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Mrs. Ribbons, Washington D.C./Bloomington, IN Age and Occupation: 23, Research Associate for an international development firm Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Proposal Coordinator for contractor Engagement Date: May 2, 2008 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Indiana Memorial Union About Me: I'm an Indiana transplant living in DC with my fiance and our pretty kitty. I enjoy the color pink, I'm obsessed with the Dior New Look and tulle, and I heart my level 80 paladin. I'm a sucker for bad TV, literary theory, and cakes of all persuasion. I also happen to be marrying the cutest closet nerd around! It's all about Bloomington for us because it's where we met -- on the college paper. If there's a theme for our small summertime wedding, it's Dior meets Dorothy Draper on a lark in Bloomington; think poofy, plus graphic prints, bold colors, and a whole lot of prettiness.
About Mrs. Ribbons

I sent a piece of our invitations to the printers this week, so it’s safe to reveal at least part of this process!

I started fiddling with invitations in June of last year. The style has stayed more or less the same, with minor tweaks over the months. The style of the invites was dictated by my chosen print method: letterpress. To keep costs down, I knew I had to keep it limited to one to two colors because each additional color means the invite needs to be run through the press another time, which equals more money. Since I designed the invite myself, I also knew I had to take stock of my talent — which does not include illustrations!

So I needed a simple design with minimal colors. To spice things up, I bought a font set and got to work.

The first attempt was a mix of calligraphy and typography.

Invitations Are Not So Easy to Come By :  wedding diy invitations stationery 4347047 4347047

I liked it enough and let that design sit for several months. Returning to it in December, though, I realized it wasn’t really capturing the high fashion look I wanted. I had to give up the calligraphy.

Back to InDesign I went. I experimented with things like all caps, small caps, and the leading (spacing between lines). I also toyed with bold colors.

Invitations Are Not So Easy to Come By :  wedding diy invitations stationery 4347791 4347791

I really liked the all caps for our names because it reminded me of Vogue. Vogue is the mother ship. Respect.

For the reception card, I wanted to depart from the formality of the invite and play with typography more.

Invitations Are Not So Easy to Come By :  wedding diy invitations stationery 434779101 434779101

Here I just used all three Leitura font styles and adjusted the kerning (space between characters) and font size to make all of the lines the same width. Kerning is best used for display type like this, while you’d typically use tracking for body text, like a long passage.

That wraps up the beginning of my design process. The final design will be revealed later!

Did anything dictate your invitation design process?

Tags: diy, invitations, stationery |
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22 Responses to “Invitations Are Not So Easy to Come By”

1 2 

1.
Miss Bonnie Blue
Member
Miss Bonnie Blue (message)  717 posts, Busy bee

I’m loving them! I can’t wait to see the final product.

I want letterpress, but the cost is just make me hesistate. I also want to create my invitations, but everyone around is concerned about the time and effort I’ll have to put in. They keep reminding me that it will take a lot of time and I know that, but it’s still something I would like. Who know. I’m hoping something will speak to me soon!

 
2.
Member Icon
Member
enerihsu (message)  6 posts, Newbee

I actually really like the script font. What is it called?

 
3.
pvaulter718
Member
pvaulter718 (message)  2,116 posts, Buzzing bee

I like the “twirling and swirling to follow” a fun play on a formal part of the party!

 
4.
pennednpapered
Member
pennednpapered (message)  286 posts, Helper bee

I love these! I want to design our invitations, but we’re having trouble finding a place to get them printed. Do you have any suggestions?

 
5.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Pudding (message)  1,180 posts, Bumble bee

Love these! Can’t wait to see them “in action”!

 
6.
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Member
tjma05 (message)  4 posts, Wannabee

When you use either a free font, or a font you have paid for, how can you share that with a printer? I’m designing my save the dates, but will have them printed professionally and want to use an unusual font. If the font is my purchase, and not theirs, how can i share that with them?

This may be a very rudimentary question, but not one i know the answer to! This is for anyone who has used a font but not printed at home. thanks!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Sewing (message)  2,701 posts, Sugar bee

can’t wait to see your final design! I love the letterpress look!

 
8.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Ribbons (message)  2,018 posts, Buzzing bee

@tjma05: In indesign, there is a command to package the design. This creates a folder that contains the fonts you used.
@enerihsu: It’s calligraphy by an etsy seller called Lilflower.

 
9.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Hamster (message)  4,045 posts, Honey bee

Can’t wait to see the finished product!

 
10.
Miss Cardigan
Bee
Miss Cardigan (message)  8,645 posts, Bee Keeper

I can’t wait to see it all come together!

 
11.
Mrs. Mouse
Bee
Mrs. Mouse (message)  5,844 posts, Bee Keeper

I never knew I could love an invitation style that was so simple that much! Something about the fonts and the bright pink is just so stylish!

 
12.
Miss Biner
Member
Miss Biner (message)  1,101 posts, Bumble bee

“Vogue is the mother ship. Respect.” Hahaha. That cracked me up. So awesome.

 
13.
LovestheBear
Member
LovestheBear (message)  1,250 posts, Bumble bee

So cool, can’t wait to see how they turn out! What font did you use for your names in your first draft?

 
14.
Miss Giraffe
Bee
Miss Giraffe (message)  4,216 posts, Honey bee

looks good so far!

 
15.
bohemianbailie
Member
bohemianbailie (message)  980 posts, Busy bee

ahhh VOGUE!!!

 
16.
Miss Banana
Member
Miss Banana (message)  171 posts, Blushing bee

Love the reception card! Nice to see another B-town bride on here, too! I’m probably going the Beck Chapel route, though, because I used to work in the IMU (in the bowling alley!), so it would seem strange to hold my wedding there, too. The courtyard is wonderful, though! I’ve played several weddings there (I’m a musician), and it’s lovely–just remind your musicians to bring clothespins and heavy stands in case of wind!

 
17.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Pencils (message)  1,027 posts, Bumble bee

oho these look phenomenal! can’t wait for final version :)

 
18.
Guest Icon
Guest
brooke f

Hi tjma05! You have a couple options for getting the font to the printer- 1. you can email them the font file or burn it on your disk when you give them your invitation file or
2. (And this is the preferred method) If you are using Illustrator, InDesign or Photoshop, you can “outline (Ill./InD)” or “rasterize (Phoshp)” your type, which turns it from being a font layer into a shape layer. A word of caution-do this as your very LAST step, because you won’t be able to edit your type afterwards! But if you do that, the printer won’t need the font at all.

Hope that helps- I’m a graphic designer and I occasionally dabble in wedding invitations:) Good luck!

 
19.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Ribbons (message)  2,018 posts, Buzzing bee

@brooke f: The File > Package command is the best thing to do, honestly. Every printer I got a quote from asked me to do this.

 
20.
Member Icon
Member
tjma05 (message)  4 posts, Wannabee

Hi Brooke, and Ribbons, thank you both so much. I was able to figure it out thanks to your advice!

 
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Mrs. Ribbons
Mrs. Ribbons

Mrs. Ribbons, Washington D.C./Bloomington, IN Age and Occupation: 23, Research Associate for an international development firm Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Proposal Coordinator for contractor Engagement Date: May 2, 2008 Wedding Date: June 2010 Venue: Indiana Memorial Union About Me: I'm an Indiana transplant living in DC with my fiance and our pretty kitty. I enjoy the color pink, I'm obsessed with the Dior New Look and tulle, and I heart my level 80 paladin. I'm a sucker for bad TV, literary theory, and cakes of all persuasion. I also happen to be marrying the cutest closet nerd around! It's all about Bloomington for us because it's where we met -- on the college paper. If there's a theme for our small summertime wedding, it's Dior meets Dorothy Draper on a lark in Bloomington; think poofy, plus graphic prints, bold colors, and a whole lot of prettiness.

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