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

Passion Fruit Mezcal Sling

Like I said last week, Tequila is pretty perfect for spring. But Tequila isn’t the only agave spirit out of Mexico that’s pretty good this time of year. We’re talking about Mezcal! Mezcal has been popular among cocktail nerds for years, but it still hasn’t caught on among the wider drinking public. But I’m a big fan, so I wanted to show off another way of approaching Mexican spirits before Cinco de Mayo. This Passion Fruit Mezcal Sling combines the tropical tartness of passionfruit, the smokiness of Mezcal, and Campari for a drink that is more tropical and exotic than your average margarita. –Andrew

Passion Fruit Mezcal Sling Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary

Passionfruit Mezcal Sling

2 oz Silver Mezcal
1 oz Passion Fruit Syrup*
3/4 oz Lime Juice
1/2 oz Campari

To make the passion fruit syrup: combine equal parts passion fruit juice and raw sugar in a sauce pan. Simmer over low heat, stirring frequently, until all the sugar is melted. Bottle and refrigerate.

Combine everything in a cocktail shaker filled two-thirds with ice and shake well. Strain into a chilled coupe glass and enjoy!

Passion Fruit Mezcal Sling Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary

This is a refreshing, lively cocktail, with lots of tropical fruit and verdant vegetal notes. There’s a definite smokiness, but, paired with the Campari, comes across more as an exotic complexity than an in-your-face edge. The Campari gives the drink a bit of bitterness on the finish, which helps balance the sweetness of the passion fruit syrup.

Mezcal is, like Tequila, made from the agave plant, a relative of aloe. (Technically, Mezcal covers all agave spirits, and Tequila is a subset of Mezcal, but we’re not going to get too deeply into this.) Mezcal is made from the heart of the agave plant, which is cooked in earthen pits, lending Mezcal the same sort of smokiness that Scotch whiskey gets from burning peat to dry malted barley. The agave is then crushed and mashed, traditionally with a horse-drawn stone, and then fermented and distilled.

Passion Fruit Mezcal Sling Cocktail Recipe by Liquorary

Mezcal has the same sorts of earthy vegetal notes as Tequila, along with a luscious smokiness. It’s a spirit that pairs well with lime, tropical fruit, melon, and cucumber, the sorts of flavors that bring out a fresh, almost juicy character from the Mezcal. So, when mixing a drink in a few days to celebrate all things Mexico, consider trying Mexico’s other great spirit.

*A quick note about passion fruit syrup: Passion fruit syrup is most properly made by simmering the juice with the pulp of whole passion fruit, which are tiny and hard to come by and difficult to work with. If you’d like to use pre-made passion fruit syrup, we like the syrups from BG Reynolds and Liber & Co. But if you’d like to try making your own syrup, follow the directions above for a version that is much easier to make!

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Glassware by Liquorary

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

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Understated Green Calligraphy and Fern Wedding Invitations

We loved sharing these minimalist black and white invitations from Grace of Grace Niu, and today we’re over the moon to share her personal wedding invitations with all of you! Grace clearly prefers a softer, more minimal design aesthetic – all of which definitely comes through in her own understated green calligraphy and fern wedding invitations. Hand painted greenery, delicate calligraphy and soft brush lettering, and the tiniest dose of gold ink. So pretty!

From Grace: Being a graphic designer and invitation designer, I obviously knew I would be designing my own wedding invitations when it came time. I had never given the invitation much thought before getting engaged, but it made it so much easier once I established my mood board and vision for the wedding in general.

A lot of graphic designers say that sometimes the hardest person to design for is yourself, but luckily I wasn’t too hard on myself and didn’t try to second guess myself too much. After looking at my Pinterest board, I curated a few select images and designed a mood board to serve as the aesthetic vision for the whole wedding. It was a modern organic feel, full of greenery, lots of white and light gray, and gold accents.

When it came time to design the invitations, I went for a minimalist design on the main invitation, keeping the color of the lettering and type to a very light gray. I wanted it to be beautiful, quiet and elegant. On the reply card, I added a small hand-painted fern to serve as a color accent, but otherwise kept everything else the same light gray. For the details card, I did something similar and used a hand-painted eucalyptus stem to break up the blocks of text a bit and to add a little color.

I completed the suite by choosing a light gray paper for the belly bands, and hand-painted our initials in gold ink on every belly band. I used the same light gray for the reply envelopes, which were individually hand-lettered with our first names and reply address. For the main envelope, I chose a sage envelope to coordinate with the hand-painted greenery elements, and calligraphed each one in black ink. To finish off the suite and tie everything together, I found the most perfect fern stamps to use on our envelopes. Looking back on these, I’m so glad to have had the chance to design these invitations for myself and to show our guests what I love doing.

Thanks Grace!

Design & Calligraphy: Grace Niu

Printer: Geographics Inc.

Gray paper and envelopes: Neenah Paper

Green envelopes: Carnival by Mohawk

Paper: Mohawk SuperFine Eggshell

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

Photo Credits: Erika DenHoed of Mayden Photography

May Desktop Downloads!

Happy May everyone! May is one of my favorite months of the entire year. It’s the month of my wedding anniversary, all my favorite flowers are blooming, and my kids are thrilled that it’s finally warm enough for afternoons at the splash pad! It’s also one of the craziest months of the year thanks to a little shindig called the National Stationery Show, which is coming up in just a few short weeks! So for this month’s illustrated wallpapers from The Good Twin, we’re giving a little nod to my favorite trade show and a note of encouragement to any exhibitors making their way towards the finish line – or anyone else who might be in need of a little reassurance these days. 

iPhone | Desktop

iPhone | Desktop

 

Illustrations © The Good Twin. All artwork is made available for personal use only. By downloading the wallpapers you agree to the terms of use.

p.s. If you’re a designer or illustrator interested in contributing your own designs to this column, please email your design to hello(at)ohsobeautifulpaper.com with the subject line “desktop downloads” and image files in both desktop and iPhone retina screen sizes. If it’s a good fit I’ll add it to the post for the following month!

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations

We aren’t exactly shy about our love of vellum here at OSBP, and today we’re loving these ethereal vellum wedding invitations from Raymond of KidGolightly Calligraphy! Combine beautiful translucent vellum with handmade cotton paper, deckled edges, and romantic calligraphy, and you’ve got a recipe for one seriously gorgeous invitation suite!

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

From RaymondAn invitation suite represents the whole wedding, giving guests even more insight into the couple’s love story and glimpse of the mood and theme of the upcoming wedding. I imagined a classic and romantic wedding on a vineyard, and that led me to create this ethereal invitation design with vellum and handmade paper.

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

I always find myself drawn to features with muted tones, soft color palettes, and organic textures. I wanted to create a timeless piece so I stayed with a traditional classic layout. The focal point is the names of the bride and groom, so I used my signature gossamer-like calligraphy style in lithe movement for that elegant and delicate feel.

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

I was drawn to the romance of the vineyard venue as I designed this suite. The highlight this inspiration an illustration of the venue is the main element on the details page. I imagined the couple on a swing under a jasmine vine with flowers delicately falling on them as the swing. This image in my mind’s eye is what led to the falling jasmine on the vellum overlay. I also carried this accent on to the main card as well.

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

To complete the design, I used a geometric sans serif font throughout the suite just to give it a little modern twist. The invitation is printed entirely in a soft muted gray. Since there were so many other delicate details, I didn’t want an overwhelming color palette that detracted from the design. The invitation is printed on a 100% cotton rag handmade paper from Fabulous Fancy Pants, leaving the natural deckled edges untouched for that organic textural element.

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

The envelope was addressed with walnut ink, which was also used on the vellum place cards, to keep that nostalgia flowing. This was the perfect chance to pay homage to the original queen of romantic movies, Audrey Hepburn, with a curated vintage postage stamp. Tying everything together is an exquisite raw silk and soft blush dyed ribbon from Shastabell.

Ethereal Vellum Wedding Invitations by KidGolightly Calligraphy

Thanks Raymond!

Design & Calligraphy: KidGolightly Calligraphy

Handmade paper: Fabulous Fancy Pants

Ribbons: Shastabell

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

Photo Credits: My Sun & Stars Co.