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Mrs. Mascara, Chicago/Upper Michigan Age and Occupation: 25, Biomedical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Process Engineer Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: September 2009 Venue: Catholic ceremony, reception at local armory About Me: A lover of Mr. Mascara, crafting, baking, Gossip Girl, diet soda, and all things wedding. A Yooper girl somehow displaced in the Chicago suburbs, planning a wedding from a distance, and counting down the days until I marry my best friend.
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Saving the Date Part 4: The Cards

April 1st, 2009 @ 9:31 am by Mrs. Mascara

Now that you’ve made your embossed envelopes, it’s time for the more important part… the cards that will actually tell your guests which date to save.

You will need:

  • Cardstock or cover weight paper (I used 12×12 linen textured cardstock from Jo-Ann’s in white and a moss green color)
  • Paper cutter
  • Corner rounding paper punch
  • Paper punch (I used a 1/16″ punch)
  • Small metal brads
  • Large stamp (I used the Large Flourish stamp from PaperSource
  • Stamp ink (I used a Colorbox stamp pad from PaperSource
  • Artwork design


Instructions:

1. Design your artwork. Don’t forget your crop marks and the small dot on the front page to tell you where to place your brad. I actually made the brad mark white, not black, and it was much more discreet; so much so that it wouldn’t show up in the picture.


I designed our save-the-date artwork in Adobe Illustrator. I sized the cards so they would fit in the A2 envelopes we used, and made sure to maximize the number of invites per page by fitting 6 on each 12×12 sheet. This helped me save on printing costs.

Caution: Before you buy 12×12 cardstock, make sure whoever you are getting your prints from is capable of printing on 12×12 paper. Not all printers can print on paper this large!

2. Get your prints made. We used a small print shop located in the UP (called CJ Graphics if anyone is interested). It was hard to do this from a distance, but they were great to work with and called me several times asking for Pantone numbers in order to make sure the colors were what I wanted.

3. Start cutting! We found that you have to make less cuts if you cut around the perimeter first, then cut between the cards. (Do as I say, not as I do! The picture below shows me cutting the perimeter last, which takes more cuts and more time!)

4. Stamp and emboss your pages, just like you did on the envelopes.

5. Assemble your pieces (we had three pages) and make sure they line up properly. Trim edges if needed.

6. Round all corners while your cards are stacked. This ensures that all of your pages will match up nicely. If you have more than three pages, you might have to split them up, as it was difficult for us to even put three in the rounder at once.

7. Use your paper punch to punch a hole through all sheets in order to put your brad in.

8. Insert brad and separate prongs to fasten.

9. Your save-the-date cards are complete!

10. Insert your save-the-date cards into your embossed envelope and seal it shut (use your tape roller again if your envelopes are homemade).

11. Add postage and send your lovely save-the-date cards to your guests.

My last post in this series will be a budget breakdown and lessons learned, so stay tuned!

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28 Responses to “Saving the Date Part 4: The Cards”

1.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Stiletto (message)  759 posts, Busy bee

Beautiful! I give you props for putting so much work into your save the date, I went the easy route and printed up post cards :) These turned out amazing!

 
2.
Steph921
Member
Steph921 (message)  190 posts, Blushing bee

simply amazing. the craftiness is astounding to me as that is not one of my strengths! beautiful save the dates :)

 
3.
rachelpete
Member
rachelpete (message)  79 posts, Worker bee

These are gorgeous! I love them. :) I design publications for a living and I might steal this idea for something in the future. Great job!

 
4.
Miss Gloss
Bee
Miss Gloss (message)  1,053 posts, Bumble bee

Those look great - I’m sure your guests were impressed. I’m looking forward to the ‘lessons learned’ I always learned so much from my mistakes….

 
5.
LatteLove
Hostess
LatteLove (message)  4,094 posts, Honey bee

Wow. just wow. This was a fantastic project! You must have worked so hard on them-I’m sure everyone who received them, loved them! I’m impressed.

 
6.
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Member
phruphru (message)  180 posts, Blushing bee

I stamped and embossed my invitations, which had four paper pieces per card. I swore never to do that much embossing ever again! It looks like your STDs were even more labor intensive; I give you props. Mad props.

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Piglet (message)  629 posts, Busy bee

Love this series! You are amazingly talented, girlfriend!

 
8.
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Guest
CJB

I love them!! Do mind sharing which font you used for the “i do”? Thanks!

 
9.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Taffy (message)  2,598 posts, Sugar bee

Your save the dates are so awesome, I love how you fit it together!

 
10.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Sushi (message)  968 posts, Busy bee

::sigh:: I LOVE linen paper. Love it!

 
11.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Mascara (message)  771 posts, Busy bee

@CJB: The “i do” font is Scriptina, you can download it for free here:
http://www.dafont.com/search.php?psize=m&q=scriptina

 
12.
MarryingtheNavy
Member
MarryingtheNavy (message)  228 posts, Helper bee

How beautiful! I am so impressed with the time and effort you put into your save the dates - guests are going to be dying to see what you do with the actual invitations (and I am too!)

 
13.
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Bee
Miss Apple Cider (message)  215 posts, Helper bee

OMG!!! You really did an amazing job. I love love love love the blue with copper embossing. Isn’t embossing fun! You are really talented.

 
14.
racheljo
Member
racheljo (message)  47 posts, Newbee

Great tutorial and excellent design!! I was wondering where to get linen paper that size… JoAnns FTW!

 
15.
Nina
Member
Nina (message)  7 posts, Newbee

Those are very nice & elegant…I’ve done invites for friends and it’s a lot of work, but well worth it!

 
16.
Gilneas
Member
Gilneas (message)  1,029 posts, Bumble bee

These are intense. So beautiful!!

 
17.
mary-alice-me
Member
mary-alice-me (message)  1,870 posts, Buzzing bee

I love those. I am still in awe of the linen textured paper. What a nice touch!

 
18.
frenchbulldog
Bee
frenchbulldog (message)  6,063 posts, Bee Keeper

Thanks for the tip on putting the dot on the card, I wouldn’t have thought to do that until after I’d started punching them :)

 
19.
LzzNYC
Member
LzzNYC (message)  877 posts, Busy bee

Wow! Looks so good - you should be a pro! Thanks for the tutorial!!

 
20.
sgarrison2
Member
sgarrison2 (message)  186 posts, Blushing bee

These are amazing! I’d be super excited to get one of those lovelies in the mail

 
21.
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Guest
lauren

How did you get the printed curved line for the rounded corner to match the punch? I can’t figure out how to make a rounded-corner template!

 
22.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Mascara (message)  771 posts, Busy bee

@lauren: I made a sample card with the correct dimensions, rounded the corner of the sample, measured the radius at the corner. The I drew the card in Illustrator with the same radius for the corners as the rounder made on the paper sample. Then I just scaled the box down until I had a border that was the width I wanted it to be, and after rounder, the curved line matched the rounded corner of the punch. Not sure if this makes sense to you (its kind of hard to explain), if you need more help send me a message.

 
23.
Guest Icon
Guest
lauren

That’s very helpful! Figuring the radius of the circle makes a lot of sense. I don’t have Illustrator but I think I handle that in Photoshop. Thanks!

 
24.
StarGazer
Member
StarGazer (message)  83 posts, Worker bee

Wow, super impressive! Looking forward to the next post with the breakdown!

 
25.
JennyBryde
Member
JennyBryde (message)  1,148 posts, Bumble bee

I love these, and I will totally, mercilessly be copying you! PS, your ring looks AMAZING in your step-by-step pictures! ;)

 
26.
honeymyheart
Member
honeymyheart (message)  763 posts, Busy bee

your save the dates have such pretty details. great job!

 
27.
mrspaetz
Member
mrspaetz (message)  1,707 posts, Bumble bee

you are very precise in how you work (engineering nature?). very nice, Ms Mascara!

 
28.
Miss Popcorn
Member
Miss Popcorn (message)  90 posts, Worker bee

These are super cute and I decided to use the idea for my programs! Thanks so much Miss M.! :)

 


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Mrs. Mascara Mrs. Mascara, Chicago/Upper Michigan Age and Occupation: 25, Biomedical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Process Engineer Engagement Date: July 27, 2008 Wedding Date: September 2009 Venue: Catholic ceremony, reception at local armory About Me: A lover of Mr. Mascara, crafting, baking, Gossip Girl, diet soda, and all things wedding. A Yooper girl somehow displaced in the Chicago suburbs, planning a wedding from a distance, and counting down the days until I marry my best friend.
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