DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner

This project was inspired by photo I recently saw online of a partition in a restaurant decked out in midcentury modern decor. I couldn’t get it off my mind, and so I decided to translate it to a hand-cut runner to bring a little Palm Springs vibe to your tabletop. It’s the perfect project for vinyl or leather. While I usually begin by describing my tutorials as “easy,” I’m going to give it to you straight – this one isn’t the easiest or the fastest. While the skill level is by no means advanced, this one is a bit tedious and time consuming, but it’s oh so worth it!  – Mandy Pellegrin of Craftcourse

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Materials
Vinyl cut to 8″ wide by desired length
Template
Pen/Marker
Metal Ruler
Craft Knife

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step One: Begin by marking a 1/2″ border all the way around the back of the vinyl. This will act as the perimeter for all of your cuts.

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Two: First, ensure that your prepared template is as tall as the strip of vinyl is wide (i.e. 8″). Align the center line of the template with one of the shorter borders, and trace.

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Three: Tile the templates and trace until you’ve filled up the entire runner, making sure that all the lines align appropriately.

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Four: Use the metal ruler and craft knife to carefully cut out the pattern. In total, it took me about 45 minutes to cut out an entire 3′ runner.

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

 

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Midcentury Modern Table Runner by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Photo Credits: Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Brick + Mortar: I don’t know what the prize is, but you won it.

A few weeks ago, Near Modern Disaster posted a photo of the custom USPS stamps she made for her NSS mailers. I was impressed, so I commented: I don’t know what the prize is, but you won it. She replied: Can I make that into a card? And I said: Yes! (and thought: ohmygod, is that how cards are born? That was so easy. Let’s make more!)  I am not in the business of making cards, though. I am in the business of following you, watching your lines grow, waiting to pounce on a new design. In doing so, I’m acutely aware of how hard you’re all working and I am grateful; that you share your pre-NSS journey and post sneak peeks of what’s to come. I thought the least I could do was make up a few fake awards to celebrate what I’m loving most in this pre-season. So here we are, in a make-believe award season, born from the #nss2015 instagram hashtag and I don’t even have a dress.*(*Kidding, I totally have a dress).  ~ Emily of Clementine

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Illustration by Emily McDowell for Oh So Beautiful Paper

WITHOUT FURTHER ADO, let’s give out some awards!

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TO Near Modern Disaster for alerting us to the fact that instead of holding up the line at the post office you could just make your own stamp. (Are you already imagining the possibilities? Me too.)

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TO Live Love Studio for adding a little bit of rhythm to NSS this year (and thus reminding me to wear sensible shoes).

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TO Life is Funny LA, for making a Valentine’s Day card for the other 364 days.

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TO Carolyn Suzuki for reminding me of those sweet few months I secretly/illegally had a kitten living in my college dorm room and for giving me a card that makes me an honorary cat-lady again, despite in-house(/marriage) allergies.

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TO Iron Curtain Press for making me dig through a few closets to find that bulletin board. Also, for challenging me to correctly spell bulletin board twice.

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TO Gold Teeth Brooklyn for reminding us to bring snacks (and start a weeks long black + white cookie craving) because no one has time to wait in line at the Javits for that Starbucks donut.

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TO Sapling Press, in collaboration with Braden Graeber, for giving me something to text to my friends weeks before I buy it. (Photo by Shindig Paperie)

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TO Big Wheel Press for being the honorary dude in the Ladies of Letterpress booth and for busting out this incredible collaboration with Molly Hatch.

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TO Angela Liguori for finding those scissors I thought I’d have to steal from someone else’s desk, but now they’ll have to steal from my desk, because: Look at them!

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TO Frances Lab for showing me the booth details that will make me marvel into wasting endless hours at home trying to recreate them.

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TO 9th Letter Press for starting the party early, while exquisitely bowing out of this year’s show with a mailer so mind-blowing, we need a new word for it. (A Boxer maybe?)

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TO Bramble Workshop (for Hello Lucky Cards) for making me wonder, in advance, if the cacti are for sale and if they’re sold in threes or sixes (or just given away to the retailer who writes a blog post about them?)

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TO Ghost Academy (via Crow & Canary) for reminding me that I’ll find things that need to be said, in ways I’ve never seen.

What items are you excited to see / what awards would you add? Share them (with a link!) in the comments section.  I wish I could help set up all of your booths (not in my fake award season dress, though, this thing is fancy). I will see you in a few days, and I’m totally cheering for you. xoxo – Emily

(Unless noted, all photos were swiped from the artist’s instagram feed as the gentle reminder to their spouse/parent/self that instagram is, in fact, work.)

Printable Hand Lettered Watercolor Wedding Stationery

Wedding season is in full effect y’all. Place cards, escort cards, and wedding details are taking over Instagram – and I love seeing all the pretty! When Avery reached out about partnering on some printable wedding stationery templates using their products, I jumped at the chance! We collaborated with the super-talented Kim of Bright Room Studio on the designs, which feature whimsical watercolor details and hand lettering. You’ll see how we customized each item below, and you can find the free downloads at the bottom of the post!

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We may have gone a wee bit overboard creating options for you! Here are the products that match the printable designs from Bright Room Studio:

Square Tags

Scallop Round Tags

Round Labels

Square Labels

Printable Tags with Strings

Postcards

Tent Cards

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The tags and labels are ideal for wedding favors – can’t you imagine the round labels on jars of homemade jam or local treats for a summer wedding?? We also loved the idea of pairing the printable tags with welcome bags for out of town guests. I just love the gradients in the watercolor lettering and illustrations!

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For the postcards, we wanted to mix things up a bit – we thought they would make a wonderful alternative guestbook! And these postcards are the easiest things in the world to use. Just print and fold along the fine perforated lines – no cutting or measuring required!

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The tent cards make the most perfect place cards and escort cards! And as much as I love calligraphy, I know it’s not always in the budget. And that’s the beauty of these printables – just add your own text using your favorite fonts! I used two fonts from calligrapher Molly Jacques – Brushy (one of my all time faves) and Asterism.

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Kim made all of the designs in ready-to-use formats to match Avery’s templates, but if you’re at all worried about spacing and alignment, just use Avery’s free Design and Print Online tool! Just enter your Avery product number, upload the design – and print! You can even add your own text using Avery’s free tool. SO EASY.

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If you’re like me and you think dessert is the best part of any party – you can also use the tent cards to highlight flavors of a donut, cookie, or macaron bar!

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Grab the free printables right here!

Hand Lettered Watercolor “Just for you” Square Tags

Hand Lettered Watercolor “Enjoy” Scallop Tags

Hand Lettered Watercolor “Made with Love” Round Labels

Hand Lettered Watercolor Square “Enjoy” Labels

Hand Lettered Watercolor “Welcome” Tags with String

Hand Lettered Watercolor “Note to the Happy Couple” Postcards

Illustrated Watercolor Laurel Tent Place Cards

 

Hand Lettering + Design: Bright Room Studio

Photography and Styling: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This post is sponsored by Avery, a company that makes it easy to create beautiful labels, cards, and tags. Thank you for supporting the brands that help Oh So Beautiful Paper create new and inspiring content!

Carrot Ginger Fizz

One of my favorite things about today’s cocktail culture is the spirit of experimentation. People are making syrups, infusions, tinctures, you name it, with new and wildly inventive combinations of flavors. Stuff I would never in a million years to think to add to a drink is showing up in recipes that sound not only delicious, but also so obvious that I wonder why I never thought of it myself. Carrot is one of those: a sweet, vegetal flavor with a gorgeous orange color. Here’s my first crack at a carrot brunch cocktail: a Carrot Ginger Fizz. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Carrot-Ginger Fizz

1 1/2 oz Dry Gin
1 oz Carrot Syrup
1 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Aperol
Ginger Beer

Shake the gin, carrot syrup, lime juice, and Aperol in a cocktail shaker filled 2/3 with ice. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass and top with ginger beer. Garnish with fresh herbs (we used mint and cilantro from our garden.) Enjoy!

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To make the carrot syrup, combine a cup of water and two cups of white sugar in a sauce pan over low heat, stirring constantly to avoid burning the sugar. Add a cup of shredded carrots and simmer the mix for 10-15 minutes, then cover and let it sit for another 30 minutes. Strain out the carrot shreds and bottle the carrot syrup. Keep the syrup refrigerated. (I used white sugar, instead of my usually preferred raw sugar, to preserve the carrot’s orange color.) You could also try combining a cup of carrot juice with two cups of sugar over low heat until the sugar is melted, but the end result would be pretty much the same.

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The Carrot-Ginger Fizz is rich and complex, with lots of earthy botanical flavors from the gin and the carrot syrup, but it’s still light and sweet and fizzily playful. You can definitely taste the carrot on this drink’s finish, but it’ doesn’t dominate this drink in a gimmicky way; instead, it blends nicely with the gin and citrus for a nice savory-sweet profile. The Aperol, a gently bitter and orange flavored Italian amaro, adds a nice touch of bitterness to balance the carrot’s sweetness while the ginger beer adds just a bit of bite. And bubbles. Don’t forget the bubbles.

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Ok. I’m off to see what else I can do with this carrot syrup.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glasses are from here – but you can find many of our vintage glassware pieces in the Liquorary shop here. 

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper