Paper Party 2016! (aka Pastel Rainbow Iridescent Disco Party Inspiration)

As promised, I’m sharing the photos from this year’s Paper Party during the National Stationery Show! I can’t believe the party was already two weeks ago – the whole evening went by so fast! The iridescent disco vibes that helped shape the invitation design also helped guide the overall party design. We incorporated a pastel rainbow color palette – lavender, mint green, light blue, and shades of pink and peach – along with plenty of sparkle!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This year’s party was again held at Hudson Terrace in the 2nd floor Salon. My talented friend (and professional event planner) Janice from Bellwether Events helped me plan the party and kept the entire evening running smoothly. Our amazing group of sponsors and creative partners helped us bring the party to life, including the National Stationery Show, Mixbook, Etsy Wholesale, My Mind’s Eye, Smock, Bella Figura, Sakura of America, Hester & Cook Design Group, Legion Paper, Mailchimp, Crow & Canary, Honeybook, Sugar Paper, Foryourparty.com, Soirée Floral, Meant to Be Calligraphy, Ashley Buzzy, Parabo Press, Sarah from Parrott Design Studio, and Smilebooth.

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

I printed the sponsor thank you banner on a 3′ x 4′ color engineer print from Parabo Press! Michele from Meant to Be Calligraphy provided the calligraphy lettering, which I combined with my own text and layered over the watercolor background from the invitations – then just printed the whole thing! Easy peasy. We decorated with our signature honeycomb clusters with mini disco balls! We also incorporated iridescent tassels made from fringe door curtains.

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

I also hand painted the Paper Party 2016 logo (designed by Ashley Buzzy) on a 3′ x 4′ engineer print from Parabo Press. The lettering is actually made of holographic silver glitter over glue. It didn’t photograph very well, but it looked really cool in person!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Can you seriously believe this paper fan wall?? It was definitely the highlight of the entire party. The team from My Mind’s Eye put the entire thing together – they even made the disco ball YOLO letters! Amazing.

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Tote Bag by Sugar Paper / Oh So Beautiful Paper

(image by Sugar Paper)

Sugar Paper made the gift tote bags for this year’s party – stay tuned for more on that soon! Hint: there will be a giveaway involved!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

I always like to have an interactive element at the party – and this year that activity involved Sakura of America pens! We asked our party guests to help us celebrate 70 years of the National Stationery Show by writing a little love note using Sakura of America Glaze, Gelly Roll, and Soufflé pens or Pen-touch paint markers. Janet from Fox and Fallow used silver Pen-touch markers to make a little sign to display amongst the colorful notes and pens. I loved the bright pop of color and seeing all the beautiful notes left by the party guests!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

AND OMG THE FLOWERS. Dawn from Soirée Floral creates the most gorgeous arrangements for the Paper Party year after year. I really don’t know how she does it! This year I asked Dawn to create arrangements comprised mostly of greens – ferns, tropical leaves, vines, etc. – with just a few pink blooms tucked into each arrangement. For the blooms we used a mix of peonies, ranunculus, roses, and cymbidium orchids. They turned out even more beautifully than I could have possibly imagined!

Paper Party 2016 Flowers by Soiree Floral / Oh So Beautiful Paper

photo via @exit343

Paper Party 2016 Flowers by Soiree Floral / Oh So Beautiful Paper

photo by Carrie Fleck

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

We served two signature cocktails at this year’s party: a Pineapple Mai Tai and a Lavender-Lemon Collins. We’ll be sharing the cocktails and recipes tomorrow – they were so good! Sarah from Parrott Design Studio was kind enough to design a cocktail menu for the party. I love her illustrations and hand lettered recipes!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Mixbook sponsored this year’s Paper Party photobooth – and they made a book with photos from past Paper Parties (aw, memories!) for guests to browse while waiting for their turn in the photobooth, along with a few other photo book examples and some of their gorgeous photo cards. So fun!

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 / Pastel Iridescent Rainbow Disco Party Inspiration / Sara Wight Photography for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Smilebooth Photos! / Mixbook + Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Smilebooth Photos! / Mixbook + Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Smilebooth Photos! / Mixbook + Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Smilebooth Photos! / Mixbook + Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Smilebooth Photos! / Mixbook + Oh So Beautiful Paper

You can find all of the Smilebooth photos from Paper Party 2016 right here!

Finally, a HUGE thank you to the wonderful sponsors and people who made the evening possible:

  • Infinite thanks to Janice and Carrie for all of their invaluable help over the past few months and throughout the evening – and our small army of friends (Kristina and Rob, Sarah, Mindy, Sam, Brad Burks, and more!) who helped stuff gift bags or with set up before the party. We couldn’t have done it without you!

And of course a big thanks to Sara Wight for the gorgeous photos and Hudson Terrace for having us!

Party Sources

Event Coordination: Bellwether Events

Floral Arrangements: Soirée Floral

“Yolo” Paper Fan Wall: My Mind’s Eye

Engineer Prints: Parabo Press

Pens and Paint Markers: Sakura of America

Gift Tote Bags: Sugar Paper

Cocktail Menus: Parrott Design Studio

Lavender Foil Coasters, Stir Sticks, and Matchboxes: For Your Party

Micro Glitter Hologram Foil Coasters: Smock

Marbled Paper Placemats: Hester & Cook Design Group

Venue: Hudson Terrace

Photo Credits: Sara Wight Photography

Paper Party 2016: Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations

I’ll be sharing the photos from this year’s Paper Party in just a bit – but first, I wanted to help set the scene by sharing the photos of the rainbow watercolor and hologram foil invitations that we created for this year’s party! As with previous years, the invitations were a group effort. The ultra-talented Ashley Buzzy designed the invitations and envelope liner, Bella Figura printed everything on their smooth cotton paper, and Michele from Meant to Be Calligraphy addressed the envelopes. This year’s invitation design featured hologram foil over a digitally printed watercolor background!

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I’ve been really inspired by all things iridescent lately, so I used that as the starting point for the rest of the inspiration for this year’s party. I created a moodboard for this year’s party, which contained an image of crinkled iridescent cellophane and a few images of disco balls – and voila! Party inspiration! I thought Ashley Buzzy had the perfect design aesthetic to complement my iridescent rainbow disco party theme, and I was thrilled when she agreed to create the invitation design!

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Ashley was super inspired by the rainbow overtones of the iridescent cellophane in the party moodboard. She created this gorgeous rainbow watercolor background by layering a rainbow gradient over a watercolor splatter pattern that she scanned into her computer. Ashley also created a rainbow watercolor splatter envelope liner that complemented the invitation design without mirroring the design too closely.

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I really, really, really wanted to use hologram foil for the printed party invitations – but I had no idea there were so many different types of hologram foil! I must have looked at more than 40 hologram foil swatches at Bella Figura before settling on this smooth rainbow-y silver hologram foil called Spectrum. I love how the foil shows a different color and light spectrum at every angle! Bella Figura also letterpress printed the design and printing credit on the reverse side of the invitation and the envelope return address in a beautiful teal ink.

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

For the envelopes, I once again turned to my favorite envelope finishing trick: dip dyeing! I decided to continue the rainbow theme by dip dyeing the envelopes four different pastel colors: lavender, blue, green, and pink. Michele from Meant to Be Calligraphy addressed the envelopes in black ink in her beautiful Durham style.

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Calligraphy by Meant to Be Calligraphy / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Calligraphy by Meant to Be Calligraphy / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paper Party 2016 Rainbow Watercolor and Hologram Foil Invitations / Design by Ashley Buzzy / Printed by Bella Figura / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Those are the rainbow watercolor and hologram foil invitations for Paper Party 2016! I hope you love them as much as I do!

Design: Ashley Buzzy Lettering & Press

Printing: Bella Figura

Envelope Calligraphy: Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell

This next story is a really special one that Emily McDowell brought up with me when chatting about this column’s story. She’s been running her company – creative and business – for 5 years and is embarking on a huge change in her company structure. Kindly sharing some very honest details about the struggles she faced in her company’s rapid growth, Emily’s here to delve into how she’s overcoming and choosing what’s best for her business. – Megan

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I’m a writer and illustrator, and I started what became Emily McDowell Studio in 2011, as an Etsy shop selling illustrated prints. I had recently quit my full time job as a creative director/writer in advertising, and I was freelancing in that business and trying to figure out what I wanted to do with my life.

Pinterest was just getting started at that time, and people were really responding to my work, repinning it all over the place. Lettering also wasn’t a huge trend yet and I’d always loved lettering – it was what I did in the margins of paper when I was bored all through school, and then in meetings once I started working – so people were really digging what I was doing there, too. For the first year and a half, I only sold prints (printed myself on a home Epson). I really wanted to make cards, but at first I thought it’d be too hard to make a profit on something that costs less than $5. I was very interested in the idea of making cards for the relationships we actually have, since so much of what was out there were traditional messages that I didn’t feel personally connected to. Cards also let me combine my writing and illustration skills, plus my love for psychology and human observations, in a really fun, interesting way.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

In 2012, I had an idea for a Valentine card for the person you’re kind of dating, but not really, which was something I’d never seen before. I had 100 printed at a local printer and put it in my Etsy shop in late January of 2013. It went viral and I sold 1700 in a week before I had to cut off shipping. That experience helped me see that there was a real need for the thing I wanted to do.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

In May 2013, I launched my wholesale stationery line at NSS with 45 cards. I wrote about 35 orders for boutiques and got a huge Urban Outfitters order, which allowed me to get a studio space in downtown Los Angeles (I had to, since the 96,000 cards I was having printed wouldn’t fit in our apartment!). The company grew really quickly; after a year in business, I had 6 employees and we were in about 1,000 stores and doing a big chunk of our sales online.

I have never had a business partner, so I’ve always run the business and done all the creative. This has been rewarding, but also tremendously challenging. As we continued to grow, I was spending about 85% of my time managing staff, infrastructure, production, finances, and putting out various fires. The creative got pushed to the bottom of the pile because it was the only thing I could do on my own, so I did it late at night and on weekends when emails weren’t coming in and people didn’t need me for anything

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

It had always been my vision to make all kinds of different products beyond stationery – as a creative person, my brain just works that way, and as a formerly naïve person to the world of business, I figured it couldn’t be THAT hard. (Famous last words!) In 2014, we introduced tote bags, mugs, dish towels, and about 4 other categories of gift products. The bigger we got, the more challenging it was to produce gift – the logistics alone are mind-boggling. After running into issues with quality, timeliness, and cost in the US the first year, we began sourcing overseas, which is of course risky in different ways. We had some major issues and financial hits along the way, like a shipment of 10,000 tote bags that arrived six weeks late with the handles falling off, that we had to figure out how to have re-sewn at a local sewing house, while fielding countless angry phone calls from stores due to the delay in shipping. I’m really proud of us for pushing through when we all wanted to give up, and figuring out so many things on our own.
Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

In May of 2015, we launched Empathy Cards, which took the business to a whole different level. This unexpected growth coincided with building out and staffing our own warehouse in Las Vegas last spring after outgrowing two spaces in Los Angeles due to the storage space requirements of gift products (stationery takes up a lot less room than anything else!). By last summer, we were in 1700 stores and I had 13 employees. The six full-time employees at our office in LA included our head of sales, two wholesale coordinators, head of operations, production/customer service manager, and communications manager. In Las Vegas, we had 5 fulltime/2 part-time employees, who managed inventory and fulfillment of all our wholesale and website orders.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

My life was constant, unrelenting problem-solving, which is part of being an entrepreneur, but this was extreme. I was in the strange position of being incredibly grateful for our success, but simultaneously exhausted and stressed out all the time. Part of why I left my career in advertising was that I was tired of the stress and sacrifice of working 80-hour weeks for ten years, but I found that I’d traded one business in for another.

This past year, I began to feel like the quality of my creative work was really suffering, and even though I’d delegated so much to my fantastic team, it felt like an impossible task to continue doing the kind of innovative creative work required to keep the business afloat while I was also running the business. I was also having to say no to a lot of creative opportunities that I really wanted to do, like writing and speaking, because I just didn’t have time.

At the end of 2015, in looking at our numbers, we realized that the wholesale arm of our business was bringing in slightly more than half of our revenue, but took ten times the resources and effort to run than our website, which accounted for the rest of our revenue. We had a lot of internal conversations about the best way forward, and it was clear that we needed to make some changes.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

At NYNOW in January, I had a meeting with the folks at Madison Park Group about doing a special licensed collection with them, featuring products that we would never be able to make ourselves. A close friend and mentor of mine, Margo Tantau, had just come on board as MPG’s head of product development and creative, and she and I had been trying to figure out how to work together for a couple of years. I also knew two of MPG’s artists fairly well, and had always heard fantastic things about them as a company.

I came out of that meeting realizing that working with MPG might be a bigger opportunity than a licensed collection, and we started talking about what it might look like to enter into a partnership. We ended up negotiating a licensing contract in which Madison Park took over our production and fulfillment for wholesale, which means that about 80% of my daily responsibilities have been absorbed by their team. I still own and have complete creative control of the brand, and we are continuing to run our website and that half of the business ourselves.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

The way it works now is that I come up with ideas, writing, and art for new products, and work with Margo and MPG’s product development team to get them made. Madison Park handles all the logistics and finances of production, and all our products destined for wholesale are stored in their warehouse in Seattle. We are able to buy inventory from them to store at our warehouse in Las Vegas and sell on our website.

Two of my three wholesale employees became Madison Park employees doing their same jobs on our brand, so when retailers call the same person answers the phone. Our sales reps and showrooms are remaining the same, and we’re keeping our own trade show booths and wholesale catalogs; those things are just managed by MPG now. Our wholesale orders are all shipped out of MPG’s warehouse and retailers submit payment to them.

This new system allows me to focus on doing what I started this business to be able to do: write and design products! We’ll still be making as many cards as we always have, but we’ll be adding so many new gift categories that we never could have figured out on our own. Between October and January, we’re going to be adding six new categories, which basically doubles our gift offering.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

In some ways, this was a tough decision because it felt a bit like throwing in the towel on a thing we had worked so hard to build for three years. But in looking at the long-term health of the brand, thinking about my upcoming 40th birthday and the badly needed changes to my personal life, we all agreed that this was a great solution for the company. I feel really grateful to have been given this opportunity, and for the first time in a while, I feel excited about ideas instead of just feeling stressed about not having the time to come up with them.

The vast majority of our retailers have been thrilled about this shift (hey, more stuff to sell!). I wasn’t sure how other designers in the indie community would react, given that we basically sold out, but the reality is that 95% of the people in this industry are incredibly kind and supportive, which is really a special thing. All our paths are different, and there are a ton of different ways to build a business. I have the utmost respect for artisans and letterpress printers, but it was never my intention to be a maker; I’m personally more drawn to the creative idea part of making stuff. Ultimately, our businesses have to serve our lives, and as entrepreneurs, it’s all too easy to forget this and make your life about serving your business.

Behind the Stationery: Emily McDowell / Oh So Beautiful Paper

All photos courtesy of Emily McDowell.

Interested in participating in Behind the Stationery? Email Megan at megan (at) ohsobeautifulpaper (dot) com for more details.

The 2016 National Stationery Show, Part 2

As exciting as it is to see brand new exhibitors at the National Stationery Show each year, I always look forward to visiting veteran exhibitors who I know I can count on to wow me at the show. So this is just the first recap featuring a few of the exhibitors that form the heart of my can’t-miss-list at the show year after year, from Sugar Paper to Rifle Paper Co. to Moglea. As expected, Sugar Paper just completely knocked it out of the park with their new collection of leather and chambray folio covers and desk accessories (all with a gold foil monogram option!), along with new office stationery (I’m in love with that weekly to do list), greeting cards, and more!

National Stationery Show 2016: Sugar Paper / Oh So Beautiful Paper

National Stationery Show 2016: Sugar Paper / Oh So Beautiful Paper

As always, this post is FULL of photos – so click through to continue reading after the jump!

Continue reading

Frozen Cocktail Recipe: Missionary’s Downfall

I’m rapidly running out of May but I still have plenty of mint. And with the unofficial start of summer taking place this weekend, it feels like the perfect time for a mint frozen cocktail recipe. So here’s a classic Tiki drink that uses a LOT of mint, the Missionary’s Downfall. â€“ Andrew

Missionary's Downfall / Mint Frozen Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Missionary’s Downfall

1 1/2 oz Silver Rum
1/2 oz Apricot Brandy
3/4 oz Lime Juice
1 oz Mint Syrup
1 1/2 oz Pineapple-Honey Syrup
2 mint sprigs

To make the mint syrup: first make a simple syrup by melting a cup of white sugar into a cup of water over low heat, stirring frequently until the sugar is fully dissolved. Then, blanch 5-6 sprigs of mint in boiling water for 15 seconds, then remove them and immediately immerse the mint in a bowl of ice water. After a minute, remove the mint and blot it dry with some paper towels. Combine the mint and syrup in a blender and blend the mint to a pulp. Strain the syrup through cheesecloth or, better yet, a coffee filter to remove any solids. Bottle and keep refrigerated.

To make the pineapple-honey syrup: combine equal parts honey and pineapple juice in a saucepan over low heat. Stir frequently until the honey and juice and fully melted together. Bottle and keep refrigerated.

To make the Missionary’s Downfall: combine all the ingredients in a blender with the leaves of two mint sprigs and a quarter cup of crushed ice. Blend until smooth, adding more crushed ice as needed until the drink starts to fold in on itself. Pour into a Tiki mug or coupe glass and enjoy!

The Missionary’s Downfall is an original, a creation of Don the Beachcomber back in the 1940s. And it’s a fun one: mint, of course, and lots of citrus; grassy dry rum and floral honey and fruity apricot brandy, all layered in that perfectly Tiki way. And it’s green, verdantly green, the sort of green that reminds you of those green hillsides in a place like Hawaii.

Missionary's Downfall / Mint Frozen Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

A note on that apricot brandy: we’re talking here about an apricot (or peach) eau-de-vie, a liquor distilled from apricots, dry up front and with a floral, fruity finish on the back of the palate. We’re not talking about apricot liqueur, a sweet, low proof spirit made by steeping apricots and then blending in sugar. For the most perfect, classic Missionary’s Downfall, you need the real deal. But! It’s not the end of the world if you decide not to stock your bar with a fairly specific, fairly hard to find ingredient. Even though this drink has been around for decades, or maybe because of it, there doesn’t seem to be a single standard recipe for this drink out there. And there’s no cocktail police who will arrest you if you come up with your own.

Missionary's Downfall / Mint Frozen Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

I’ve seen people use apricot liqueur, or just straight brandy, or peach bitters here. An apricot liqueur will add fruity sweetness to your drink, not quite the same but still pretty good. If you head in that direction – substituting or dropping the apricot brandy, I’d recommend adding in a bit more rum in its place, to balance out the sweetness and proof of the drink.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram!)

Glassware by Liquorary

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper