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Mrs. Beagle, Austin Age and Occupation: 26, Electrical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 28, Finance Engagement Date: July 12, 2008 Wedding Date: October 2009 Venue: Church Ceremony/Reception at The Waterford House About Me: I am a true, but rare, Austinite---I was born, raised, and continue to live in this great city! Although I am an engineer by day, I feed my inner creative side through crafting, sewing, and obsessing over Martha Stewart. I love coffee, my mister, NPR, and exploring all the nooks and crannies of Austin. I can't wait to share my adventures in DIY and wedding planning with all of you!
About Mrs. Beagle

The Invitations: Part I - Lessons Learned

September 9th, 2009 @ 3:08 pm by Mrs. Beagle

As I write this post, our invitations are on their merry way to our guests, anxiously waiting to be opened (or maybe that’s just me that is anxious). In the meantime, I thought I would fill you in on our invitation deets:

I ordered the invitations and RSVP cards, and respective envelopes, from the White Aisle. Rebecca was really sweet and was super easy to work with. I’m extremely happy with the way they turned out. To save some $$, I decided to make the remaining enclosures… and this is where my problems began.

Lesson #1:
Originally, I had planned on drawing a cutesy map like one of these:

006_sm01

Laura Hooper

map1

Pantomime Papers (aka Snappy)

This turned out to be a big fat fail and was not coming together the way I had originally hoped. Although, I’m not really sure what my original hope was. I went into our invitations with little idea of what exactly I was trying to put together. It was very hard for me to come up with a design that really meshed. Finally, after many hours of trial and error, I designed a mini-map using a combination of Autocad and Photoshop. On a side note, I would like to add this: these two ladies are tremendously talented. Map making = lots of time consumed.

Lesson #2.
I had the mindset that, once I finally received our invitations, putting them together would be easy as pie. This was wrong. I think part of this stems from the fact that I didn’t really want to put that much effort into the invitations in the first place. In the beginning, I really didn’t see the importance of spending lots of $$ and time on something that people would most likely discard. However, once I received our big box of invitations and RSVP cards, they seemed too neatly packed to just stuff in an envelope and send. (I may have also felt the need to liven them up too, since our paper products were going to be seen on the Internet.) Thus, a vision was created and molded. This was something that took a long while to perfect.

Lesson #3
The assembly process was extremely unorganized. Because I had taken so much time designing a map and a vision, I was rushed to get these puppies out the door. In fact, most of my Labor Day weekend was spent assembling them. Instead of pre-cutting all my supplies, I intermixed cutting and matting and stuffing—making the process much longer than it should have been. I also underestimated the amount of supplies I needed, which meant I had to take several breaks from the assembly process to get more.

And so, after many trips to Jo-Ann’s and Hobby Lobby, hours of cutting and matting, and an entire Friday spent addressing, our invitations were born. Stay tuned later this week/early next week for the final result!

What lessons have you learned from your DIY projects?

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16 Responses to “The Invitations: Part I - Lessons Learned”

1.
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Bee
Miss Dachshund (message)  487 posts, Helper bee

I can’t wait to see how they turned out, your map especially! I keep debating whether or not I’m going to include a map or just direct our guests to our website : \

 
2.
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Bee
Miss Beagle (message)  1,053 posts, Bumble bee

@Jennarationnext: Thanks, but I’ll warn you that our map is not very involved. It makes me wish I had invested in a map-maker, but oh well….. We don’t actually have a website (doh!), so I had to include a map for this reason.

 
3.
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Member
bass lover (message)  56 posts, Worker bee

Hi Miss Beagle!

my guy and I both worked on our diy invites together. I learned tons!!! I too made several extra trips to Michael’s, Joann’s and Hancock fabrics..argh.

I learned that you should give yourself waaay more time than you would think you would need. Especially if you have to purchase all of your supplies or borrow them. I tried to make a map and wanted to “cut & paste” it into a template that I had for my invites, but, I couldn’t since the template was a PDF. So, my guy took over the task of creating the map (took forever, poor buddy!) and I printed them out, used a cut craft scissor to make pretty edges and pasted them onto the little card that was to go with the invites. It’s not too pretty, but, hey! I’m just happy they are done! Another lesson is to make at least ten more than you planned on making, since you will more than likely be so thrilled with your invites, you will want to invite more people! I have to make six more invites, like, tonight. :-)
Congrats on your invites..I can’t wait to see the pics!

 
4.
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Bee
Miss Moonbeam (message)  1,335 posts, Bumble bee

I’m having trouble with my map right now, just so hard to make them un-boring. Can’t wait to see.

 
5.
tea
Member
tea (message)  2,659 posts, Sugar bee

i’ve learned to make sure you allot enough time to complete them! even if you already have a few projects under your belt. nothing worse than feeling pressed for time at the end.

can’t wait to see your invites miss beagle!

 
6.
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Guest
lolo7835

I’m hoping that since the Mr is going to grad school for geography, that one of his classmates will be a map making wiz. I’m trying to get him to be friends with the cartography guys for that very reason. :) (well, and they are nice guys for him to hang with)

I’ve learned to measure twice and then cut. You think I would have learned this from having a handy dad, but nope. Always measure twice then cut.

 
7.
Miss Poodle
Bee
Miss Poodle (message)  3,020 posts, Sugar bee

Cant wait to see your invites!!

I think the main lesson on my DIY was “be careful” hot glue gun and sealing with candle BURNS!! lol

 
8.
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Member
HoneyBunny (message)  347 posts, Helper bee

Can I just add, that I really really do not like AutoCAD or HydraCAD or any other CAD so super props to you for using it and making it work!

 
9.
chicagobride092010
Member
chicagobride092010 (message)  209 posts, Helper bee

I bought cardstock in “solar white” and “epic black” for my invitations. Apparently, at one point, I was obsessive enough to insist not only on pointed envelope flaps, but the “white” in the envelopes HAD TO BE “solar white” from the same company. Any slightly and unnoticeably different shade of white wouldn’t do. Does this company sell “solar white” pointed flap envelopes? No. In fact, it doesn’t sell any in quantities below way-too-many-more-than-I-need.

Queue me ordering a ream of plain “solar white” text paper, and individually tracing, cutting out, folding, and gluing 250 envelopes in various sizes. Custom liners too. This is what I learned is “what I will never do again.” I kind of want to kill myself.

Thankfully, at least, I’m not a procrastinator. A year out from my wedding and they’re half completed. Still the. worst. idea. ever.

 
10.
LatteLove
Hostess
LatteLove (message)  4,120 posts, Honey bee

oh so many DIY lessons learned over here. The biggies: be over-prepared, make instructions first, don’t be afraid to ask for help, but very carefully instruct!

 
11.
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Bee
Miss Ramen (message)  263 posts, Helper bee

buy more than you need, allot yourself more time than you think, be humble and ask for help, and be THANKFUL that you have an amaaaaazing and talented designer fiance.

 
12.
jmc
Member
jmc (message)  476 posts, Helper bee

Ah, Laura Hooper. So gorge.

 
13.
jmc
Member
jmc (message)  476 posts, Helper bee

This is the day of lessons, btw!

 
14.
alishaneva
Member
alishaneva (message)  1,531 posts, Bumble bee

I’m so glad there are so many bees (such as yourself) willing to lend advice to prevent us hopefuls, planners, etc. from making the same mistakes! Thanks! And I’m glad your invitations made it out in the end! I’m sure they look great and are worth your labor!

 
15.
pvaulter718
Member
pvaulter718 (message)  1,604 posts, Bumble bee

I think the best advice I wish someone had given me regarding DIY was this -

1. Purchase 25% more materials than you could imagine you’d use in your wildest dreams.

2. Buy a bottle of wine, recruit 2 friends, and budget 50% more time than you think you’ll need.

You may hate the project at the end, and question if it was worth the time, money, and insanity, but it will get done.

 
16.
Guest Icon
Guest
Alissa

Hi! I had posted earlier that I was sorry that I did my own invites. They are finished now and the RSVPs are coming back now. Everyone loves them and it seems worth it now! I think what was the hardest is that I didn’t know what to expect throughout which meant numerous tries on paper/printers/envelopes, etc. Once we figured out the right combination, everything worked out. So if you plan on doing your own invites, I would say, “do it!”, just leave a lot of time and be patient.

 


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Mrs. Beagle Mrs. Beagle, Austin Age and Occupation: 26, Electrical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 28, Finance Engagement Date: July 12, 2008 Wedding Date: October 2009 Venue: Church Ceremony/Reception at The Waterford House About Me: I am a true, but rare, Austinite---I was born, raised, and continue to live in this great city! Although I am an engineer by day, I feed my inner creative side through crafting, sewing, and obsessing over Martha Stewart. I love coffee, my mister, NPR, and exploring all the nooks and crannies of Austin. I can't wait to share my adventures in DIY and wedding planning with all of you!
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