Honeymoon Photos – Part 1, Lima & the Desert Coast

Back in August, my husband and I spent two weeks in Peru for our honeymoon.  During those two weeks, we visited Lima, Ica, Nazca, Iquitos and the Amazon, Cuzco and the Sacred Valley, including Machu Picchu.  Needless to say, we were exhausted by the end of our two week trip, but we came home with a ton of pictures!  Here are a few of our favorites photos from the trip – if you’re interested, you can see more of them here.

LIMA

It was winter time during our trip to Peru, which meant that Lima was mostly cold and gray and we didn’t take many pictures of the city:


{the Presidential Palace}


{Moorish balconies of the Bishop’s Palace next to the Cathedral}


{Spanish tiles inside the Cathedral}


{a newlywed couple taking wedding portraits at the Parc D’Amour at night}


{some of the very cool tin art sculptures that we saw around Lima}

THE DESERT COAST

After Lima, we headed down the Pan-American Highway along Peru’s western Desert Coast towards Ica and Nazca.  (Peonies, this is where I e-mailed you after your computer crashed).  Ica is known for some pretty impressive sand dunes, which I gave up climbing about halfway up.  My husband climbed all the way up one dune and was very proud of himself for conquering said sand dune.


{All of the hotels were nestled around a once real, but now fake, lagoon/oasis called Laga Huacachina.  It all felt very artificial and actually kind of creeped me out a bit.}

Ica is also famous for being part of Peru’s wine country and for its family-operated wineries known as bodegas.  But lest you think that this means something fabulously glamorous like Italian wineries, think again.  This is what we discovered:

I can’t even begin to tell you how much crap was piled up around the winery – I recall seeing several skulls that I’m sure belonged in a museum somewhere, a stuffed fox or at least the pelt of a fox, a preserved tarantula, among others. Here’s a photo that our taxi driver/tour guide took of us:


{We’re doing our best not to look a bit terrified}

NASCA

After Ica, we took another bus down to Nazca to see the Nazca Lines. Everything you’ll see below is a Line – from the long, straight runway-looking lines to the line drawings of birds and animals. The entire plateau, known as the Pampas de Jumana, is covered in these lines:

{Next up, Iquitos and the Amazon…}

Something beautiful…

I'm finding it a bit difficult to concentrate on anything tonight – and depending on how things go tonight may continue through tomorrow.  So for now, I'll leave you with some beautiful calligraphy by Maria Thomas – whose lovely work was featured in this morning's inspiration board over at Snippet & Ink:

Picture 1

Picture 2 

Picture 3 

Picture 4 

Picture 5 

Picture 6 

{images via Maria Thomas for Checkerboard, and you can see more of Maria's work here}

Place card & escort card ideas… continued

As promised… here are a few more ideas for place cards and escort cards!  First up – escort cards hung from a clothesline have been a staple of outdoor weddings for the past several years, but are also really easy to customize to suit your wedding style and theme:


{images above by Bethalee Photography via In Style Weddings, from brides.com via Snippet & Ink}

Instead of hanging escort cards in the air, these escort cards are attached via miniature clothespins and twine along a flat table surface:


{via Wedding Paper Divas}

One charming wedding featured escort cards in the form of a handwritten note to each guest from the bride and groom – such a wonderful and personal touch!


{via Bird Dog Press}

If you plan to work with a calligrapher for your place cards (or even plan on doing the calligraphy yourself), stamps are a great way to dress up standard tented place cards. Paper-Source carries a great selection of stamps featuring floral patterns, animals, and other designs, but you can also try searching ebay for vintage stamps.


{via Bird Dog Press}

If you’re not planning to use calligraphy, try Kathryn’s suggestion of using individual rubber stamps to spell out guests’ names, or try using an every day object, such as these old playing cards, and label them using pre-printed or hand-written names on store-bought labels:

Stamppc_2

Playing_card_pc
{both via Snippet & Ink}

Continuing the rubber stamps idea, I’ve always held a particular fondness for this constellation idea, as well as using small bunches of lavender as escort cards:

  

Martha Stewart Weddings

Last for today, in addition to making fun Save the Date cards, post cards can also serve as a fun option for escort cards, with guests’ names and table number written in place of an address:


{via Elizabeth Anne Designs}

I’d love to hear your ideas – what are you doing for your escort cards or place cards?

{images via their respective sources}

Wedding Invitations — Bird and Banner

Bird and Banner consistently produces some of the most amazing wedding invitation designs.  I love their use of non-traditional materials, particularly cloth and wood, in pulling together an invitation suite.  If I hadn’t already been set on a fold-out invitation design, I think I would have very easily switched directions and gone with a design inspired by the stitched invitations below:

Bird-Banner-Stitched

Bird-Banner-Stitched1

{stitched}

Bird-Banner-Cape-Cod-Fabric-Pocket

Bird-Banner-Cape-Cod-Fabric-Pocket1

Bird-Banner-Cape-Cod-Fabric-Pocket2
{Cape Cod Wedding}

A few more favorites from the Bird and Banner collection:

Bird-Banner-Philadelphia

Bird-Banner-Philadelphia1

Bird-Banner-Philadelphia2
{a garden wedding in Philadelphia}

Bird-Banner-Wedding-in-the-Woods1

Bird-Banner-Wedding-in-the-Woods2
{a wedding in the woods}

Bird-Banner-Family-Farm

Bird-Banner-Family-Farm1

Bird-Banner-Family-Farm2
{family farm}

Bird-Banner-Modern-Monogram

Bird-Banner-Modern-Monogram1

Bird-Banner-Modern-Monogram2
{modern monogram}

I love the hand lettering and interesting typography on these next invitations:

Bird-Banner-Hand-Lettering

Bird-Banner-Hand-Lettering1
{notebook doodle}

Bird-Banner-Silhouettes

Bird-Banner-Silhouettes1
{silhouettes}

Bird-Banner-Country-Cookout
{country cookout}

So many more over on the Bird and Banner website.  Swoon…

{all images via Bird and Banner}