Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas

For many of us, summer vacation means spending at least a few long summer days on a beach somewhere. Well, if you can combine a beach vacation with a wedding – all the better! For those of you planning a beach wedding, here are some creative beach wedding escort card ideas and seating chart display ideas that will fit right in with your coastal setting. Think driftwood, sea glass, macramé details for a tropical location, or even oyster shells for a New England affair!

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Obsessed with the white calligraphy on driftwood! | Event Planning & Design: All Who Wander Events, Calligraphy: A Fabulous Fete via I Do Y’all

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

This macramé leaf escort card display adds a tropical vibe. | Photography: Jillian Mitchell, Event Design & Planning: Nicoella Events via Green Wedding Shoes

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

How cute are these tiny boats? | Photography: Wendy Laurel, Event Design & Planning: Maui’s Angels Destination Weddings & Events, Calligraphy: Miss B Calligraphy via The Knot

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Gold details add an elegant touch. | Photography: Harwell Photography, Event Design & Planning: Eva Clark Events via Style Me Pretty

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Love these colors. | Photography: Rebecca Fishman of Birds Of A Feather, Event Design & Planning: La Boheme Events, Paper Goods: Prim And Pixie via Style Me Pretty

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

How can you resist a message in a bottle?! | (Left) Photography: Rodeo and Co. Photography, Event Design & Planning: Monica Johnson via Southern Weddings / (Right) Photography: The Ganeys, Event Planner at Carlouel: Kelley Williams via Trendy Bride

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

This Italian marbled paper is gorgeous. | Photography: Cambria Grace Photography, Event Design & Planning: Foret Design Studio via Ruffled

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Who needs table numbers? Each seashell represents a different table! | Photography: Kate Osborne Photography via Brides

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Surfboard turned seating chart. | Photography: Natalie Schutt Photography, Event Coordinators & Stylists: Details, Darling via Wedding Chicks

Beach Wedding Escort Card Ideas / Oh So Beautiful Paper

White calligraphy and sea glass are a dreamy combination. | Photography: Jade + Matthew Take Pictures, Event Design & Planning: Gray Harper Event Maker, Calligraphy: LowCountry Paper Co. via Green Wedding Shoes

Doesn’t a beach wedding sound dreamy? A beautiful wedding plus beach vacation? Yes, please!

p.s. Macramé wedding inspiration and citrus wedding inspiration!

How to Help Families Separated at the Border

I spent most of last week and this past weekend feeling physically ill over the news coming out of the U.S.-Mexico border. Nearly 2,000 children separated from their families in April and May 2018. Many of these families are seeking asylum in the United States – which is 100% a legal form of immigration codified in international treaty obligations – but are now being prosecuted for the misdemeanor of entering the country illegally. At the same time, officials are refusing to allow families to cross through valid ports of entry to claim asylum, a violation of international law. There are also reports that the government is separating asylum-seeking families that ARE allowed to present themselves at legal ports of entry so the government can keep the parents in jail-like immigration detention while their asylum cases are adjudicated. Babies. Toddlers in diapers. Hysterical children with no one to comfort them. This is happening to children and families just like mine. To parents just like me. Families seeking asylum, just like my Jewish great grandmother who came to the United States after fleeing war and persecution in Eastern Europe. This goes beyond politics. I cannot sit silently while this is going on, and I hope you will also help in any way that you can – whether that means donating to some of the organizations below, joining a protest in your area, or calling, texting, and writing to your Congressional representatives.

Mr. Rogers

CONTACT YOUR SENATORS AND REPRESENTATIVE

One of the most important things you can do right now is contact your Congressional representatives to express your views. There are three important pieces of Congressional legislation that would prevent family separations at the border and provide assistance to unaccompanied or separated minor children in the United States:

  • S. 3036 – Keep Families Together Act would prevent the Department of Homeland Security from taking children from their parents at the border and require the Department of Homeland Security to provide parents with information on how to locate a child if separated. Check here to see if your Senators support this bill (under the cosponsors section). 
  • R. 5950/S.2937 – the HELP Separated Children Act would protect the safety and well-being of minor children who have been left alone and vulnerable after their parents have been arrested or detained by U.S. immigration authorities. Check here to see if your Senators support the Senate version of this bill (under the cosponsors section), and check here to see if your Representative supports the House version.
  • R. 2043/S. 2468 – the Fair Day in Court for Kids Act of 2018 would provide unaccompanied minor children with access to legal representation when they appear in removal proceedings before an immigration judge. Because three year olds should not have to represent themselves in court. Check here to see if your Senators support the Senate version of this bill (under the cosponsors section), and check here to see if your Representative supports the House version.

Printable Dear Senator / Dear Representative Postcards by Allie Hasson

Download these printable postcards by Allie Hasson here

You can look up the address and phone number for your two senators here. You can look up your house representative using your zip code here. When you click on their name, scroll down and you’ll see an address and a phone number for their Washington, DC office. Contacting their DC staff is totally okay, or you can click through to their individual website to find local contact info. You can download these printable Dear Representative/Dear Senator postcards by Allie Hasson right here.

Fun Fact: residents of the District of Columbia, where I live, have no voting representation in Congress! We have no Senators, and only one non-voting House representative, which means DC residents don’t get to have our views represented on any of these important policy issues. So please, if you live in one of the 50 states, contact your Senators and Representative and make your voice heard – because I can’t!

When contacting your senator or representative, it’s best to keep things short and sweet. Make sure to include the name of the city or town where you live so the staff will know you’re actually a constituent – otherwise they may disregard your call or letter completely! – and a brief statement outlining your concerns and what you want them to do.

If your Congressional representatives do not currently support the legislation above, urge them to co-sponsor each bill by name and number (this helps their staff track constituent support for specific legislation). For example: I’m a constituent of [Town/State] and I’m calling/writing to ask that [Sen Name] support S. 3036, the Keep Families Together Act, to stop the separation of immigrant families at the U.S. border. This practice is immoral and unnecessarily harms innocent children. It must be stopped by Congress immediately. I’d also like you to support S. 2937, the HELP Separated Children Act, and S. 2468, the Fair Day in Court for Kids Act of 2018, to provide assistance for unaccompanied minor children in the United States.

If your Congressional representatives do support the legislation, contact them anyway to say thank you! It’s important that Senators and House representatives hear from their constituents on important policy issues so they know they’re heading in the right direction.

BTW – whether you’re writing a letter or making a phone call, there’s an amazing resource called 5Calls.org that determines your representatives based on your zip code, allows you to select your priority issues or bills, and gives you a specific script for that issue. You can definitely add your own text and opinions, but it’s a great starting point!

And if you get phone anxiety and want to get a message to your representatives out quickly, Resistbot is a texting service that will deliver your message for you. Text the word RESIST to 50409 to get started.

DONATE

There are lots of ways to support the organizations working on these important issues, from donations to volunteering your time in your area. There are a bunch of great organizations listed in this Slate article, but I tried to round up a few that I heard about from multiple sources below, starting with the organizations in Texas:

The Texas Civil Rights Project represents families and their young children separated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) at the border. They are seeking volunteers who speak Spanish, Mam, Q’eqchi’ or K’iche’ and have paralegal or legal assistant experience to help with intake efforts in McAllen, Brownsville, Laredo, El Paso, and Alpine, Texas. You can also donate to support their efforts here.

RAICES (Refugee and Immigrant Center for Education and Legal Services) works with parents in detention centers in Texas. They have a bond fund to help reunited families and fight their cases from the outside. You can support that bond fund here.

Neta RGV is providing supplies for families waiting to request asylum at legal ports of entry along the Rio Grande Valley of South Texas. CBP is claiming they are at capacity and unable to process them, forcing families to stay outside in the South Texas heat for days and weeks. They are seeking donations of supplies such as diapers, wipes, water, and non-perishable food items. Donate and volunteer here.

LUPE (La Union del Pueblo Entero) is a non-profit organization providing pro bono immigration legal services in McAllen, Texas and the Rio Grande Valley area. Consider donating here

Human Rights First provides pro bono legal services for asylum seekers around the United States, including in the Houston, Texas area. They’re looking for volunteer lawyers who can represent asylum seekers, and you can consider donating here

Here is an Amazon wish list for the Sacred Heart Church in McAllen, Texas. These items go directly to the Sacred Heart Respite Center working with families seeking asylum, including parents seeking to be reunited with their children. You can also send gently used items, including shoes, pants, and shirts to 1721 Beaumont Ave, McAllen, TX 78501 

Arizona: The Florence Immigrant & Refugee Rights Project is a nonprofit organization providing free legal and social services to women, men, and unaccompanied children in immigration custody in Arizona. The Florence Project seeks volunteers including pro bono lawyers, interpreters, researchers, medical professionals, and administrative assistants. You can e-mail [email protected] for volunteer opportunities and donate here.

New Mexico: The Santa Fe Dreamer’s Project provides pro bono legal services for New Mexico’s immigrant community, including assistance for unaccompanied minors. They currently represent several fathers detained at the border and transferred to a federal criminal prison in New Mexico. They are seeking volunteer lawyers and volunteers with language skills. You can also donate here

Illinois and Wisconsin: The Interfaith Community for Detained Immigrants (ICDI Chicago) seeks volunteers for a variety of activities, from observing the proceedings at immigration court to visiting immigrant detention centers in the area, and helping mentor newly arrived immigrants.

Pennsylvania: Aldea – The People’s Justice Center in Reading, Pennsylvania needs volunteer interpreters (especially Spanish and indigenous language speakers), attorneys, and legal assistants for help at the Berks Family Detention center, which currently houses unaccompanied minors and children separated from their families. Sign up to volunteer here.

Washington State: The Northwest Immigrant Rights Project needs volunteer Spanish, Mam, Q’eqchi’ or K’iche’ translators and interpreters for detained immigrant families, including more than 200 parents separated from their children at the border who have been transferred to this area. NWIRP has offices in Granger, Seattle, Tacoma or Wenatchee. If you speak any of these languages and live in the area, you can volunteer here

Keep Families Together / Ladyfingers Letterpress

Keep Families Together Printable Poster by Ladyfingers Letterpress

JOIN A PROTEST

A National Day of Action with marches and rallies across the country will take place on June 30 – join us in DC or find a march in your area right here. The awesome ladies of Ladyfingers Letterpress have kindly offered a free printable poster that you can download right here for all your protesting needs. Thank you ladies!

Inspiring Calligraphers: Michele of Meant To Be Calligraphy

Hey everyone! I’m excited to share a peek today into the work of Michele Hatty Fritz of Meant To Be Calligraphy. There’s lots of pretty calligraphy here to check out, but I also love Michele’s insights that show her true passion for lettering. She not only creates calligraphy — she also teaches classes on calligraphy and brush lettering. So let’s take a look at this inspiring calligrapher! – Jen

Calligraphy Wedding Sign / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Vicki Grafton Photography

How did Michele become a calligrapher? She started out working with words in a different way, as a journalist. “I spent the first part of my career as a journalist, covering entertainment, pop culture and food for a national magazine and later as an editor for The Washington Post,” says Michele. “But in 2009, I was ready for a change, so I quit my job at the Post to become a full-time, professional calligrapher and launched Meant To Be Calligraphy.” She does have some fun memories from her past work!  “I’m probably the only calligrapher you will ever meet who has interviewed Coldplay before a big show in Manhattan, John Mayer in a swanky New York hotel, Patrick Dempsey on a race track in Florida, Josh Duhamel on the beach in Santa Monica after a joint surfing lesson, J.K. Rowling over lunch in Boston and Maroon 5 on their tour bus here in DC.” Ha, so fun!

Calligraphy Escort Cards on Mini Envelopes / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Whitney Neal Photography

Rather than one style, Michele offers a slate of 30 signature styles — ranging from fun and playful to classic and elegant — through Meant To Be Calligraphy. “Being able to write across a range of styles allows me to give my clients a lot of options from which to choose and helps my work remain fresh and interesting as I go from project to project.”

Calligraphy Wedding Vows / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Elizabeth Fogarty Photography

Calligraphy Escort Card Display / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Calligraphy Chalkboard Wedding Ceremony Sign / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credits: Abby Jiu Photography

Michele, like most calligraphers, has been asked to write on more than just paper. Calligraphy works just about anywhere and Michele’s written on it all — chalkboards, mirrors, antique windows and doors, cutting boards, ceramic plates, glass bottles, painted canvases, clay pots, oyster shells, rocks, magnolia leaves, apples, pumpkins, and just about every other vegetable with a relatively smooth surface.

White Calligraphy on Produce Place Cards / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Lisa Blume Photography

Calligraphy Wedding Seating Chart / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Vicki Grafton Photography

On other calligraphy projects, Michele shares: “I also do in-person appearances where I have customized everything from valentines to New Years resolutions for party guests, and occasionally I’ll even bring along an engraving tool and a pair of safety glasses and turn glassware and the like into on-the-spot, custom party favors.”

Calligraphy Chalkboard Wedding Sign / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Ready Luck Photography

Michele’s passion for lettering started young — and runs in the family. “My father worked as a hand lettering artist for General Motors for his entire career,” says Michele. “He is the person who taught me my letters. I have very vivid memories of being two or three years old and he would draw letters with dots and then let me connect them. I was obsessed and I used to beg him for more dot letters!” Her mom also encouraged the craft by enrolling Michele in her first calligraphy class when she was just six or seven years old. “I was hooked from the very first lesson and continued to seek out instruction as I grew older,” says Michele.

Calligraphy Return Address Stamp / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Nole Garey

Michele also creates custom products for everyday use as well, like return address stamps and personalized stationery.

Michele credits her parents as the inspiration behind her decision to offer calligraphy classes. “I really wanted to honor my father’s legacy as an artist and honor my mom’s as well. She taught all sorts of crafting workshops when I was growing up and she definitely inspired me to want to share my knowledge, too.”

Happily Ever After Calligraphy Wedding Getaway Car Sign / Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credit: Holland Photo Arts

Michele has had people travel from all over the country (including a few international students!) to take part in her calligraphy workshops. “It’s amazing to me that I am already in my seventh year of teaching and it is one of the great joys of my life to watch my students both fall in love with lettering and learn how to master it during the course of our time together,” says Michele.

Such a cool story behind her work. Thanks again for sharing a peek into what you do, Michele! You can find her over at Meant To Be Calligraphy and on Instagram.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations

We love it when wedding invitation designers draw heavily upon the wedding venue for design inspiration! Michelle of Honey Paper (a member of our Designer Rolodex, naturally) designed these romantic wildflower inspired wedding invitations with the lush wildflower varieties of California’s Santa Ynez Valley in mind. From crisp honeysuckle to bristly blue fiesta flowers and pale leopard lilies, the delicate foliage in this suite is spot on – and so pretty paired with equally delicate text in pale green script!

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

From Michelle: Nicholas proposed to Katherine under the open skies of California’s Santa Ynez Valley in Santa Barbara County as the heads of lupines and poppies unfurled like antique quilts shaken out and smoothed. As native Coloradans, the couple felt a connection to this peaceful land between the mountains and wanted to share the gentle, pastoral countryside and local culture with their loved ones on their wedding day.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

The venue, florals, stationery details, and seasonal menu all drew inspiration from the generous, natural beauty of the region and the couple’s shared interest in sustainable food and love of the outdoors. I created original watercolor illustrations for the stationery and dinner menu inspired by the wildflowers of the region. An oval wreath of native ferns, chaparral nightshade, lilies and blue fiesta flower with its bristly foliage encircled the text of the invitation. An elegant script in green, the color of weathered copper, suggests the wandering stems of California honeysuckle.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

The deckled edges of the invitation and response card highlight the artistry of the mould-made paper by Fabriano, a distinguished Italian paper company wholly dedicated to renewable energy and sustainable business practices.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Bright white envelopes with old-world flaps were lined with my original watercolor illustration of the pale leopard lily, an abundant native plant often found alongside hedge nettles and stream orchid. Long, billowy stems with silky petals gracefully reach toward the first hints of the morning sun. Fess Parker Wine Country Inn and The Bear and Star were a perfect venue pair. Nestled among meadow, hill and stream, The Bear and Star restaurant boasts a closed-circuit ecosystem, meaning its menu is entirely crafted from the harvest yielded by Fess Parker Home Ranch. While quail, pig and cattle roam pasture, heirloom vegetables and fruit cling to vine and branch like baubles and gemstone.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

As favors, guests took home some of the garden spoils in packets filled with heirloom seeds from the year’s previous yield which read, “Let Love Grow,” with a running border of leopard lilies. The Bear and Star’s Chef John Cox prepared a family style dinner which started with a farm fresh hors d’oeuvres bar and the local Pinot Noir, Riesling and Syrah. Guests gathered at long tables on the veranda under a gentle sky and helped themselves to scoops of heirloom beans, quail egg and spring radish.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Envelopes were addressed using a romantic script the unmistakable green of spring’s first sweet pea shoots and paired with monochromatic vintage stamps. What an absolute delight to be part of this beautiful wedding day that was both a celebration of love and an homage to the riches of the earth.

Romantic Wildflower Inspired Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Thanks Michelle!

Design: Honey Paper
Paper: Fabriano Paper

Honey Paper is a member of the Designer Rolodex – check out more of their beautiful work right here or visit the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Ashleigh and Erik

Happy Weekend!

Happy Friday everyone! We’ve had the most gorgeous week here in DC, and I got to chaperone my first field trip for Sophie’s kindergarten class on Monday! We went out to a farm in Virginia with a huge pumpkin patch and a bunch of fun things for kids to do. Sophie has 25 kids in her class, so it was a little bit chaotic, but a lot of fun. This weekend we’re planning to take Alice to the pumpkin patch (since she didn’t get to go on the field trip) and enjoy this gorgeous fall weather! But in the meantime…

Dallas Clayton #kindcomments Mural at Union Market in Washington, DC

Photo by me of the new Dallas Clayton #kindcomments Mural at Union Market here in DC

…a few links for your weekend!

I just bought this jacket and I’m already completely obsessed with it! And it’s currently 25% off!

Definitely going to try this DIY two-toned concrete vase project

Country Curtains is going out of business after 60 years, and I’m so sad. They make my absolute favorite thermal blackout roman shades – get some while you still can!

This velvet dress is perfect for the holidays!

Love the hologram foil edge on these business cards

The perfect fall bootie

MAKE: Pumpkin donuts with maple glaze and toasted coconut

 

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Weekend project alert! Make these DIY Matisse-inspired pumpkins

Have you tried the new recycled cotton business cards from MOO? They’re perfect for bright colors and illustrations!

Fun and modern color blocked geometric wedding invitations

Black and white wedding stationery inspiration

 

That’s it for me this week. I’ll see you all back here on Monday! xoxo