Seasonal Stationery: 2012 Holiday Cards, Part 3

Um, how is Thanksgiving NEXT WEEK?! I swear this time of year always seems to speed by on fast forward, which means the Christmas and New Year’s holidays will be here before we know it (eeks!). So without any further delay, here are a few more cards from the 2012 holiday card round up!

Holiday Card Round Up via Oh So Beautiful Paper (2)

1. Moontree Letterpress (can also be customized); 2. Ink Meets Paper; 3. Night Owl Paper Goods; 4. Fig. 2 Design Studio; 5. Oslo Press; 6. Smock

Holiday Card Round Up via Oh So Beautiful Paper (1)

7. Hello Small World; 8. Paper Lovely; 9. Yellow Owl Workshop; 10. Dude and Chick; 11. My Little Buffalo; 12. Stone and Feather; 13. Happy Cactus

Check out the full holiday card round up right here!

{images via their respective sources}

Seasonal Stationery: 2012 Holiday Cards

Nothing gets me excited for the Christmas season quite like holiday cards (naturally), and this year is no exception. I’ve had so much fun watching stationers release their newest holiday card designs over the last few weeks!  You can check out the full holiday card round up with my favorite cards from each designer right here, and here’s a little sample of some of the best holiday cards from this year…

2012 Holiday Card Round Up via Oh So Beautiful Paper

1. Crane & Co.; 2. Honizukle; 3. Campbell Raw Press; 4. Sugar Paper; 5. Humunuku; 6. Sass + Peril

2012 Holiday Card Round Up via Oh So Beautiful Paper

7. Molly Jaques; 8. Parrott Design Studio; 9. Missive; 10. Mr. Boddington’s Studio; 11. Quill + Fox; 12. Ink + Iron; 13. Rifle Paper Co.

Check out the full holiday card round up right here!

{images via their respective sources}

Molly’s Zoo Theme Holiday Card + Moving Announcement

After moving to a new home and welcoming a second child, Molly from Paisley Quill decided to get super creative with her family’s annual holiday card – combining all three into one package!  Molly embraced the recent chaos, going with a fun zoo theme for the entire package accented with cute plastic zoo animals and lots of fun vintage stamps.

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (7)

From Molly:  This year has been rather crazy for us.  We had another baby and purchased a new home that required lots of renovations in a short amount of time.  Needless to say, I fell behind on my correspondence.  So this year, I decided that it was high time I got caught up and sent everything out together.

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (6)

In a little blue box, I sent our son’s birth announcement, our moving announcement, and Christmas card all together.  Tied up in a pretty little package and mailed to family and friends with lots of vintage stamps.  My friend Holly from the Paper Nickel gifted me the baby buggy stamp in honor of Callahan.

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (2) Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (8)

Since having two kids, our life has been a ZOO!  So I ran with the concept, creating both a birth announcement and moving announcement modeled after an information card from the zoo.  I had a custom stamp made and stamped all of the glassine envelopes with our new family “crest.”  I sealed the moving announcement with the zoo animals inside the envelopes and taped them shut with fabric tape.

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (5)

Paisley Quill Holiday Card/Moving Announcement via Oh So Beautiful Paper (9)

Thanks so much Molly!

Photo Credits: Paisley Quill

*Paisley Quill is a sponsor of Oh So Beautiful Paper

Calligraphy Inspiration: Primele

Some like to think that talent runs in the family.  In the case of Primele, the design studio of sisters Patricia and Rachel Mumau, it’s most certainly true.  Ever since I stumbled upon their Etsy shop, I’ve been looking for glimpses of projects on Patricia’s blog, and ogling their portfolio of work.  The sisters are also the creatives behind Fawnsberg, a stationery line that carries over Primele’s signature style, adding it to cards, papers, and stamps.  Their work has been featured in Martha Stewart Weddings, Lucky Magazine, and Real Simple.  You’ll see why!  – Julie 

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Patricia’s calligraphy gives off a playful and welcoming air.  You don’t have to worry about blending into the crowd with addressed envelopes like these. (Especially with such great, bright inks!)

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

Calligraphy and illustration find a home in the line of Fawnsberg stationery.  Ever so whimsical, their art and address stamps, writing sheets and notecards are some of the most charming I’ve seen.

Primele Calligraphy via Oh So Beautiful Paper

With the sneak peeks I’ve seen of the Fawnsberg booth at the National Stationery Show, you’ll definitely want to keep an eye on these ladies.  I can’t wait to see what goodies they’ll have in store for us next!

Photo Credits: Primele and Fawnsberg

Friday Happy Hour: The Norwegian Wood

We have in our bar a bottle of Akvavit, a strange, superb Scandinavian liquor that tastes, of all things, like caraway seed.  It’s fantastic and complex, but strongly reminiscent of rye bread – it’s not the easiest flavor to blend into a cocktail.  So, our bottle has been sitting there for a while, unused and unloved.  Until now!  A recent web search revealed this fantastic winter drink by an awesome Portland bartender, Jeffrey Morgenthaler, that does justice to this odd spirit and has quickly entered my rotation.

Read below for the full recipe!

Norwegian Wood

1 oz Akvavit
1 oz Apple Brandy or Calvados
3/4 oz Sweet Vermouth
1/4 oz Yellow Chartreuse
1 Dash Angostura Bitters

Combine all the ingredients, stir well with ice, then strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Garnish with a twist of lemon peel and enjoy.

 

Scandinavians have been drinking Akvavit since at least the 16th Century as a tonic for all sorts of ailments, as its name – from the Latin aqua vÄ«tae or “water of live” – suggests.  Traditionally, Akvavit is consumed unadorned, paired with food or in a Christmas toast.  There aren’t many cocktail recipes that incorporate Akvavit, which is why I was so delighted to find Mr. Morgenthaler’s recipe.

Here’s what you’ll get: an enormously complex, bold, well-balanced (but boozy) drink.  I was honestly surprised at how good this drink was when I first tried it.  The Akvavit’s caraway seed flavor is a major component but doesn’t dominate the drink; it’s a little sweet and a little spicy and a lot herbal. It brings foremost to mind the warmth of a roaring fire on a frigid northern night.

 

Akvavit is the Scandanavian cousin of English dry gin.  Both start as a neutral spirit that is then distilled again with botanicals to impart flavor: juniper is the most prominent for gin, and caraway dominates Akvavit.  But just as gin is more than just juniper, Akvavit also carries such flavors as dill, fennel, coriander, clove, anise, and cardamom.

I don’t expect most people to have at home a bottle of Akvavit or Chartreuse (an amazingly complex liqueur made by French monks from a secret combination of herbs, spices, and flowers).  But here’s what I strongly suggest: that you pick up a bottle of one or both and give them a try.  Americans have been conditioned by hundreds of varieties of flavored vodkas to expect spirits to taste exactly like a thing, whether that thing is vanilla or raspberry or pears or bubble gum or espresso.  Instead, Akvavit and Chartreuse are big, bold, complex Old World Flavors that are as impossible to pin down as they are memorable.  If you haven’t already, branch out and try something new.  You might find yourself a convert.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper