Seasonal Stationery: Father’s Day Cards, Part 2

I shared some awesome Father’s Day cards yesterday – but, as promised, I have a few more today!  Today’s selection of cards for Dad ranges from sweet to funny, with a robot and a few ties thrown in for good measure.

Quill and Fox

Fugu Fugu Press

 

Mr. Boddington’s Studio

May Day Studio

 

Night Owl Paper Goods

Sweet Harvey

Sass & Peril

 

Hammerpress

Steel Petal Press

 

Old Tom Foolery (left); Paper Plates Press (right)

Campbell Raw Press

Gold Teeth Brooklyn

p.s. This Father’s Day card is also really awesome

{images via their respective sources}

New Giveaway! A Year of Stationery from Smudge Ink!

This giveaway is now closed.  Thank you for entering!

As you might have guessed from my hints on Friday and earlier this morning, I’m super excited about today’s giveaway!  Smudge Ink is offering one lucky reader the chance to win a whole year’s worth of beautiful letterpress and offset printed stationery!  Can you imagine anything more perfect?

Smudge Ink is known for bold and vibrant letterpress printed greeting cards and custom wedding invitations (I’m proud to have them as a member of the Designer Rolodex) – along with calendars, gift wrap, and offset printed greeting cards.  I loved the sneak peek at some of their new paper goodies in the colorful Smudge Ink booth at this year’s National Stationery Show.

The winner will receive a package from Smudge Ink that includes letterpress and offset printed birthday cards, thank you cards, cards for the various holidays, boxed note cards – even two calendars!  The greeting cards are letterpress printed at the Smudge Ink studios, a renovated textile factory located in the Charlestown neighborhood of Boston, and all boxed notes and calendars are offset printed in Maine.

So here’s how to enter:  Visit and “Like” Smudge Ink on Facebook – then come back here and leave a comment with your favorite holiday of the year!  You’ll have until 11:59 p.m. on Thursday, June 7 to enter the giveaway.  One winner will be selected randomly and notified via email.  Bonne chance!

Photo Credits: Smudge Ink

*This giveaway is sponsored by Smudge Ink.  Official sweepstakes rules here.

Seasonal Stationery: Father’s Day Cards

Happy Monday everyone!  We’ve got a really awesome giveaway coming up a bit later this morning that you definitely won’t want to miss, but first – Father’s Day cards!  Father’s Day is coming up in just a couple of weeks, so I wanted to start the week off with a few favorite cards to help celebrate the favorite dads in our lives…

Honizukle

Anemone Letterpress

Sycamore Street Press

Smock

Sugar Paper

 

Egg Press (left) and Rifle Paper Co. (right)

Orange Twist

Papersheep

Wiley Valentine

Red Cap Cards

I’ll be back with a few more Father’s Day cards tomorrow!

{images via their respective sources}

*Wiley Valentine and Smock are sponsors of Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Queen’s Park Swizzle

In the mood for something tropical?  Here’s one of Trinidad’s greatest exports, the Queen’s Park Swizzle – an enormously complex drink Trader Vic called “the most delightful form of anesthesia given out today.”  The Queen’s Park Swizzle is one of the most complex drinks – flavor-wise – I’ve ever tasted.  It’s sweet and sour, deliciously minty, earthy, and spicy all at the same time.  And wonderfully cold from a generous portion of crushed ice.  Even though its ingredients resemble those of many other drinks, especially the more effervescent Mojito, this Swizzle has a taste like nothing else, and it’s very, very good. – Andrew

Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (13)

Read below for the full recipe!

Queen’s Park Swizzle

3 oz Clear Rum (Demerara Rum is best)
1 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Simple Syrup (again, Demerara sugar is best)
1/2 oz Velvet Falernum
Angostura Bitters
Mint Leaves

Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (27) Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (19)

Cover the bottom of a highball glass with mint leaves.  Don’t muddle: since the mint is staying in the glass, bruising it will turn the mint bitter, so just slap the leaves a few times in your palm.  Cover with lots of crushed ice.  Add the rum, lime juice, sugar, and falernum.  Cover with more crushed ice.  Swizzle (more on that in just a moment).  Add the bitters, and don’t skimp – a dozen dashes isn’t out of the question.  Top with more crushed ice, garnish with a bunch of mint, plunk in a straw, and enjoy!

Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (16) Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (29)

Now: swizzling.  You’re not shaking this drink, and you’re not stirring it, you’re swizzling.  Take a bar spoon or, better yet, an actual swizzle stick, and insert it into the ice (not so far down that you disturb the mint).  Twirl the stick between your palms, back and forth, blending and cooling the drink until a nice film of ice forms on the outside of the glass.  Real swizzle sticks are made from actual sticks, stems from the quararibea turbinata, grown on Martinique and nearby islands and known to locals as the swizzle stick tree.  In some places, people make medicinal teas from the bark of the tree, so it’s not hard to imagine it making the leap to rustic blender.  It blends a Swizzle subtly but well and makes for quite a show.  If you use a real one, make sure to wash it and let it try after each use.

Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (24)

The Queen’s Park Swizzle was invented at the Queen’s Park Hotel in Trinidad’s capital, Port-of-Spain, in the 1920s.  Swizzles were around for over a century before that, and may descend from switchels – much older drinks, an early form of today’s energy drinks made from sweetened vinegar and water – but the Queen’s Park may be the first of the modern family of Swizzles.  (The oldest recipe in print, from 1788, lists spruce beer, rum, and sugar as its ingredients.)  Oh, and Velvet Falernum?  This isn’t part of the original recipe, but was included in the version I learned from Derek Brown, DC’s cocktail king, and trust me, it’s worth it.  Falernum is a sweet syrup from the Caribbean, somewhat like orgeat syrup.  Velvet Falernum is a liqueur version, imported from Barbados and made from rum, sugar cane syrup, lime juice, and plenty of spices – cloves, allspice, ginger, cinnamon, and maybe a hint of almond.  Yum.

Cocktail Friday Recipe: The Queen's Park Swizzle via Oh So Beautiful Paper (8)

Oh, and be careful: that’s a lot of booze in one drink.  The Queen’s Park Swizzle’s saving grace is that it takes a long time to build one properly.  Take your time, sip slowly, and savor.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

{happy weekend!}

Happy Friday everyone!  I’ve had a wonderful time covering the 2012 National Stationery Show, but after spending much of the last two weeks going through more than 1,000 photos from the show I’m looking forward to turning my attention back to everyday things – like making progress on the nursery!  I’m also super excited about next week because I have a super awesome giveaway to share with you on Monday!  But in the meantime…

Photo by me, cute little venn diagram love card by Maginating

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

As usual, we have a fun cocktail coming up for you this afternoon, so check back a bit later for the recipe!  I hope you all have a wonderful weekend, and I’ll see you back here on Monday!  xoxo