JoAnna + Matt’s Illustrated Black and White Wedding Invitations

Wedding invitations should always contain something personal and meaningful to the bride and groom, whether it’s a motif in the invitation design or the tradition of a classic engraved invitation. This couple chose to use their favorite place – a tower close to their home in Connecticut – as the central design element in their wedding invitations from Laura Macchia. The purple patterned envelope liner adds a perfect pop of color for this classic black and white invitation!

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From Laura: JoAnna and Matt’s invitations are inspired by their favorite place: the Heublein Tower on Talcott Mountain, close to their home in Connecticut. The architectural tower illustration paired with the organic pattern on the envelope liner gives it a formal yet elegant feel. The suite is letterpress printed in black on Ecru Lettra with lavender envelope liners to add a pop of color.

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Thanks Laura!

Design: Laura Macchia

Letterpress Printing: May Day Studio

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

Photo Credits: Laura Macchia

Bon Voyage Cocktail Party Recipes

Summer is almost over. Almost. But not yet, and there’s still time to enjoy an ice cold summer cocktail on a hot DC summer night. Here are a few of our favorite St-Germain drinks, just right for that last party of the season. So invite some friends over and give some of these a try, before we have to break out the fall cocktails!

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St Germain Swizzle

1 1/2 oz Aged Rum
1 1/2 oz Clear Rum
1 oz St-Germain
1 oz Fresh Lime Juice
1/2 oz Rich Simple Syrup
1 Dash Allspice Dram
Angostura Bitters

Smack a bunch of mint in your hands to release its oils, then place it in the bottom of a highball glass. Fill the glass with crushed ice, then add the rum, St-Germain, lime juice, and syrup. Top off your glass with more crushed ice, then swizzle the drink – put a swizzle stick or long-handled bar spoon into the glass and twirl gently between your hands to mix and cool the drink without churning up the mint at the bottom. Top with a dash of Allspice Dram and a few dashes of Angostura bitters, then garnish with more mint. Enjoy!

Cocktail Recipe Card: St-Germain Swizzle by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The last time we threw a summer cocktail party, I highlighted some recipes that were easy to make in big batches and light on the booze, the easier to serve to a gathering of friends spending a lot of time in the hot outdoors. This drink is sort of the opposite, and a bit on purpose. Swizzles like this Caribbean inspired cocktail are easy to drink, and this one is no exception: airy from the rum, sweet and floral from the St-Germain, minty and refreshing, sweet and spicy. It’s the sort of drink that you can put away before you feel its full effects, so it’s actually a good thing that the Swizzle takes some time, care and craft to mix up. So if you’re looking for a drink that will help your guests pace themselves, or an opportunity to hold court before your guests while you prepare a delicious and impressively gorgeous drink, mix up some St-Germain Swizzles.

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St-Germain Cobbler

2 oz Bourbon, Rye Whiskey or Brandy
3/4 oz St-Germain
1/4 oz Rich Simple Syrup
Blackberries

Combine the whiskey, St-Germain, syrup, and a handful of fresh blackberries in a cocktail shaker. Muddle the blackberries well, then shake everything with ice. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass and garnish with more blackberries. Enjoy!

Cocktail Recipe Card: St-Germain Cobbler by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

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Ok, so this might be the most perfect of all summer cocktails of all time. Not to brag or anything like that. But the combination of whiskey, blackberries, sweetness and ice is the sort of thing that could make a teetotaler convert. Unlike the Swizzle, this St-Germain Cobbler is pretty easy to make ahead in a big batch for a party. Just scale up your ingredients and combine in a pitcher; add to an ice-filled shaker and shake only when you’re ready to serve.

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Pop-Up Paloma2 oz Tequila
1/2 oz Fresh Lime Juice
1/2 oz Fresh Grapefruit Juice
1 oz Agave Nectar
BeerShake the tequila, juices, and agave nectar with ice, then strain into a highball glass or glass mug filled with more ice. Top with beer, garnish with lime, and enjoy!

Cocktail Recipe Card: Pop Up Paloma by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

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The Pop-Up Paloma is a play on one of Mexico’s best cocktails, the Paloma, concocted by the brilliant minds of DC’s best cocktail bar, the Columbia Room.  This awesome drink pairs the vegetal kick of tequila, the tartness of all that citrus, and a bit of sweetness with a pop of beer, preferably a hoppy IPA.  It’s flavorful and refreshing and easy to make for a party, like the Cobbler. Just scale up your ingredients and combine them, except for the beer, ahead of time.  When you’re ready to serve, shake up those ingredients with ice, strain, then add the beer – the sort of thing that will make you look like a master mixologist in front of your guests.

All illustrations by Dinara Mirtalipova for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Calligraphy Cocktail Menu Cards: Meant to Be Calligraphy

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This post is brought to you in collaboration with St-Germain. All content, photos, recipes, and words are our own. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that help make Oh So Beautiful Paper possible!

p.s. In case you missed them, you can see our first two cocktail party posts right here: a housewarming cocktail party + recipes, and a backyard summer cocktail party + recipes

End of Summer Cocktail Party

This is officially the last week of summer, which means it’s time for the final installment of our summer cocktail series with St-Germain! As some of you may know, I previously worked as a diplomat with the U.S. Department of State and I still have several friends in the civil and foreign service. Over the years we’ve both welcomed friends home after a couple years overseas or wished them well as they departed for a new assignment. So for this party, we imagined that we were throwing a bon voyage cocktail party – but with cocktail recipes that will work for any party or occasion. This one was particularly fun, since I was able to use some of the treasures that I’ve accumulated during my own travels!

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Courtney from Swiss Cottage Designs created the beautiful invitations, featuring a double-sided design with an air mail-inspired border and a map background on kraft paper. I love the way Courtney made the initials look like map pins! Michele from Meant to Be Calligraphy addressed the square envelopes in her Edwards style.

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We wanted to bring a slightly more masculine vibe to this cocktail party, so we incorporated wood and kraft paper along with deeper tones of purple and burgundy.

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For the floral arrangements, I used jewel toned flowers – sweet peas, ranunculus, anemones, and wax flowers – in a tall brass vase and our Turkish coffee pot, along with a potted maidenhair fern and a few scattered succulents.

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I took one of Michele’s calligraphy classes a couple months ago. And while I’m still learning and practicing, I was inspired the night before to create this “bon voyage” banner using a white India ink marker and kraft paper. It’s definitely not perfect, but I really love it!

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If you’re hosting a party at home, use every available surface! We found this antique Egyptian etched brass tray at a local flea market, and it makes a perfect coffee table for drinks and appetizers.

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For favor bags, I used a pencil eraser to stamp polka dots in neon pink, coral, and purple ink on simple muslin bags.

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Full cocktail recipes are coming up in just a bit!

Invitations: Swiss Cottage Designs

Calligraphy: Meant to Be Calligraphy

Menu cards and favor bags: Paper Source

Party & Floral Design: Oh So Beautiful Paper

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This post is brought to you in collaboration with St-Germain. All content, photos, recipes, and words are our own. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that help make Oh So Beautiful Paper possible!

Friday Happy Hour: The Mai Pen Rai

Normally when I mix St-Germain cocktails, I’m trying to match the liqueur’s floral notes. But St-Germain also has a fruity sweetness to it that’s been likened to lychee fruit. So that got me thinking: could I use St-Germain in a cocktail tribute to the flavors of southeast Asia, where lychee is a common ingredient? And the answer is: yes, yes I could. Nole and I are suckers for southeast Asian cuisines, with their amazing flavors and amazing foods, making this a pretty easy cocktail to taste-test as I worked on the recipe: the sweet and funky Mai Pen Rai.– Andrew

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OSBP Signature Cocktail Recipe: The Mai Pen Rai

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Mai Pen Rai

2 oz Batavia Arrak
3/4 oz 
St-Germain
3/4 oz Lemongrass Simple Syrup*
Handful of Mint and Thai Basil Leaves
Splash of Soda Water

Combine the mint and basil leaves with the St-Germain and lemongrass simple syrup, then muddle gently. Fill the glass with lots of crushed ice, then add the Arak and top with a splash of soda water. Stir gently and enjoy!

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*To make the lemongrass simple syrup, first wash and dice a few stalks of lemongrass. Bring a cup of water to a boil, then reduce to a simmer and add two cups of turbinado sugar (my go-to for simple syrup) or white sugar (which will let the lemongrass flavor shine through more cleanly). Stir the sugar to dissolve it and then dump in the chopped lemongrass, stirring frequently for 20-30 minutes. At first you won’t notice much happening, but around the 15-20 minute mark, you should notice a really strong smell of lemongrass. Pour the mixture into a bottle, straining out the lemongrass, and store in the fridge for up to a month. You should end up with about 2 cups of syrup.

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The Mai Pen Rai is something like (my imagined version of) a southeast Asian Mojito.  It’s tall and cold and sweet, full of mint and ice, and the Arrack has something of a funky rum flavor to it.  But it adds some local twists to set it apart.  The Thai basil lends an herbal savoriness to it, while the St-Germain floral, fruity flavors mimic lychee fruit.  And the Arrack…

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Batavia Arrack is, like Brazilian Cachaça, distilled from fermented sugarcane and a bit of red rice. It has some of the same funky flavors as Cachaça, which can be used in a pinch if you can’t find Batavia Arrack (and it’s not easy; we found ours at one of DC’s best liquor stores, Ace Beverage). However, do not substitute Lebanese Arrack, which is distilled from grapes, flavored with anise, and sweetened. Look for the real stuff, imported by Haus Alpenz: distilled on the Indonesian island of Java according to the same recipe used since the 17th century, in Chinese pot stills, aged in teak vats. Batavia Arrack, which featured in many of the earliest punch recipes, gets its name from the Arabic word ‘araq, meaning sweat (I’m guessing a metaphor of the distillation process) and a common word for spirits of any kind throughout much of Asia. In his awesome book Punch, David Wondrich says of Batavia Arrack that it “has a raw, flat tang that has a way of floating itself…right into that tiny, atavistic part of your brain that controls motor function and inhibition. It’s got that funk.” Amen.

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Oh, and the name? Mai pen rai is a Thai phrase that means, among other things: you’re welcome, no problem, it’s all good, no worries (and sometimes: not my problem). You get the idea. The Mai Pen Rai is just like that: a get along drink, an all-purpose problem solver, and, like the Mojito, perfect for just chilling out on a hot day.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This post is brought to you in collaboration with St-Germain. All content, photos, recipes, and words are our own. Thank you for supporting the sponsors that help make Oh So Beautiful Paper possible!

{happy weekend!}

Happy Friday everyone! Memory associations are such a funny thing. When we went into the hospital on September 10 last year, it was still hot and humid summer outside. When we came back out five days later with our baby girl (thanks induction!), it was cool and crisp fall. I will forever associate Sophie’s birthday with the changing of the seasons. And just yesterday, the temperatures thankfully dropped from the 90s to the mid-70s in just a couple hours. Which hopefully means good weather for a certain girl’s birthday party this weekend! But in the meantime…

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…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

Photo Credit: Sierra Studios Photography via My Insanity