Happy Weekend!

Happy Saturday everyone! I’m on the train to New York as I write this, making my way towards the 2017 National Stationery Show! If you don’t already, follow me over on Instagram for some real-time updates from the show, and of course I’ll be back here next week to share recaps and highlights from the show – along with some of our regularly-scheduled content. But in the meantime…

 Azalea-Inspired Envelope by Mary Kate Moon

Photo by Mary Kate Moon via Instagram

…a few links for your weekend!

How gorgeous is this skirt?? I want one in every color!

Loving the new Parachute tabletop linen collection

Such great embroidered t-shirts from Anne Robin Calligraphy – the proceeds all go to Planned Parenthood! I especially love this Make America Kind Again kid’s shirt.

NEED these hologram envelope sets from The Social Type!

Thinking I might need this for future trade shows – it’s the perfect way to store business cards!

Make: Thai iced tea ice cream

Card of the week!

 

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Playful floral pinwheel wedding invitations

Beautiful blue agate-inspired watercolor and calligraphy wedding invitations

Fun cards to congratulate friends and family on a new home!

Super fun neon acrylic birthday party invitations

NSS 2017 Sneak Peeks: Wild Ink Press, Inclosed, Amy Heitman, and Egg Press

A Tequila and Mezcal Old Fashioned cocktail recipe

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations

Um…. these neon acrylic birthday party invitations from Melissa of Atheneum Creative are SO much fun! And the best part? They were inspired by one of my favorites: Sour Patch Kids! Drawing from her candy inspiration, Melissa chose a bright neon pink acrylic to pack a punch with the overall design and feel of these invitations. So fun and sweet all the way through!

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations by Atheneum Creative

From Melissa: This was a fun one! James had a birthday coming up and his wife wanted to surprise him with a birthday party. She mentioned his love of Sour Patch Kids and before we knew it that was the inspiration for the party and the invitations. When you’re given Sour Patch Kids as inspiration for a birthday invitation, you simply can’t just print it on paper – it needs to be exciting and fun!

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations by Atheneum Creative

We presented some different design directions, but we all fell in love with this colored acrylic. The color we chose to work with is called Flamingo – I mean how fun is that? The one thing we love about this acrylic is the ability it has to change colors right in front you. Turn it one way and it looks orange, turn it another way and the acrylic turns pink. It also changes colors when placed on different surfaces. The draw to the acrylic was instant, but the fact that it changed colors only played to the sour patch kids even more with their tagline being, “first they’re sour, then they’re sweet.”

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations by Atheneum Creative

We wanted to add another layer of texture to the invitation by cutting his name out of the acrylic. We loved the way it was all packaged up with the filler paper showing through behind the acrylic invitations. The idea of seeing something different played well with the Sour Patch Kids theme. I loved the presentation as a whole, especially how his name stood out so boldly!

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations by Atheneum Creative

We mailed the invitation in a self-mailing white box with a wrap around label and white paper filler. This also highlighted the pink color when you opened the invitation and experienced the color changing acrylic as you took out the invitation. We loved the overall feel we created from such a fun piece of inspiration!

Neon Acrylic Birthday Party Invitations by Atheneum Creative

Thanks Melissa!

Design: Atheneum Creative

Atheneum Creative 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: Chelsea Davis Photography

Happy Mother’s Day Weekend!

Happy Friday everyone! And Happy (almost) Mother’s Day to all the mamas and soon-to-be mamas out there! This week has been kind of intense for me: after four years of living in our home, we’re FINALLY having central air conditioning installed – which isn’t the easiest process in a narrow 1920s row house with brick and plaster walls. But we’re almost done and it’s going to be sooooooo worth it once the summer heat and humidity arrives. But after all the construction at home, I’m thinking we’ll just enjoy a low key weekend and Mother’s Day. It’ll be my last quiet weekend before the National Stationery Show kicks off next weekend! Aaaaah! But in the meantime…

Photo (and card) by Heartell Press via Instagram

…a few links for your weekend!

I’m on the hunt for a few lightweight midi skirts for summer. I have my eye on this lavender linen skirt (also comes in gingham!), this chambray skirt, this striped skirt, and this dotty gingham skirt.

Planning to make a ton of these mini cherry crisps this summer

Loving this sculptural lamp

Help buy 800 goats for Syrian refugees in Jordan

Also, how Syria changed the world

How cute are these hologram foil save the dates??

These gingham sneakers are so cute for little girls (and they’re 25% off with code SHOPNOW)

Crying all the tears after reading this story

Card of the week!

 

Recently on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Enrollment for the Modern Calligraphy Summit 2.0 is back open! Read about it here, or just go ahead and sign up here.

Absolutely LOVE these colorful patterned wedding invitations!

New illustrated desktop wallpapers for May!

NSS 2017 Sneak Peeks from Richie Designs, Iron Curtain Press, and Ramona & Ruth

Ethereal vellum wedding invitations

Behind the Stationery with Cheree Berry Paper

Cards to send to your graduates: Part 1 and Part 2

Fun party supplies from Hip Hip Party Goods!

Pokemon birthday party invitations!

Understated calligraphy and green fern wedding invitations

Autumn ombré wedding invitations

Spring at the National Arboretum

A Passionfruit Mezcal Sling and a delicious Elderflower Tequila Rickey

Lucas’s Pokemon Birthday Party Invitations

It’s so fun to see how talented designers interpret their kids birthday party theme requests, especially as they get older! I’ve had the pleasure of featuring every single birthday party invitation that Lisa from Good on Paper has designed for her sons Lucas and Theo, and I’ve loved watching the themes evolve from numbers to superheros to animals to magic. For Lucas’s 7th birthday party (!!!), Lisa put her spin on a Pokemon-themed party! For the Pokemon birthday party invitations, Lisa created her own modern take on a Pikachu design complete with a sunny yellow balloon and envelope liners with a photo of the birthday kid. So fun!

Pokemon Birthday Party Invitations from Good on Paper

Pokemon Birthday Party Invitations from Good on Paper

From Lisa: Lucas asked for a Pokemon themed party for his 7th birthday. As usual, I like to put my own modern spin on the theme. I designed the invitations with a simple and modern take on Pikachu’s face. I initially wanted to mail each invitation with a balloon that had a hand drawing of Pikachu’s face but it didn’t quite work out the way I wanted.

Pokemon Birthday Party Invitations from Good on Paper

Instead, each invitation came with a yellow balloon taped to the yellow backing of the invitation with some black striped washi tape. The custom envelope liner had a photo of Lucas looking at a Pokemon book written in Japanese from our date to the Kinokuniya bookstore in San Francisco’s Japantown. The invitations were mailed in sunny yellow envelopes and sealed with wraparound address labels.

Pokemon Birthday Party Invitations from Good on Paper

Every birthday party we throw includes donut holes and custom paper cones – definitely a big hit with the party guests!

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

For the party favors, I made Poke Surprise Balls using white crepe paper streamers, a black Sharpie and red acrylic paint. Each Poke Ball included a few Pokemon figurines, Japanese candy, and a colorful whistle.

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

For the birthday cake, I made a super easy red velvet cake and cupcakes with cream cheese frosting. I had seen many Pinterest photos of cupcakes resembling poke balls but I didn’t have the time or energy to go that route. Instead, I just put seven Pokemon figurines on Lucas’s cake and one each on top of the cupcakes. The kids were so excited to get more figurines and negotiated trades.

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

We also hired a face painter who specialized in Pokemon drawings. Some kids had their full face painted and others, like Lucas, just had a character drawn on their face or arm.

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

Every year, my husband Nick and I tag team on making the piñata. This year I made a giant Poke Ball using the paper maché method and filled it with Japanese candies and fruit gummies.

Pokemon Birthday Party Ideas from Good on Paper

Thanks so much Lisa! And happy 7th birthday Lucas!

p.s. You can also see the invitations from previous birthdays: 65, 4, 3, 2, and 1.

Photo Credits: Good on Paper

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry Paper

There’s something so incredible about seeing a small business started by one designer turn into a team of 20 employees over the course of 10 years! We’ve admired the work of Cheree from Cheree Berry Paper for every single one of those 10 years, and we’re beyond thrilled to welcome her to our newest installment of Behind the Stationery! Balancing her signature custom work with the retail stationery side of her business, Cheree shares about her team’s design process for both kinds of work and how they maintain that Cheree Berry touch. Take it away, Cheree! –Megan Soh

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

From Cheree: My love of all things paper started as a child. Visiting the Hallmark store was a treasured outing –there was just never enough time to open all of those cards. Fast forward to college, I chose graphic design as my major. With a BFA in hand from Washington University, I moved to NYC for my first design job at the graphic design powerhouse, Pentagram. Shortly after, I landed a position at the fashion company Kate Spade. It was at KS that I really fostered my love for paper, helping to create the company’s wedding stationery line with Crane & Co. In 2006, I returned to the Midwest for a beau (turned husband) and upon my arrival, I quickly started Cheree Berry Paper in my apartment.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

Work started coming in from across the country, and one employee has since turned into over twenty! And now that we are in our tenth year, you could say that we have two businesses camouflaged as one – the custom invitations and graphic design side that our business was built on and now the retail stationery side. Our love is the clever and unexpected. For our custom designs, our challenge is bringing stories to life on paper. For our retail stationery line, it’s creating something that is engaging and supportive of our visual voice.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

Custom: Our business was started on creating custom solutions for our clients, and this is where our passion still remains today. During the custom process, our first task at hand is to listen to the client’s story and vision. We love leaving a meeting or ending a call with lots of material, but not the exact design solution. After our client interaction, we sketch, research, and refine until we come up with two to three different design solutions to present. From there, with feedback from our clients, we work through revisions and ultimately get to the end result – it’s our job to ensure that our clients are as happy with the design as we are.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

Retail: We are our very own test market. Our first mini line of stationery, produced about eight years ago, was created out of necessity in order to keep our own stationery drawers fully stocked. How do we create a line from scratch? We open our treasure chest of snail mail keeps and think about how these particular pieces made an impact. You’d be hard pressed to find a card in our retail stationery offering that is simply a rectangular card with a pretty design on the front. What you can find in our line? Unexpected formats, clever copywriting, hidden details, fun envelope touches that create anticipation, interactive moments and items that feel personalized without much DIY commitment.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

The design process typically starts with a client meeting or call including a project manager and a designer. We listen and ask questions to be able to achieve our ultimate goal – telling a personal story on paper with great design. Often the next step is mood boards or sketches to narrow a design direction. Timelines and budgets are set and then the design phase begins!

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

A few design options are presented to the client, then we get feedback and move to revisions before settling on a final design. Most of our designs mix lots of processes – letterpress, foil stamping, painted edges; really, whatever it takes to make the piece a stand-out while maintaining the budget we’ve been given. The final stop? Our production departments applies the finishing touches. We may be tying a booklet, lining an envelope, or placing the stamp just so. We delight in all the details.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

No one day is like another, but after coffee, I’m ready to check my email and see what happened after midnight. I make my to-do list for the day and the brainstorming, sketching and meetings begin. Lunch is usually at my desk, and when I need to fully focus, you might find me at a nearby coffee shop or bookstore. Four o’clock becomes six o’clock and then I’m rushing home to relieve my nanny. After dinner and a lengthy bedtime routine with my kids (that usually starts with a short dance party and ends with a Mo Willems book), I plug back into work once lights are out.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

Our team consists of designers, project managers, and a full production staff. Every department touches each job throughout the design and printing processes – without one department, our job could not get done! Our design team has a range of talents, so projects are assigned according to the project style and content. For example, we match the designer to the project based on whether the client’s vision includes a custom hand-drawn illustration, more focus on typography, hand lettering, etc.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

Our project managers work very closely with our clients to ensure great communication throughout the process. Once a job has gone to print, it moves through a very thorough production process. There is no piece of stationery that leaves Cheree Berry Paper without being quality checked. Our jobs must finish as strong as they started.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

The evolution for me is to focus on the big picture. I have a staff of fabulous designers and art directors so their talents allow me to think about vision, voice and concepts. I love connecting with them daily to see the brilliance brewing. Marketing is my big push right now. I am driven to get my Instagram message out there – a place where I showcase our work and occasionally my values.

Behind the Stationery: Cheree Berry

I’m hands-on when I need to be but really rely on my personal projects – holiday cards, kids birthday invites, etc. – to get me back to my love for design. And I don’t forget what 10 years ago looked like when I was designing invoices to look pretty and taking too long to send them out and working for what seemed like every minute of every day.

Here’s a very special sneak peek at a brand new line of all-occasion cards by Cheree Berry Paper, produced and distributed by Galison Gifts. The designs will debut at the National Stationery Show this month!

Cheree Berry Paper for Galison Gifts

Write-On Cards offer stickers and spaces to handwrite, so each card can be personalized.

Cheree Berry Paper for Galison Gifts

Expanding Cards unfold and expand to reveal the message.

All photos courtesy of Cheree Berry Paper