James + Molly’s Cozy Woodland Toile Wedding Invitations

Last week I had the pleasure of featuring these awesome interactive invitations for a destination 40th birthday party, and today the ladies of Ladyfingers Letterpress are back with some equally stunning autumn wedding invitations! Inspired by the Lake Placid Lodge where the wedding took place, Arley-Rose and Morgan incorporated an illustrated woodland toile pattern into the design complete with a loon and an elk!

Woodland Toile Wedding Invitations by Ladyfingers Letterpress

From Arley-Rose and Morgan: When we were approached by Molly and James who were planning their autumnal wedding, they said they wanted their invitations to “feel like you’re wrapped in a cashmere blanket.” Little did we know that we would be incorporating cashmere into their suite!

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Molly sent us some cashmere and wool samples which we individually cut and attached as envelope liners. Unfortunately, we didn’t have any leftovers for the photo shoot, but I can assure you, it was utterly luxurious!

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Molly sent us an incredible Pinterest board that painted a gorgeous picture of the feeling she and James wanted. They mentioned that they were in love with the idea of having a “woodland toile” somehow integrated into their suite, so we made drawings of a loon, an elk, and scenes from the Lake Placid Lodge where they tied the knot.

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The suite was letterpress printed in two colors on thick, 220lb Crane’s Lettra; with a copper interior envelope (lined with cashmere which is not shown) and Crane’s outer envelope.

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Thank you so much ladies!

Ladyfingers Letterpress is a member of the Designer Rolodex – check out more of their beautiful work right here or visit the real invi­ta­tions gallery for more wedding invitation ideas!

Photo Credits: Ladyfingers Letterpress

The New Amsterdam Sour

In the world of cocktails, change a single ingredient and you have a whole new drink on your hands. To wit: a Whiskey Sour is a pretty great drink by itself, combining whiskey with lemon and sugar. Add a new ingredient (in this case, red wine) and you have instead a New York Sour, transforming a solid but simple drink into something much more complex and robust. Swap out another ingredient – replacing the whiskey with some aged Genever that my sweet wife recently gave me as a present – and we have a mellow, complex drink that’s perfect for this transition from summer to fall. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

New Amsterdam Sour

2 oz Aged Genever
2/3 oz Lemon Juice
2/3 oz Simple Syrup
1/2 – 1 oz Red Wine

Combine the Genever, lemon juice, and simple syrup in a shaker filled with ice. Shake well and strain into a chilled cocktail glass. Pour the wine very gently over the drink – pouring over the back of a barspoon half-submerged in the drink helps to float the wine on the surface. Enjoy!

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I’ve seen recommendations to stir the wine before you take your first sip, but I like to leave the wine floating on top – what used to be called a “claret snap” – to both keep the gorgeous layered look and to give the flavors of the drink a layered effect too. But that’s a personal preference and it’s entirely up to you. A dry red wine is best, like a tannic Spanish tempranillo, because of the contrast between the sharp spiciness of the wine and the round, smooth maltiness of the aged Genever. It’s a surprisingly complex bunch of flavors out of just four simple ingredients.

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Near as I can tell, the New Amsterdam Sour’s precursor, the New York Sour, is a drink that dates back to the 1870s or 1880s. Despite its apparent association with Prohibition – a recent episode of Boardwalk Empire was named after it – it’s an older drink, and this should come as no surprise. Cocktails made from or including wine were pretty popular before Prohibition, but most have fallen out of favor. (Except maybe for Sangria.) And even the most familiar drinks these days that preserve this fondness for wine, at least in the form of Vermouth – drinks like the Manhattan or the Martini – are usually made with way less wine than they should be. So let’s mix up some New Amsterdam Sours, or some classic New York Sours, and bring wine back into cocktails.

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Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper

{happy weekend}

Happy Friday everyone. Truth is, I’m having a really hard time keeping a smile on my face these days. Despite what some on the television news might want you to think, this shutdown does affect real people. My husband and several of our close friends are among the 800,000 federal government employees furloughed until the government reopens. With the shutdown, half our income immediately disappeared. No expectation of backpay and no idea when he might be allowed to go back to work. The last shutdown lasted nearly three weeks. I’m trying to look on the bright side of things and be thankful that our situation isn’t worse. I’ve also never been more grateful for leaving federal employment three years ago, so that I can at least continue to earn while Congress gets its act together. With all of this uncertainty, this is a pretty scary time for our family. But it has also gotten us thinking about some larger changes we’d like to make in our life. Changes that will help us live our life on our own terms, rather than the whims of politicians. But in the meantime…

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Photo Credit: Maple and Belmont

…a few links for your weekend!

This week on Oh So Beautiful Paper:

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

Jennifer + Eric’s Colorful Gold Foil Calligraphy Wedding Invitations

If you love bright, bold colors and shiny gold foil, you’ll love these wedding invitations! A collaboration between calligrapher Jenna Blazevich and designer/printer Margot Madison, the invitation suite features bright jewel tones paired with both gold foil and shiny metallic gold ink, a colorful floral envelope liner, and lots of pretty day-of stationery details!

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From Jenna: This entirely hand-lettered custom wedding invitation suite was a collaboration between myself and Margot Madison for the wedding of Cincinnati event planner Jennifer Trokhan. Jennifer wanted to work with a collection of vibrant gem tones and subtle hits of gold and an occasional aubergine purple.

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The wedding took place at the Taft Museum of Art in Cincinnati, and the color story which began with this rich invitation continued through the day-of stationery and accommodating table elements. For the envelope liner, Margot and I chose a print from Katrina Rocella’s Spoonflower shop.

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The invitation itself features gold foil, and the effect of the deeply imprinted gold on the thick peacock stock turned out really special. I completed the envelope addressing, table numbers, place cards, and out-of-town guest cards by hand in my Julienne calligraphy style with gold ink.

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The printed day-of stationery elements includes hand-lettered menus, programs, and thank-you tags for guest favors and were screen printed by local Cincinnati printer, Jon Flannery at Cryptogram, all in a gold metallic ink.

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Thanks Jenna!

Design + Calligraphy: Jenna Blazevich

Invitation Printing: Margot Madison

Day-of Stationery Screen Printing: Cryptogram

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

Photo Credits: Jenna Blazevich

Friday Happy Hour: The Continental School

Just a few days ago, I wrote that there was still a sliver of summer left and still a bit of time to enjoy summer cocktails. But today I’m also going to start exploring some fall cocktails. Pretty soon it will be time to put away the drinks of summer – fizzy with soda water and ginger beer, light from rum or tequila, drenched in ice and fruit, that sort of thing – and break out the drinks of fall with their crisp herbal flavors, heavy with cider and apply brandy and rye, and maybe even some port and sherry. Here’s one own recipes, and one of my favorite fall drinks, a cocktail tribute to the flavors (and the mad philosophers) of continental Europe: the Continental School. – Andrew

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Illustration by Shauna Lynn for Oh So Beautiful Paper

2 oz Rye Whiskey
1/2 oz Sweet Vermouth
1/2 oz Benedictine
1/4 oz Green Chartreuse
2 Dashes Orange Bitters

Combine the whiskey, vermouth, Benedictine and Chartreuse with lots of ice and stir well.  Strain into a chilled cocktail glass, add the bitters, and garnish with a lemon twist. Enjoy!

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Sweet vermouth is, of course, a fortified wine flavored with all sorts of herbs and other botanicals. Chartreuse, as I’ve mentioned before, is an incredible blend of herbs made by French monks(!!) from a centuries-old secret recipe. Benedictine is, like Chartreuse, a French liqueur made from a secret blend of herbs and other botanicals, though its claims to the same antique heritage as Chartreuse are a little more circumspect. Which doesn’t mean it’s any less good, though. So in other words, the Continental School has a presence to be reckoned with. It’s a robust drink, boozy with a big, silky mouth feel. It’s rich and sweet and a bit spicy from all that herbal liqueur.

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This isn’t a drink for everyone. Nole, whose tastes range much lighter and sweeter, would absolutely hate this one. And that’s ok, not everyone needs to love every drink.  But I know some of you will love this one, so try one before dinner… or to warm up on the next crisp fall night.

Photo Credits: Nole Garey for Oh So Beautiful Paper