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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.
About Mrs. Mascara

Finally, the last post on our save-the-dates! You’ve seen how we made the envelopes and the save-the-date cards. I told you I’d write about the cost breakdown and lessons learned, so here it is. First up, let’s see how much they cost us, shall we?

  • $35.00 - 200 sheets of text weight paper in Lake from PaperSource
  • $11.50 - large flourish stamp from PaperSource
  • $7.95 - small flourish stamp from PaperSource
  • $15.00 - envelope template kit from PaperSource
  • $5.50 - ColorBox stamp pad in Eggplant from PaperSource
  • $1.50 - Clear embossing powder (on clearance at Jo-Ann’s
  • $3.00 - Double stick adhesive (2 rolls - using 50% off coupon at Jo-Ann’s)
  • $3.00 - Two packs of metal brads (using 50% off coupon at Jo-Ann’s)
  • $3.59 - 1/16″ circle punch (on sale)
  • $5.00 - Corner rounder (using 50% off coupon at Jo-Ann’s)
  • $14.40 - 90 sheets of linen textured cardstock (12 x 12) from Jo-Ann’s (6 for $0.96)
  • $38.16 - Printing costs for 90 full color 12 x 12 sheets*

——–
$143.60

*Note: The printing company we used had quoted us $.40 per color sheet when I sent them our design. Later we found out that they had quoted us wrong (it should cost more like $.99 per sheet) but they still honored the original quote. We got lucky!

We’ll also be using the large and small flourish stamps and the envelope template kit for other projects. I still added them into the cost of the save-the-dates, but they’ll be freebies for our invites and other paper goods.

Final price per invite: for 150 save-the-dates, it works out to about $0.96 per save-the-date (not including postage). Not too bad!

Now, onto the lessons learned.

  1. Even though making envelopes with PaperSource paper rather than buying PaperSource envelopes is cheaper, I’m not sure it would be worth it for everyone. It is a pain cutting out 150 envelopes. I spread out the work over a week or so, cutting about 20-30 envelopes everyday. Cutting anymore than 30 per day is just torture. Don’t do it!
  2. Sign up for emails from craft stores like Jo-Ann’s and Michaels. You will get coupons pretty much every week for 40-50% off one item. Use these to buy your supplies. You’ll save a ton of money!
  3. This is an important one. Jo-Ann’s has great sales on 12×12 paper. You can get 6 sheets for $0.96, while one sheet usually costs $0.50. Ask your printing company if they can print on 12×12 paper before you buy it. If they can’t print on it, you’ll have to find another printer or cut the paper down to 8.5×11. We found out that none of the common printers in our area (FedEx Kinko’s, OfficeMax, etc.) knew how to print on 12×12 paper. We ended up using a place in the UP to print all of our save-the-dates to avoid cutting the paper down.
  4. It’s quickest to make the envelopes and save-the-date cards one step at a time, preferably with help. Get someone (your fiance!) to cut out all of the printed cards (or envelopes) while you stamp them. Put the embossing powder on each stamped surface immediately, but you do not have to heat up the embossing powder right away if you don’t want to. It would probably be best to have three people for this process. One to cut, one to stamp, one to emboss. You can round all of the corners and insert the brads on the save-the-date cards at the end.
  5. Embossing allows you to use pigment ink without waiting for it to dry. This is one of the primary reasons we’ve been embossing all of our paper goods (aside from the fact that it looks good!). The only type of ink I’ve found in our wedding colors are ColorBox pigment inkpads. The problem with this ink is that it takes forever to dry unless you emboss it. Once you emboss it, it’s dry in about 30 seconds.
  6. These save-the-dates take time. Make sure you have time to spare before taking on a project like this one! We were working on these for about a month (not every day, of course). Now we know how much time our invites will probably take, so we can plan accordingly.

Hope this helps some of you that are planning to make your own save-the-dates or invites! Happy crafting! :)

Tags: , , |   Link for this post | Share this post: Saving the Date Part 5: Adding It All Up      
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11 Responses to “Saving the Date Part 5: Adding It All Up”

1.
LatteLove
Hostess
LatteLove (message)  4,120 posts, Honey bee

Thanks for the breakdown!!

You guys did an incredible job on these and put so much work into them. I can’t believe how cheaply you did it :-)

I plan to bring some of my DIY projects to the meetup Thursday–you should too!

 
2.
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Member
jenny.j (message)  168 posts, Blushing bee

Wow - what a lot of work, but what a money-saver! Thanks for this post.

I have a dumb question, though - I keep seeing people mention this UP? I have no idea what you’re talking about! :) Is this a U.S. thing?

 
3.
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Bee
Miss Mascara (message)  774 posts, Busy bee

@jenny.j: LOL. The “UP” is the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. It’s the little peninsula that is connected to the lower part of Michigan only by the Mackinac bridge, and it is often forgotten when people think of the state of Michigan. In fact, the “yoopers” (people who are from the UP) have petitioned several times to come the 51st state of Superior, since Lake Superior borders so much of the land. Just a little fun Michigan fact for you all :)

 
4.
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Member
jenny.j (message)  168 posts, Blushing bee

Haha…. thanks for clearing that up!! I should have known that, I’m just across the other side of the Great Lakes in Ontario. You learn something new every day! :)

 
5.
mary-alice-me
Member
mary-alice-me (message)  1,870 posts, Buzzing bee

After nearly every thing I do I have a list of “lessons learned” — I keep trying to get better and better, but is seems as if experience is the only teacher. Thanks for sharing yours!

 
6.
MarryingtheNavy
Member
MarryingtheNavy (message)  228 posts, Helper bee

They turned out great - and great job taking advantage of all those craft store coupons! Just a tip for the future… you should be able to heat your pigment ink with your embossing gun, without putting embossing powder on top, if you want the ink to dry faster after you’ve stamped your image. It doesn’t work with all inks, but I’ve done that on scrapbooking projects when I want the pigment ink color, but not the hassle of waiting for it to dry.

 
7.
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Member
phruphru (message)  180 posts, Blushing bee

Thanks so much for this! Your stds really were gorgeous, so it’s nice to know the monetary cost as well as the blood-sweat-and-tears cost, too.

 
8.
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Bee
Miss Mascara (message)  774 posts, Busy bee

@MarryingtheNavy: Thanks for the tip! I’ll definitely be trying this out!

 
9.
racheljo
Member
racheljo (message)  47 posts, Newbee

How much and where did you purchase your return address stamp from? Did you not use your last names on the stamp? Thanks!

 
10.
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Bee
Miss Mascara (message)  774 posts, Busy bee

@racheljo: We got the stamp from an Office Depot store during the store closing sale, so it was like 50-60% off (somewhere around $10 total I think). I can’t find the exact stamp we used on their website but it was sort of like this one (same brand): http://www.officedepot.com/a/products/184049/2000-PLUS-Medium-Self-Inking-Dual/
We did have our last names on there, I just photoshopped them out for privacy purposes :)

 
11.
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vintage2010 (message)  1,022 posts, Bumble bee

Just wanted to say thank you for posting your STD posts. We are in the process of finishing our design and you helped me with some ideas.
Thanks!

 


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Mrs. Mascara
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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