Party Paper: The Thanksgiving Kids Table

If the Thanksgiving kids table looked like this – I’d probably choose it over the adult one! If you have a bunch of little ones headed your way for Turkey Day, here’s a few of my favorite items to keep them entertained while you snag the last slice of pie! —Kelly

Party Paper: Thanksgiving Kids Table via Oh So Beautiful Paper

No. 1 Placemats from Anthroplogie, No. 2 Paper Cups from The TomKat Studio, No. 3 DIY Candy Pumpkin from Real Simple, No. 4 “I Am Thankful Cards” from Paper Source, No. 5 Printable Pie Boxes from Studio DIY, No. 6 Turkey Place Cards from Paper Source

{images via their respective sources}

Lesley + Brian’s Street Map Wedding Invitations

These modern wedding invitations are the result of a fun collaboration between Kseniya of Thomas-Printers and Mike from Anticipate Invitations – and happen to feature my home town of Washington, DC! With the wedding location as the primary inspiration, the design features a street map background behind the main text and hand lettering for the bride and groom’s names. Beautiful!

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From Kseniya and Mike: The inspiration behind Lesley and Brian’s letterpress wedding invitation was a street map of the wedding’s location in Washington, DC. Dupont Circle was chosen as the central focus and the abstract lines of the streets were printed blind (without ink) behind the main text on Crane’s Lettra 220# in Bright White. The couple’s names were hand lettered and printed in a punchy orange ink to compliment the warm gray; the rehearsal dinner card and response card followed suit.

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Thanks Kseniya and Mike!

Design: Michael Musser of Anticipate Invitations

Letterpress Printing: Kseniya Thomas of Thomas-Printers

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

Photo Credits: Michael Musser

Bohemian Botanical Wedding Invitations

My oh my, I have completely fallen for the newest addition to the Lucky Luxe wedding invitation collection! These bohemian invitations combine watercolor hand lettering with a typewriter font and antique floral engravings – perfect for an understated nature-inspired wedding. Love!

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From Erin: Flora was created to be a reflection of that couple tied to the land and their love — not tied to the standards of wedding paper formality. The script for the suite is painted by hand in watercolor, and all the fine text is an understated typeface taken from our old Remington typewriter. The invitations are then flat printed on 100% cotton Lettra paper, allowing for a layering of color and gradients.

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The lettering choices, layered with colorful antique engravings from Furber’s Twelve Months of Flowers published in 1730, create a composite that’s altogether modern, bohemian, and nostalgic. We’re thinking of Flora as the new flower child among her sisters in the Lucky Luxe wedding collection.

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Thanks Erin!

Lucky Luxe is a member of the Designer Rolodex – you can see more of their beautiful work right here or visit the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Lucky Luxe

The Knickerbocker

This week’s cocktail might seem out of place at first glance. With its rum, lime, and orange liqueur, the Knickerbocker is halfway to being a Tiki drink, more at home in summer than in October. But the Knickerbocker predates Tiki by many decades, and shows off some old-fashioned, fall-friendly features.– Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Knickerbocker

2 oz Golden Rum
1/2 oz Raspberry Syrup
1/4 oz Orange Liqueur
1/2 oz Lime Juice
Half a Lime
Fresh Berries

Combine the rum, raspberry syrup, orange liqueur, and lime juice in a shaker filled with crushed iced. Shake well but don’t strain – pour the whole drink, including the crushed ice, into a chilled tumbler. Add the shell of the lime you squeezed for juice and garnish with fresh berries. Enjoy!

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Like I said, the Knickerbocker is old – it shows up in Jerry Thomas’ 1862 cocktail guide – and it shows. First, that raspberry syrup, which shows up in lots of drinks from that period but isn’t so common anymore (which is a shame, because it’s really quite tasty and versatile). [update - You can make raspberry syrup at home, but we’re too lazy for that. Fortunately, Royal Rose makes an awesome raspberry syrup.] Second, all that fruit in the glass, which is pretty rare these days but was all the rage at the time. So while it could feel like a tropical drink, the Knickerbocker ends up eliciting a fall harvest of fruit in a glass.

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The original Jerry Thomas recipe is a bit boozier: two ounces of rum but then just teaspoons of everything else. We tried it, and it’s a little too rum-heavy, like a tarted up shot. Our version is a little less historically accurate but rounds out the rum a bit better, and the result feels better integrated. Feel free to play around.

Technique Tip: The best way to crush ice is to use a Lewis bag, a cotton sack you can fill with ice and bash with a mallet. The bag soaks up any meltwater and you can easily control the fineness of the crushed ice. You can find Lewis bags for sale online or you can sew up the pant leg of an old pair of jeans; nothing fancy is needed. The crushed ice setting on your refrigerator isn’t a bad option either. What you shouldn’t use, however, is a blender. Crushing ice also melts some of the ice, and a blender will leave all of that water behind – giving you a wet, soupy mess.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Happy Weekend!

Happy Halloween weekend everyone! Today is the annual Halloween parade at Sophie’s daycare – and if you haven’t ever seen dozens of babies and toddlers in full costume all in the same place, well, it’s pretty much the cutest thing ever. This year, Sophie will be rocking a homemade costume of sorts: she’ll be a snail, which is just about the extent of my limits with a newborn at home. We don’t get many trick-or-treaters on our street, so we’ll be hanging out with friends and their adorable daughter tonight to help them pass out candy. Best of both worlds! But in the meantime…

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Photo by Shannon Kirsten

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Check back soon for this week’s cocktail! I hope you all have a wonderful weekend, and I’ll see you back here next week! xoxo