Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations

Aaaaaah… These beautiful ocean-inspired dip dyed letterpress wedding invitations from Swell Press Paper Co. are like a breath of fresh air! Individually dip dyed in shades of blue over blind impression text, I could stare at this gorgeous invitation suite all day!

Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations by Swell Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

From Brittany: These dip dyed wedding invitations was inspired by a wedding in Seaside, Florida. If you’ve heard of Seaside (or seen the Truman Show) the first thing that comes to mind is an idyllic town filled with pastel buildings, gently crashing waves of crystal water… and a really good ice cream shop. I wanted this invitation suite to evoke the charm of Seaside – which isn’t a hard thing to do with a town so dang cute. I individually dip dyed the invitation and RSVP cards with different colors of the ocean, ranging from sea foam to bright turquoise. Both the invitation and RSVP card are on 220lb Natural White Crane’s Lettra, with a sea foam RSVP envelope, Natural White outer envelope, and light blue inner envelope.

Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations by Swell Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations by Swell Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations by Swell Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Dip Dyed Letterpress Wedding Invitations by Swell Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Thanks Brittany!

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

Photo Credits: Swell Press Paper Co.

Quick Pick: Day Designer by Blue Sky

If you’ve been reading OSBP for any length of time, you probably already know about the amazing Day Designer planners. My friend Whitney created the Day Designer a few years ago to help users find balance and live an organized life – and it has been a huge hit ever since! You can find the amazing flagship edition of the Day Designer right here, but today I’m super excited to help share the news that Whitney has teamed up with Blue Sky to produce a special edition of the Day Designer available exclusively at Target stores starting this week!!

Day Designer by Blue Sky at Target / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Day Designer for Blue Sky is available in an incredible 29 format and cover options – from full-size 8″ x 10″ planners to purse-friendly weekly/monthly planners to wall and desk calendars! You can even find special free printables for travel, food, and school! There are even casebound versions for those of you who aren’t fans of the wire-o binding. The cover options include bright solid colors and floral patterns, but I think I’ll always be partial to the classic gold stripe pattern. So classic!

Day Designer by Blue Sky at Target / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Day Designer by Blue Sky at Target / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Day Designer by Blue Sky at Target / Oh So Beautiful Paper

 

You can browse the full collection right here – and find the collection at a Target store near you starting this week! Yay!

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations

There are so many places in the world that I want to visit someday – and Iceland is definitely in my Top 5! Lyndsey from The Hunter Press recently got married in Iceland, with an intimate ceremony attended by 10 family members. Lyndsey designed the most beautiful copper foil and navy invitations for her destination wedding – I’m so happy she’s sharing them here today!

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

From Lyndsey: I run a letterpress printing and design studio in Scotland called The Hunter Press and recently had the pleasure of designing my own wedding invitations. My husband and I married in Iceland in an intimate ceremony, surrounded by just 10 of our family.

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

When my now-husband Keith popped the question 18 months ago, I went straight to work collating ideas for our invitations. As a designer and printer, the chance to create your own wedding invitations is a big deal and seriously exciting, if a little overwhelming! The invitations were designed in the style of a map book and were printed using a combination of letterpress printing and hot foil.

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

We were engaged in an lava tunnel in Iceland 18 months previous and instantly made the decision to return to Iceland for our wedding day. Our ceremony took place in a tiny black church on the Snaefellsnes peninsula in Western Iceland, surrounded by only the ocean and mountains. We chose to have an intimate ceremony with just our immediate family present and wanted our invitations to be an extra special keepsake for our guests.

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

The little black church and neighbouring Budir Hotel were both strong design influences. We wanted to keep the invitations as simple and romantic as possible while bringing in an element of Budir charm. The hotel itself was full of dark features, old maps and various wildlife specimens. Dark blues, rough cottons and suede cords seemed the perfect combination for our stationery.

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

The invitation cover, centre page and back poem were foil printed in copper onto dark blue Colorplan stock. The foldout map insert was letterpress printed in a warm grey onto textured 100% Cotton Saunders Waterford Stock.  All items were drilled at the top and secured with a copper book screw, allowing each page to swivel open. The map books were then tied with a brown suede cord and packaged within a strong Kraft button and string envelope.

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Copper Foil and Navy Iceland Wedding Invitations  / The Hunter Press / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Thanks Lyndsey!

Design and Printing: The Hunter Press

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

Photo Credits: The Hunter Press

The Ghost Flower

I’m pretty psyched about this month. Last month was all about infusions; we’ll be spending July exploring the world of Tiki drinks. Tiki! Despite its evocation of a(n imaginary) Polynesia, there’s nothing quite as American as Tiki, a family of drinks invented and popularized by men like Don the Beachcomber and Trader Vic at their southern California bars in the 30s and 40s. So it’s pretty fitting that we start our month of Tiki drinks the day before that most American of holidays, the Fourth of July. – Andrew

Rum and St-Germain Tiki Cocktail Recipe / Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Ghost Flower Cocktail Recipe Card / Shauna Lynn Illustration / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

The Ghost Flower

2 oz Silver Rum
1 oz Lime Juice
3/4 oz Pineapple Juice
1/2 oz St-Germain
1/2 oz Creme de Violette
1/2 oz Orgeat

Combine all of the ingredients in a shaker filled two-thirds with ice and shake well. Strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Float half of a spent lime shell, soaked in overproof rum, in the glass and carefully light the rum with a match. Enjoy (carefully)!

Rum and St-Germain Tiki Cocktail Recipe / Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Tiki isn’t a family of drinks like Sours or vermouth cocktails: there’s no particular ingredient or combination that makes a drink a Tiki drink. Instead, there are two principles that a drink should follow to be considered a Tiki drink. First: layers of flavor. Many Tiki drinks combine multiple kinds of rum, citrus juices, spices, and syrups to build complex and rich flavor profiles. Second, Tiki drinks should have an exotic, kitschy, fun sensibility. Even though most Tiki drinks feature Caribbean flavors, especially rum and citrus, they’re supposed to evoke a fantasy version of Polynesian island culture. The whole idea behind the first Tiki bars was to allow middle class Americans to experience an exotic vacation without leaving home. Like I said: kitschy and fun. The best Tiki embraces the inherent silly ridiculousness. A Tiki drink’s flavors should be serious, but that’s it.

Rum and St-Germain Tiki Cocktail Recipe / Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

So I built the Ghost Flower with layers of flavor: rum, two kinds of citrus, but especially three kinds of floral sweeteners: elderflower-flavored St-Germain, violet-flavored Creme de Violette, and orgeat, with its almond and orange blossom flavors. I wanted to evoke a tropical orchid. And I also built it to be a little ridiculous and fun: a pale grey-blue color and a flaming lime rind to evoke a ghostly forest spirit. Yeah. I wrote that with a straight face.

Rum and St-Germain Tiki Cocktail Recipe / Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

About that lime rind. Use an empty, spent lime shell half; you should have a few left over if you’re juicing fresh limes for your citrus. You can float it in the drink (watch out for overflow!) or pour the whole drink over crushed ice, like we did here, to hold up the lime better. Fill the lime shell with a splash of overproof rum – you really need something stronger than 80 proof here, more like 90 or 100 – and light with a match. It helps if the rum is warmed up a bit, because what you really need is for the rum to release some vapors that will light more easily than the rum itself. (I find that blowing very gently on the match as it’s held over the rum will help the vapors catch.) Alcohol doesn’t burn that hotly, but it’s still hot, so make sure you blow out that fire before you take a sip.

Rum and St-Germain Tiki Cocktail Recipe / Liquorary for Oh So Beautiful Paper

This is going to be a great month.

(Don’t forget to follow us on Instagram, where we’ve been posting our experiments before they make their way onto this column!)

Glassware by Liquorary 

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

Lucas + Judah’s Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations

I really don’t know how Lisa from Good on Paper does it. Every year she comes up with the best themes for her two boys’ birthday parties and then completely knocks it out of the park with the invitations! For her older son’s 5th birthday (BTW – how is Lucas FIVE already??? You can also check out birthday invitations 1, 2, 3, and 4), Lucas requested a Wild Kratt’s theme for a shared party with his friend Judah. The resulting invitations and party paper are all so much fun!

Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations / Good on Paper Design / Oh So Beautiful Paper

From Lisa: For Lucas’ 5th birthday party he asked for a “Wild Kratts” party. If you haven’t seen this show, it’s an educational animated series on PBS, created by and starring brothers Chris and Martin Kratt. The show is full of fun facts about animals, ranging from polar bears to geckos, and each episode features a particular critter’s unique “creature power.” Lucas gets really excited learning about animal powers and defenses, and I love when he enlightens me with new animal facts! This year we decided to throw a modern animal-themed birthday party together with Judah, Lucas’ good friend from school, who turned five the day before.

Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations / Good on Paper Design / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Starting with the invitation design, I painted abstract animal patterns using simple black watercolor paint, and hand wrote “Go Wild” which would later become a logo for the party. I took a cute photo of Lucas and Judah and used it as a custom envelope liner. The envelopes were finished with matching wrap-around address labels.

Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations / Good on Paper Design / Oh So Beautiful Paper

We originally scheduled the party for Saturday, and had all the invitations printed up. We later changed it to Sunday due to Little League conflicts. I didn’t want to waste the old invitations, so I cut off the old RSVP information, and used the top half to make “creature power” trading cards that accompanied each t-shirt. Each trading card had fun facts about different animals. Cute AND educational! The bottom of the invitations were used to create name tags and were handwritten with each kid’s name.

Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations / Good on Paper Design / Oh So Beautiful Paper

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP3

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP5

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP7

If you’ve seen our other birthday parties, you know that donut holes are a Jackson family tradition. This year’s donut cones were made with the animal printed recycled paper.

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP9

One of my favorite ideas for the party was to make “polar bear ice,” aka popsicles. There’s a Wild Kratts episode called “Polar Bears Don’t Dance,” and I wanted the “polar bear ice” to tie into that. The team at Whole Foods Market Gilman made custom paletas in three fruity flavors (blueberry cream, apple/pineapple and fresh strawberry). All were a huge hit on the warm day.

Wild Kratts Birthday Party Invitations / Good on Paper Design / Oh So Beautiful Paper

I designed some packaging for the pops using wax food bags, snipped at the bottom and  sealed on top with a hand lettered label. The package kept the pops from sticking together in the cooler, and also doubled as a place for the melty drips to fall. They were devoured in seconds!

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP16

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP17

Wild-Kratts-Birthday-Party-Good-on-Paper-OSBP19

Yay! Thanks Lisa! And happy 5th birthday to Lucas!

Photo Credits: Good on Paper