern Postcard

  • Variety: Postcards and Greeting Cards come in both standard (4.25×5.7) and deluxe (5.7×8.5) sizes, with over 500 different pattern choices.
  • Ease of Ordering: Online ordering only, the website is very easy to follow through the different options available.
  • Personalization Options: With the pre-designed cards it looks like you’re locked into the personalization placement but you still have full advantage of the font options (11 fonts, 6 font size options, 12 font color options). With one of the 14 design-your-own options you choose your size, orientation and layout and can upload a photograph or your own original art for the image. Basic editing tools are available for photos. This would be great for artists dealing in small-run cards for shows, just trying things out.
  • Packaging: The order was delivered in a bubble-mailer (via USPS) with a length of pearl ribbon keeping the cards from shifting around. Simple and effective.
  • Extras: They offer cards for the postcards at an additional $1.50 per 25 (again, for standard size), and return addresses printed on those envelopes for $17.50 with a sliding scale for larger orders. They also will direct mail your order (great for invitations!) if you want them to, for an extra fee per card of course.
  • Usability: And this is where Modern Postcard let me down a little. I ordered a set of 25 standard postcards, so I can’t really speak to the greeting cards. The cards are coated on both sides, glossy on the front. Now, working for a printing company as I have these past 16 years, I know that coated stocks can sometimes resist certain inks and even pencil marks! So I did a test. Pencil was actually okay, ball-point pens needed a little coaxing but were fine once you got them started, but gel and archival-ink felt-tips smeared up to a minute after writing with them. Permanent marker, of course, poses no problem. Not the worst thing in the world, but if you were planning on ordering postcards and actually using them as such, you might want to be aware that your pen choice will be limited if you want it legible. My recommendation to Modern Postcard would be to investigate C1S (Coated 1-Side) stocks for their postcards to increase the user-friendly nature of the cards.
  • Price: $19 for 25 standard postcards, no envelopes ($0.76 each); $29 for 25 standard greeting cards & envelopes ($1.16 each); free shipping
Smear Test on my New Notecards

Smear Test

For all that the coated backs made certain pens a liability, the cards really came out great. The print quality was excellent on the photo (please note: they do give instructions about what sorts of files to upload–if you send them garbage you won’t get roses, folks! dpi is important!) and would not hesitate placing an order with them for show cards or items for conventions should I got that route. The cards were processed in a timely manner and it was a pleasure getting to try them out. It should also be noted that they offer larger quantities (increments of 25), with a decreasing cost-per-item as you go up.

~~~oOo~~~

Style isn’t just what we wear, it’s in everything we do, say and believe. Fun stationery is a little luxury, a small price to pay for something miles removed from a blank sheet of copy paper or a screen full of pixels. Indulge a little (very little, with prices like these) and show the world your style even when you’re no longer in the room.

Disclaimer: I was provided a $19 credit to use towards an order with Modern Postcard in return for trying out their service. The opinions expressed above are entirely my own.