Quick Pick: Power + Light Press State Prints

I really cannot resist a good map or state print. I’d love to have a gallery wall just of prints from every state I’ve ever visited. Hopefully someday! Right now I’m loving these letterpress state prints from Kyle at Power & Light Press. Each print is inspired by souvenir magnets, which I’m guessing Kyle collected during her cross country adventures with her Moveable Type truck. So great!

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More prints (and even more to come!) over at Power & Light Press!

Photo Credits: Power & Light Press

Chris + Yelena’s Gilded Parisian Wedding Invitations

I’m always so excited when Margot from Atelier Isabey sends over one of her custom wedding invitation designs because I know it’s going to be super creative and unique. Case and point: these romantic invitations for a wedding in Paris! The invitation suite combines gold foil and black letterpress printed text along with a booklet full of important info for guests. Stunning!

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From Margot: Weddings don’t get any more romantic and glamorous than in Paris so we wanted to set the tone with an invitation that captured a truly classic Parisian feel in a fresh, updated way. We tried to stay away from anything too kitschy or cliché and focused on making the suite feel French and Parisian with understated references to the city of lights and with elegant photography and graphics.

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Yelena, the bride, was originally from Russia and loved all things luxurious and ornate, Chris on the other hand had a more modern and minimalist, Philippe Starck aesthetic. We merged their individual styles right in the middle and accentuated the design with a multitude of luxe print methods, details and finishings.

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The invitation card is printed in gold foil and black letterpress on ultra thick stock with gilded edges. It is paired with a booklet (also with gilded edges) which outlines the itinerary, information and details all designed in a contemporary editorial style with bold typography and crisp photography.

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Both of these pieces slide into a stark white sleeve accented with a sculpture embossed coat of arms designed specially for them. To finish the entire look we designed a custom gusseted envelope with a thick spine and contoured flap to house the contents within.

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Thanks Margot!

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

Photo Credits: Atelier Isabey

Julie + Bo’s Hand Painted Wedding Invitations

Happy Monday everyone! We’re starting the week with some beautiful wedding invitations from Meghan of And Here We Are! Inspired by the bride’s love of all things ombré, Meghan combined watercolor (hand painted on more than 200 sheets of paper!) and letterpress printing into a seriously gorgeous wedding invitation.

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From Meghan: Julie and Bo’s upstate New York wedding had a bohemian, outdoorsy, and slightly vintage vibe with a color scheme of peach and robin’s egg blue. It was really important that their invitations felt unique and hand made, so when Julie showed me her Pinterest board full of ombrés, I knew I just had to try a hand-painted watercolor ombre paper with blue letterpress printed elements.

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I painted over 200 individual pages of extra-thick cotton paper, then letterpress printed and trimmed them to size. The invitation was inspired by a mix of vintage and modern design, with some hand drawn components. Elements like the ribbon motif, the crossed-arrow heart, and 1920s-inspired double lines and angles, along with a mix of script and sans-serif typefaces came together to form the final design.

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I also created a Julie and Bo ‘logomark,’ which we used on the save the dates, programs and wedding website, and also translated into a rubber stamp and wax seal. That artwork was later used on matchbooks, favors and cups at the wedding.

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Thanks Meghan!

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

Photo Credits: Julie Holder

Friday Happy Hour: The Brandy Crusta

It has been quite a long while since we featured a truly classic cocktail. Not a new creation of ours, not a modern cocktail, not our own take on something older. Something genuinely old, and genuinely good, to have stood the test of time. So here’s the Brandy Crusta, just that sort of drink. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Brandy Crusta

2 oz Brandy
1/2 oz Orange Liqueur
1/2 oz Lemon Juice
1 Dash Simple Syrup
2 Dashes Aromatic Bitters
Lemon Peel and Sugar to Garnish

Cut a lemon in half lengthwise and remove the ends. Carefully remove the peel from one half (more on this later). Rub the rim of the glass with the lemon, then roll the glass in sugar to frost the rim. Curl the lemon peel in the glass and set aside.

Combine the brandy, orange liqueur, a squeeze of fresh lemon juice, simple syrup, and bitters, then shake well with ice. Strain into the glass and enjoy!

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The Brandy Crusta is rich and oaky from the brandy, a bit sweet from the orange liqueur, and richly citrusy. Not just from the fresh lemon juice, which adds a tart accent, but also from all that lemon peel in the glass, which lends the drink a delicious scent of lemon oil. Plus just a bit of bitterness from the pith. It’s complex but smooth.

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So, about that peel. There are two ways you can go about this. The easier, saner way is to take a sharp vegetable peeler to a whole lemon. Turning the lemon as you go, cut a long, spiraling piece of peel that you can curl in the glass. The much harder, and much less sane, method is this: take a sharp knife to one half of the lemon and carefully, painstakingly remove the peel from the lemon, taking care not to cut yourself as your hands get slippery from lemon juice. Then, once you have a single piece of peel, scrape off as much of the bitter white pith as you can. The advantage of this latter method is the beautiful, solid peel that you can curl around your glass. The disadvantage is that it is a pain in the ass. So go with the first, easier method unless you’re really trying to impress someone. This is not, in other words, a drink to serve to a bunch of party guests.

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Like I said, this is an old drink. It dates back to the 1850s, invented by Joseph Santini at his City Exchange bar in New Orleans. (He also made Whiskey and Gin Crustas, but the Brandy Crusta is the version that has survived through time.) This must have been a productive time for New Orleans bartenders, because this was around the same time they invented such other amazing cocktails as the Sazerac. I’m guessing a good time was had by all.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Happy Weekend!

Happy Friday everyone! Do you all have fun plans for this beautiful fall weekend? We’re heading to upstate New York to visit my husband’s family for a few pre-Halloween festivities. It’s a long drive, but I know Sophie will be happy to see her grandparents and cousins! I’m heading out to make our final preparations for the trip, but in the meantime…

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Photo by me via Instagram

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

Finally, I made a little announcement on Instagram last week that I thought I’d share here as well. I’m looking to add some DIY contributors to the OSBP team! If you’re interested in contributing, click here for more details on how to apply!

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