Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations

When I think about summer, I think of bright, vibrant colors and bold patterns (ideally of the fruit or floral variety). I’m loving these colorful watercolor crest wedding invitations from Sandy of Roseville Designs (one of our fantastic Designer Rolodex members!), whcih feature beautiful summery tones and a vibrant floral envelope liner. The custom watercolor crest is both whimsical and elegant, and the watercolor floral details throughout the suite are the perfect burst of summer color!

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

From Sandy: I am so excited to share Melissa and Andy’s colorful watercolor crest wedding invitations! I love doing watercolor wedding crests because they can be used for not only invitations, but day-of wedding stationery, too! The beauty of a custom crest is you can take the elements of the crest and use them for designing the other paper elements.

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

For Melissa and Andy, I created a watercolor wedding crest incorporating greens, blues, pinks, and peaches to celebrate their bright, summer wedding along the Connecticut shoreline. Since we knew we wanted to use a calligraphy-style font for the names, we used a more formal serif font for their initials inside the shield of the crest. The finishing touch were the rich green vines on the bottom.

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

I used elements from the watercolor crest in the rest of the suite, with different pieces of the floral and greenery on the RSVP card, reception card, and details card. Then I took florals from the crest and enlarged them for a bright and happy custom envelope liner! I knew this detail would put a big smile on the faces of their wedding guests when they opened the envelope.

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

The final piece was a custom wax seal incorporating the monogram from the crest. This was placed on the outside of the envelope. I used a sea foam green wax to give it a soft feel. I love using wax seals in my suites because they give texture to design, and we all know invitations are a tactile experience!

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

The entire suite was digitally printed on thick smooth white stock, to allow us unlimited flexibility with colors for the entire suite. This also allowed us to allocate more of her wedding invitation budget to additional pieces, like the envelope liner and wax seal. The result was an invitation suite that is romantic, timeless, and sets the tone for her elegant wedding celebration.

Colorful Watercolor Crest Wedding Invitations by Roseville Designs

Thanks Sandy!

Design: Roseville Designs

Invitation Printing: Stationery HQ

Envelopes + Envelope Printing: Cards & Pockets

Wax Seals: Waxseals.com

 

Roseville Designs is one of the fabulously talented members of the Oh So Beautiful Paper Designer Rolodex – our curated, members only directory of the best wedding invitation designers. You can check out more of her work right here!

Photo Credits: Xo and Fetti Photography

Inspiring Calligraphers: Anna Lora Whitley of Silt and Pine Calligraphy

Hey everyone! We’re into the summer swing of things… which means summer soirées and summer weddings! We’re celebrating these long summer days with some gorgeous calligraphy and hand lettering work from Anna Lora Whitley. Her calligraphy work as Silt and Pine is a sweet find (much like stumbling on a good lemonade in the summer). Jen

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credits: Anna Rebecca

On her calligraphy style, Anna Lora says: My lettering style is honestly a version of my own handwriting. When I first started calligraphy, I kept getting so frustrated trying to do the traditional calligraphy styles. I quickly realized that it was much more important to me to create my own style.

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credits: Ashley Goodwin Photography

Her calligraphy style feels just right with this Hawaiian themed invitation suite.

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credit: Justin Johnson Photography

What a pretty way to display place cards!

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credit: Laurie Dicus Photography

Mimosas, anyone?

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credits: Tec Petaja

On a favorite project she’s worked on: I got to work on was a New Orleans + Indian fusion wedding. I am partial to New Orleans because my husband and I got married there, but I was so excited to work on this particular wedding because of the blending of cultures, beautiful color palette that the wedding planners, The Nouveau Romantics, created for the wedding and the absolutely stunning venue. It is hands down the most inspiring project I have worked on so far!

Inspiring Calligraphers: Silt + Pine

Photo Credit: Laurie Dicus Photography

On non-traditional surfaces, she shares: My favorite non-paper surface that I have worked on would be mirrors, but I have a feeling I’m about to have a new favorite. I have a fun wedding coming up where I get to write on acrylic and agate slices. The seating chart will be an 8-foot tall piece of acrylic. It is going to be such a fun project to work on.

A big thanks to Anna of Silt and Pine for sharing a peek at her work!

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations

Soft neutral hues never go out of style. Michelle of Honey Paper designed these soft neutral vineyard wedding invitations inspired by the gorgeous venue nestled in the California mountains. Add in some vinyeard-inspired botanical illustrations, gold wax seals, and curated vintage postage and you’ve got the recipe for one seriously elegant and refined wedding invitation!

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

From Michelle: Between the San Rafael and Santa Ynez Mountains the summers are warm and rainless, dense with thickets of shrub and stippled in gray pine, wild cotton and a long list of oaks. The narrow, steep ranges are considered young at five million years old. Alluvial soils of the valley bear the plants of myth: bay laurel, rosemary, grape and olive. The Santa Ynez Valley is vintner’s and an artist’s dream. Gravelly soil bakes white in the sun while the slender olive leaves shake and bristle like birds in flight. The villa at Sunstone Vineyards and Winery was built under a seafaring sky in the heart of this beautiful place.

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

When the Rice family founded Sunstone Vineyard and Winery it became one of the first organic vineyard estates in the region. Everything about their venture has remained true to the story of the land, from practicing sustainable viticulture to incorporating hillside caves among dense blankets of wild grasses and evergreen. Antique wooden beams, once privy to the smells and sounds of a Victorian lavender factory, were brought from England and integrated into the architecture. The villa is a testament to the materials and practices of the old world integrated seamlessly to meet modern standards. Thick walls of local stone were finished with imported French limestone and elegant terra cotta roof tiles. The villa is an architectural gem that simultaneously preserves the past and shapes the future.

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

We wanted the stationery to capture the essence of the light at Sunstone. We paired a pale clay-colored ink with soft white paper. Each piece of the suite and day-of details, including menu and escort cards incorporate the silhouette of slender olive leaves and branches. The subtle design is reminiscent of a sun print – light waves patiently breaking down the fragile color bonds leaving only traces of color. The envelope and invitation enclosure are a nod to sandstone – a rock whose only memory is of the sea. Each invitation was wrapped in a buttery white ribbon and completed with a golden wax initial seal.

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Fine linens and freshly cut greenery were arranged on long tables with wooden benches and tawny pillows under the shade of the high walls. The wedding cake arrived: three tiered, quartz on sky on the softened teal of mountain bluebird. All of the details came together in this inspiring land of rocky outcroppings, sandstone, shale and limestone. A place where the sun leaves a trace of its brightness behind.

Soft Neutral Vineyard Wedding Invitations by Honey Paper

Thanks Michelle!

Design and Calligraphy: Honey Paper

Check out the Designer Rolodex for more tal­ented wed­ding invi­ta­tion design­ers and the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Ashley and Erik Fine Art Photography

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Next up on Behind the Stationery is Liz from Lionheart Prints based in New Orleans! With a hybrid storefront and studio on Magazine Street, she manages her business, staff of 6, and creates all of the designs for Lionheart Prints. She’s here to share her story about how working a hodgepodge of jobs right after college brought her into the stationery world and open up about some of her struggles as a small business owner. Take it away, Liz! —Megan Soh

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Photo by Oli Alexander of Gigsy.co

From Liz: I graduated college in 2008, during the height of the financial crisis. My dream was to find a job as a designer in a fancy ad agency, but there were no such positions available. Instead, I worked a lot of (what felt like) random part-time jobs, that ended up paving the way to starting my own business. One of them happened to be a job as a shopgirl at Paper Source in Houston. I loved everything about that job, from helping customers find the perfect gift, to guiding couples through the custom wedding invitation process – but especially restocking the card wall. Every time I would unpack a box of cards, I would turn over each one to read about the brand and how they were made. Realizing that these companies were small studios, often run out of their homes by one or two people getting to make beautiful, funny, tiny pieces of art for a living. I said to myself, “Yeah, that’s the job for me.”

A few years later, I moved to New Orleans and was still balancing the freelance design / part-time job hustle. I was exhausted — working at Pier One during the day, doing improv comedy at night, and squeezing in client work in between. One day I saw a listing for my dream job: a full-time position as retail manager and designer for a beautiful stationery shop on Magazine Street. I got the job and worked my tail off handling dozens of custom holiday cards, invitations, and whatnot, all while managing the retail shop. It was a lot, but I loved it. However, the owner of the store neglected to inform me that this would be her last holiday season, and I was merely hired to get her through the rush. She closed up shop in the beginning of January, and once again, I was out of a job.

Crestfallen, and refusing to get stuck in the same cycle again, I looked back at all the experience I had accumulated and decided that I was going to start my own line. The name Lionheart comes from that feeling; it’s about being brave and doing what you believe in. It’s been five years since I started the company and I’m so proud of what we’ve built it to be today. It started as a little dream, just a gut instinct, a side hustle. Now it’s bigger and better than I ever imagined – and we’re just getting started.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Our studio is located in the heart of Magazine Street, home of the best shopping in New Orleans. We print all our cards in house on two antique letterpress machines, which are visible from the retail floor. Our studio and shop is bright and happy, and we often hear customers say how much they enjoy being in the space, which always makes our day. The front half of the space is all retail, and the back half houses all of our inventory, production area and our office spaces. The space used to be a Buffalo Exchange (used clothing store) so we knocked out the walls where the dressing rooms used to be, and that’s where our offices are located now. In the very back, we have our retail backstock, a break room, and my favorite part – a photo studio! We can shoot products in house, and also use the space to record our podcast, Lionheart Living.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

We specialize in hand-lettering and letterpress printing. We love the tactile feel of letterpress printing paired with the humanist touch of hand-lettering; I really think it brings our messages to life. Everything we make is rooted in positivity, so all the copy for our products is either funny or empowering, and in some cases, a little of both. I try to stay away from snark or self-deprecating humor, because I truly believe that the messages we give ourselves have the power to change our lives. I think that underlying philosophy really separates our brand from the crowd.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Since buying our own presses, we are cutting all of our digitally printed cards from our line. It’s really satisfying as we re-release cards in their new letterpress printed versions because it makes our whole line so much more cohesive in terms of color and style.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Typical work day? What even is that?! What I probably love most about my job is how unpredictable each day is. It keeps things exciting! I work in the shop almost every day except for Tuesday and Wednesday which are my “off” days, but really I’m still working, just usually from my home studio where I create the artwork for our line. I get up around 6:30-7:00AM, take care of things around the house, get some exercise, then head to work about 10:30AM. The store opens at 10ish (we have a great store hours sign, which is always a hit on Instagram), but Lauren, our wholesale manager goes in early around 9am to get started on work before the store opens. Ross is our press operator and works regular store hours from 10AM-6PM. We have several retail sales associates who are mostly college students and work in the front of house in shifts of 10AM-2PM and 2-6PM. Between the six of them, we are almost always able to have someone helping customers at the front. Whenever we don’t, I get to play shopgirl – it’s always fun getting to connect with our customers. Magazine Street is a heavy foot traffic area, so the shop stays pretty busy most days.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

All of our designs are hand lettered, which means that I don’t use fonts to create our designs (which sometimes I resent not just being able to type good ideas and call it a day, haha!).

Everything starts as an idea, inspired by real life situations and people. When something happens or I say something that I think has potential, I add it to my running notes list of ideas in my phone. It’s about a mile long. When getting ready to design a new collection or group of cards, I’ll sit down with our amazingly funny and creative team to read off what ideas I’ve accumulated since the last release. It’s a good chance to spitball with them and see what actually works, and also figure out what doesn’t make as much sense. Sometimes they aren’t totally on board with an idea, but if I really believe in it, at the end of the day, it’s my risk to take.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Once we get a good tailored list of ideas we want to focus on, I’ll go spend my studio days over the next few weeks bringing the concepts to life. I try to make words look they way they feel. Through typography, colors, shapes and lines, I treat hand-lettering like the costume words wear to get the idea across.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

First, I’ll start with a pencil sketch (more like several, if it’s a more intricate design). Once I like the way the text looks and feels, I’ll scan it or take a photo on my phone or iPad (depending on the complexity and detail), and I’ll either draw over it in ProCreate on my iPad Pro, or I’ll plot the points in Illustrator. The goal at this point is just to get the design in black and white, so we can send the file off to be made into a letterpress plate or die for foil stamping.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

When we get the plates in, our pressman, Ross, uses our specific library of colors that we have mixed for our line. He’ll place the newly made photopolymer plate on the base, add the ink to the inkwell and start printing. It always takes some tries to get it just right, but once everything looks correct, we can print about 1200 cards in an hour on our Heidelberg Windmills. We usually print 400-800 of any given card to start out with unless we know it’s a best-seller, then we’ll print a couple thousand at a time.

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Once they’re printed and scored, we then pair them with envelopes and put them in cello sleeves for wholesale and retail. This is where my experience with Lean Logistics really comes in handy. We have very specific processes for folding such large volumes of cards so that we can maximize efficiency. Then, they hit the shelves and wait for someone to buy them to send to someone they love! It’s pretty awesome being in the business of spreading good vibes. 🙂

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

I spend most of my time doing about a dozen things at once. My days are filled with managerial tasks like paying bills, ordering products for the store, supplies for production, guiding employees with decisions, and taking meetings with custom clients. Every day is different, and very little of my time is spent actually getting to make artwork. I’m trying to change that though. One of the main reasons I have to make the artwork from home is because my role as the boss is always requiring me to answer questions and juggle many tasks simultaneously. It’s impossible to get in the zone and get into the deep, thoughtful work of creating artwork for products. It’s one of the biggest challenges of running this business along with finding time to make the work that moves our company forward. As a wholesale line, our success depends on consistently releasing new products several times a year. The sheer volume of keeping pace with the wholesale industry is very difficult when balancing so many other high-level aspects of my business. I have hired off a lot of tasks, but there are still just some things that I’m the only one who can handle.

Another big daily struggle is cash flow. We have a huge store to fill and, of course, we can’t sell what we don’t have. Our studio space quadrupled, along with our rent, payroll, and retail floor when we moved to Magazine Street last summer. Although our retail sales are through the roof, it’s still hard balancing all the payments going in and coming out. We are a wholesale line with a retail store, we also do custom wedding invitations, and host workshops frequently. It’s really important to have different verticals for our business, so that when one is slower, we can put energy into another to keep everything in flow. It’s not easy!

Behind the Stationery: Lionheart Prints

Photos courtesy of Lionheart Prints.

Want to be featured in the Behind the Stationery column? Reach out to Megan at megan [at] ohsobeautifulpaper [dot] com for more details.

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations

If you’re a fan of watercolor florals, you’re going to love today’s wedding invitations! These romantic watercolor floral wedding invitations from Jen of Blush Paper Co. feature soft, cascading flowers, flowing calligraphy, deckled edge envelopes, and a copper wax seal. The entire suite feels timeless and romantic!

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

From JenMy heart truly soars when we get to work with watercolors and florals! We created this invitation suite to reflect the couple’s love of all things nature, thanks to a color palette of pink, green, and gray, flowing script, and botanical elements. The twine and hand-torn paper reinforced the nature-inspired theme, while the wax seal brings in a vintage touch. Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

While this invitation suite primarily uses a soft color palette, I wanted to create a floral design that would remain timeless and could be applied to any season. The pinks and greens are wonderful for spring and summer, the orange undertones nod toward fall, and the eucalyptus and blue florals help transition this suite into winter.

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

Soft, cascading florals frame the main invitation and enclosure cards, but my favorite piece throughout the entire suite is the watercolor wash on the reply card. I incorporated watercolor florals throughout the invitation and the enclosure cards, but gave the reply card a subtle watercolor wash for a pop of color and to make the suite stand out. White deckled edge envelopes and a copper wax seal pull the entire look together.

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

The invitations are printed on a lovely textured cotton paper. This particular paper is one of the best for digitally printing watercolor, and almost looks like the elements were hand painted directly onto the card instead of being printed. The cotton paper really brings everything to life!

Romantic Watercolor Floral Wedding Invitations by Blush Paper Co.

Thanks Jen!

Design: Blush Paper Co.

Check out the Designer Rolodex for more tal­ented wed­ding invi­ta­tion design­ers and the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Margot Grey