DIY Gold Paper Air Plants

I’ve been on a bit of a paper creation binge lately – trying to dream up what kinds of things I can bring to life in paper form. My latest creation: paper air plants. Sure, air plants are already the lowest maintenance of all flora, but I couldn’t resist super-sizing their interesting contours and – oh yes – making them GOLD! Today, I’m sharing how to make a medium sized paper air plant about 8″ in diameter. Make lots and lots to create a table runner, or downsize them a bit for a creative plate adornment. I can only imagine all the uses you could come up with for these beauties! – Mandy Pellegrin of Craftcourse

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Materials

  • Gold Card Stock
  • Scissors
  • Bone Folder
  • Hot Glue Gun

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step One: Cut out about 15 triangles in various widths ranging from 1/4″ – 1″ and heights ranging from 4 – 6″ to create the air plant’s leaves. Also cut (or punch) out two circles about 2″ in diameter.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Two: Use a bone folder to gently curl each of the leaves as you would curl ribbon. Vary the curliness. Create an S-curl on a few  by curling the entire leaf in one direction from the back and then curling just the end of the leaf in the other direction from the front.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Three: Cut a slit half way across the diameter of each of the circles.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Four: Overlap the cut edges of each circle to create two cones, and glue into place. Make one of the cones a bit more angled than the other.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Five: Glue 6 or 7 leaves into each of the cones by placing glue onto the back side of the bottom edge and sliding into the cone.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Six: Reserve two of the skinnier leaves for the center, and glue them together at the bottom.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Seven: Cut the bottom of the center two leaves into a point.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Eight: Dispense a large dollop of hot glue in the bottom of the less steep cone, and then affix the steeper of the two cones inside. Hold it in place a moment while the glue sets.

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Step Nine: Dispense another small bead of glue into the steeper cone, and affix the pointed end of the center two leaves, holding in place while the glue sets.

Enjoy!

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

DIY Gold Paper Air Plants by Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Photo Credits: Mandy Pellegrin for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Modern Black and White Rehearsal Dinner Invitations

I’m loving these chic monochromatic wedding rehearsal dinner invitations from Becca of Suite Paperie ! The invitation combines modern typography – digitally printed in white ink on black paper! – with a vintage-inspired envelope liner. So fun!

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From Becca: Digitally printed in white ink on black card stock and paired with a crisp white envelope with a deco black on black liner, this rehearsal dinner invitation screams modern, bold and fun.

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Thanks Becca!

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

Photo Credits: Lindsay Nathanson

Angel + Arthur’s Spring Floral Wedding Invitations

I’m a big fan of floral-inspired wedding invitations any time of year, but especially for a spring wedding! These invitations from Amanda at Wide Eyes Paper Co. combine simple line illustrations with a floral watercolor envelope liner. So pretty!

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From Amanda: We created this invitation suite for a couple getting married in Sunny San Diego, California. The bride and groom are both surfers and love the outdoors. They wanted their wedding invitations to reflect their personalities and the location of their wedding in Solana Beach. They wanted something simple, elegant, and nature inspired. I hand illustrated the wreath around their names and mixed in whimsical typography.

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They also wanted their guests to know how to properly get to their wedding venue. I created a custom illustrated map to go alongside this vision which is a fun way to showcase directions versus just writing them out.

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The invitation and map feature letterpress printing to complement the simplicity and elegance of the set.​ Angel and Arthur wanted to stick with the “natural look” so we included a painted floral envelope liner and paired it with our natural kraft envelopes to tie it all together.

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Thanks Amanda!

Design: Wide Eyes Paper Co.

Watercolor Envelope Liner Pattern: Chau Matser

Letterpress Printing: Clove St. Press

Wide Eyes Paper Co. is a member of the Designer Rolodex – you can see more of Amanda’s work right here or visit the real invitations gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Let’s Frolic Together

Hannah + Seth’s Illustrated Summer Wedding Invitations

A New York wedding with a bit of Southern charm? Sounds like the perfect combination to me! Created by Kara Anne Paper, this wedding invitation suite features whimsical calligraphy and beautiful illustrations to complement their beautiful outdoor wedding venue – all in the most beautiful shade of powder blue!

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From Kara: Hannah and Seth wanted an illustrated wedding suite that had a chic, Southern charm feel to it. Hannah loved the idea of mixing whimsical calligraphy, floral illustrations and a traditional serif font. We used a powder blue letterpress ink for her paper suite to match the color of her bridesmaids dresses. The fresh color and lovely silk ribbon was the perfect touch for their outdoor New York summer wedding at Tug Hill Vineyards.

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View More: http://jedphoto.pass.us/hannahseth

View More: http://jedphoto.pass.us/hannahseth

View More: http://jedphoto.pass.us/hannahseth

Thanks Kara!

Design: Kara Anne Paper

Letterpress Printing: Patrick Masterson

Invitation Photos : Colorbox Photographers / Wedding Day Photos: Jessica Eileen Drogosz 

Watermelon Mint Gin Rickey

After last week’s amazing Clover Cub, we’ve decided to stick with gin as our theme this month. Unlike last week, we’re going to stray away from the classic formula and try something a little different. We’ve featured the Gin Rickey – Washington DC’s official cocktail, for obviously good reasons – more than once in our Friday Happy Hour column. So instead of revisiting a classic again, we’re going to update it a bit. The result is somewhere between a Rickey, a shrub, and a Pimm’s Cup, but it’s all awesome. – Andrew

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Illustration by Nathalie Ouederni

Watermelon Mint Gin Rickey

1 1/2 oz Dry Gin
1 oz Watermelon & Mint Shrub

1/2 oz Pimm’s No. 1
1/4 oz Ginger Liqueur
1/2 a Lime
Tonic Water

Muddle the lime in the bottom of a highball glass, then fill the glass with ice. Add the gin, shrub, Pimm’s, and liqueur. Top with the tonic water and give the drink a stir. Enjoy!

This is a fun, peppy, complex play on the Rickey. There’s a lot going on in this glass, in contrast to the original Rickey’s simplicity, and I think a more delicate gin works best here to bind all of the flavors together. Try Plymouth, easily one of our favorite English Dry Gins, or Hendrick’s, which adds cucumber and rose to its list of botanicals, or Aviation, which is made with a bit less juniper to let all its other complex botanicals shine. One of my newest favorites is Heritage Soft Gin, which is made by skipping a second round of distillation that leaves the gin without a sharp juniper edge. (These last two, in contrast to the English Dry style of gin, fall under the category of New American Gins, which focus less on juniper and more on all those other herbs and spices that lend their flavor to gin.)

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That watermelon and mint shrub comes from 1821 Bitters, whom I mentioned back when we featured our Amaretto Sour. It’s very tart, made with a base of apple cider vinegar, but also tastes richly of sweet watermelon (the mint gets a bit lost, more of an accent, but that’s ok for my purposes). It adds a nice zing and a hint of summery fruit to the glass. Same goes for the Pimm’s, which I normally associate closely with summer drinking. And the ginger liqueur – something like Domaine de Canton or Barrow’s – adds just a bit of sharp ginger spiciness. Like I said, there’s a lot going on in this drink, and then you pour bitter tonic on top. (Make sure you give a stir after that, or your first taste will be all tonic…)

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And on that tonic: after spending all that time putting together all these great ingredients, you don’t want to dump just any generic tonic in your glass. Most tonic for sale these days is made without any quinine, the essential ingredient that gives tonic its bitterness (tonic started its life as a way of getting British sailors and soldiers assigned to tropical locales to take their quinine, a natural anti-malarial drug) and sweetened with corn syrup. Fortunately, there’s a growing availability of tonics made with quality ingredients. It’s worth putting in a little leg work as the weather gets nicer and your highballs start demanding to be filled with Rickeys and Gin & Tonics.

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

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper