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Mrs. Spaniel, Los Angeles Age and Occupation: 28, Law Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Calamigos Ranch About Me: I'm a third-year law student trying to balance graduating with starting my career, keeping up a relationship, and, oh yeah, planning an Old World, multi-cultural, "mountain lodge" wedding for 180 guests! A South Asian Jewish girl getting ready to marry my handsome Catholic Dane, I'm hoping to blend our cultures in our wedding just a bit more gently than by providing samosas as appetizers and offering æbleskiver for dessert. (Although that would also be awesome.)
About Mrs. Spaniel

Let’s Do the Time Suck Again

November 13th, 2009 @ 2:52 pm by Mrs. Spaniel

As a master procrastinator, I decided that pricing wedding invitations about 13 months before the wedding was a much more pressing concern than studying… it’d be more fun if I didn’t have to re-enter the text every time!

Let's Do the Time Suck Again :  wedding invitations stationery Juliett

I started with the thought that I would make my own wedding invitations à la Cards and Pockets (with a folio and backing and lots of colors). But after purchasing a sample set and attempting to print an invitation, I realized that my printer was not up to the task.

I thought about sourcing out the printing to Envelopper Inc., which does multi-color printing in custom sizes at a fairly reasonable price (even though everything else is more expensive than Cards and Pockets), but with all of the inserts, the price became so high that I wasn’t really sure it was worth it to make my own invitations—after all, the printing was still flat.

I tried MyGatsby.com to have the inserts printed using thermography, which I like better than digital offset printing (but less than letterpress), but I couldn’t send them a PDF; I had to work with their line spacing and fonts. And isn’t that why I wanted to make my own in the first place? Or was it because of the pockets, and the fact that I didn’t want to spend $10 per invitation on them? Wait, do I even need so many inserts when the wedding and ceremony are in the same place? Or even if they aren’t? Why am I doing this again?

Well, it was back to the drawing board.

Let's Do the Time Suck Again :  wedding invitations stationery Tn 5952

My next stop was at FineStationery.com, which has gorgeous engraved invitations that I WANT, like these Kate Spade ones that don’t match our colors AND I could never afford, but also some plainer ecru engraved William Arthur invitations that I (almost) could. But, they were all still too expensive. I looked at the thermography invitations (both William Arthur and other brands), but they were still kind of expensive for their plainness, and the Birchcraft ones had lousy font choices. And I want envelope liners! If we’re getting plain ecru invitations with plain black ink, give me some darn pattern somewhere!

So, it was on to the next!

Let's Do the Time Suck Again :  wedding invitations stationery 1024

Apparently, a lot of the invitations at The Wedding Paper Divas are flat-printed (and I can’t afford the William Arthur letterpress ones that aren’t), but I loved the banded damask invitations there in Kiwi—but they weren’t customizable enough because I couldn’t move the number of lines around above or below the band, and I still wanted raised printing! Dang it! Sure, they’d be easier than assembling everything myself, but for the same price, they didn’t offer much I couldn’t do on my own.

Onward!

I finally started making some progress when I found Mercurio Brothers Printing, who will print my own files onto letterpress, giving me 100 5 x 7″ invitations and 3½ x 5″ response cards and printed envelopes for each for under $600, but I still wanted direction cards (the address for our venue doesn’t match the actual location, and getting there is more complicated than a Google map can help with), and thank you cards, and I didn’t want to spend $1,000 on paper!!!

Anyway, I thought we would most likely end up going with Invitation Consultants, where we can get our invitations, response cards, thank you notes and printed envelopes for under $550. Sure, it’s thermography and not letterpress, but, eh, good enough. They will be pretty plain (black ink on ecru), but I’ll probably find some black and white damask patterned paper elsewhere and make my own envelope liners to liven them up a bit. Or not. I can’t think about invitations anymore! :)

Did you search the gamut of online invitation stationers? Which sites did you like the most? Where did you find the most customizable options?

Tags: invitations, stationery |
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18 Responses to “Let’s Do the Time Suck Again”

1.
Guest Icon
Guest
Anne

I had Hello Lucky print my invites and then made my own fabric covered pocket folds to put them in. They have an online order process that looks like there’s a set number of lines, but the designers can alter the template to your specifications and are very responsive to personalization from the basic set designs. I opted for the flat printed invites instead of the much more costly letterpress ones. I considered doing my own printing, but the result of the professional printing, designs and beautiful paper was well worth paying someone else to do it. Honestly, it seemed to me the thick beautiful paper is what made their invites seem so luxurious and the letterpress vs flat printing didn’t make as big of a difference when I compared the samples.

 
2.
asunw
Member
asunw (message)  550 posts, Busy bee

Have you seen the new home letterpress machine? I want it so bad for our invitation suite, luckily we’re not getting married until June 2011 and I have lots of time.

 
3.
Miss French Fries
Bee
Miss French Fries (message)  2,217 posts, Buzzing bee

We’re printing our own — mostly to save money b/c spending thousands on paper (like you said) made my soul cry. So, we’re DIYing, but I’m hoping it all works out as planned.

 
4.
Champagne Wishes
Member
Champagne Wishes (message)  1,187 posts, Bumble bee

Jean M and Gatsby have been the two sites that let me do the most customizing so far.

With Gatsby, they lay out the max amount of lines for you but you can remove as needed.
Jean M has a few letterpress designs for a good price.

We will be ordering soon but I think I might go to a local vendor and Party City (I have heard good things) before the Mister and I commit to an invitation.

 
5.
elaineathon
Member
elaineathon (message)  349 posts, Helper bee

Thanks for the rundown! Saves me some time in doing my own research. ;) Have you tried any of the vendors on Etsy? Most are willing to work with you to customize your design, and I’m sure they could recreate some of the designs you like for a reasonable price.

 
6.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Pudding (message)  1,180 posts, Bumble bee

We’re making our own, but I waste a lot of time looking for inspiration and than changing my mind!

 
7.
Guest Icon
Guest
AprilBride10

I second the Hello Lucky recommendation - for the price they had the most luxurious paper options by far. They also let me customize the heck out of one of their designs and made sure to change the layout to fit in all of my text - which saved me having to get a reception card!

 
8.
Mrs. French Bulldog
Bee
Mrs. French Bulldog (message)  7,730 posts, Bee Keeper

LOVE the title of this post Miss Puddling ;-)

 
9.
Mrs. French Bulldog
Bee
Mrs. French Bulldog (message)  7,730 posts, Bee Keeper

Ooops I saw Miss Puddling’s comment above and had a total brain fart, I obviously meant Miss Spaniel ;-)

 
10.
LisaBee
Member
LisaBee (message)  358 posts, Helper bee

I just got my save the dates from minted - i loved their selection, and thus spent HOURS look around at wedding invites! After this most, I know I will spend hours more looking through all your recommendations! And I, too, should be studying. oh well.

 
11.
Bee Icon
Bee
Ms Potato Chips (message)  1,193 posts, Bumble bee

I love your internal monologue! I briefly flirted with the idea of making our invites, but abandoned it quickly!

 
12.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Moonbeam (message)  1,732 posts, Bumble bee

Wow, you have way more patience than I with all that searching. I’m sure they’ll be lovely.

 
13.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Spaniel (message)  6,792 posts, Bee Keeper

@Miss Moonbeam: Patience, maybe. Avoidance, absolutely. :)

 
14.
Mrs. Mouse
Bee
Mrs. Mouse (message)  5,844 posts, Bee Keeper

What if you introduced a little pop of color with your envelope liner? It would be fun and unexpected!

 
15.
Guest Icon
Guest
Anne

@asunw:
I have the home letterpress and am using it for some of my non-invitation paper items. I’m big into scrapbooking and card making so I would have bought it even if I wasn’t getting married. If you’re not going to use it outside of your wedding paper products it’s probably not worth the cost at this point (it may be better with future versions). It retails for $140 before any letterpress plates, ink, or special paper. Each set of plates is in the $30 to $40 range and they recommend only using their thicker letterpress paper. They have said they plan to do a custom plate option in future, but right now you would not be able to letterpress your invitation text. They have 1 set of uppercase script letters and 1 set of uppercase block letters that are meant for monograms, but not spelling out words. Even spelling out a single word or name is tricky to line up each individual letter, and if your word has 2 of the same letters you have to buy 2 sets of the entire alphabet, or run your paper through twice and get everything lined up perfectly (not worth the frustration, and I can take a lot of frustration in the paper-crafting department). You could letterpress your invite design and flat print the text with a computer. But once again, the available letterpress plates and graphics are limited right now as it just came out the begining of November. The “wedding” letterpress plate set is useful for printing placecards, thank you notes, and anything you want a pretty swirl on as it has set plates that say “Thank You” and “Table No.___ ” But that’s a minimum investment of $200 and you’d probably only be able to do placecards (you’d still have to write in each individual person’s name), thank you notes, monogram coasters, headings for program covers, headings for menus etc. I hope those details are helpful for anyone considering the L letterpress. It’s not that I don’t recomend it, I love mine. I just think the average bride who doesn’t already love paper-crafting for it’s own sake might regret the purchase.

 
16.
Member Icon
Member
KMSull (message)  6,442 posts, Bee Keeper

Is it bad that every time I read a Bee’s invite post, I get anxious? I think this might be the scariest part of wedding planning.

 
17.
Irishker03
Member
Irishker03 (message)  571 posts, Busy bee

Wow. you certainly did put in the effort into searching for the right company! I’m going to try and DIY the invitations!

 
18.
Guest Icon
Guest
The Proof is in the Pudding. Or the Email Attachment. | Weddingbee

[...] you may recall, I had originally wanted to DIY our invitations, but I found a really great price on letterpress invitations that didn’t require my amateur [...]

 

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Mrs. Spaniel
Mrs. Spaniel

Mrs. Spaniel, Los Angeles Age and Occupation: 28, Law Student Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Wedding Date: March 2010 Venue: Calamigos Ranch About Me: I'm a third-year law student trying to balance graduating with starting my career, keeping up a relationship, and, oh yeah, planning an Old World, multi-cultural, "mountain lodge" wedding for 180 guests! A South Asian Jewish girl getting ready to marry my handsome Catholic Dane, I'm hoping to blend our cultures in our wedding just a bit more gently than by providing samosas as appetizers and offering æbleskiver for dessert. (Although that would also be awesome.)

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