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Miss Fondue, Nashville Age and Occupation: 27, Technical Analyst Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Network Admin Student/Senior Game Advisor Engagement Date: December 25, 2007 Wedding Date: May 2009 Blogging Since: September 14, 2008 Venue: Ravenwood Golf Club About Me: I’m your average computer geek marrying a gaming geek and trying to find a good balance of elegance and geek chic in our wedding. I adore The Sims, Nintendo, cosplay, (good) music, TiVo, theme parks, and our two crazy felines.
About Ms Fondue

Okay, so I’m technically not a married bee, but a lot of people seem to really enjoy this post (I seriously had an old high school friend message me on Facebook last week saying she came across the post and got inspired and then realized that she knew the author of it, haha).

~~~

Don’t worry; I won’t keep you guys in suspense!

You’ve previously seen the damask stamp I ordered from Impress Rubber Stamps on projects like our coasters. However, I originally purchased it when I was working on our invitation design last spring.

I showed you all the original designs we considered. But as I was designing all of those, as I mentioned, I decided I wanted something with a little more texture. Now it’s time to reveal the real thing.

Note: If you are invited to our wedding, please do not proceed beyond this point!

Our invitations were created in four stages:

  1. Print the wording onto cardstock
  2. Emboss the damask design
  3. Add ribbon
  4. Assemble cardstock pieces

For the first stage, I simply created a Microsoft Word document using the dimensions of my white cardstock and printed them all on my home printer.

The second stage was the longest, and so I bring the tutorial I promised in my coasters post! (Would you believe I took these step-by-step photos back in April, just in case I was ever blogging for Weddingbee one day? Ha!)

Supplies:

  • Stamp
  • Stamp pad - make sure it is pigment ink, not dye ink, as dye ink dries too quickly
  • Embossing powder - I used clear for this project
  • Heat gun
  • Stamp-a-Majig - Optional, but useful

The Stamp-a-Majig is a nifty tool that allows you to line up where you want to stamp before you actually stamp your image. I used it for the first few invitations, but I eventually got the hang of where I wanted the stamp to be without it. But, if you are using one, the first step is to line up your Stamp-a-Majig where you want your stamp to go. I also placed my invitation on top of a scrap piece of cardstock so I could stamp the edge of the paper and not stamp my table. (While I might not mind a damask dining room table, I have a feeling Mr. Fondue would.)

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 038 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 038

And then stamp!

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03801 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03801

After you have stamped one invitation, cover it in embossing powder. Be very generous. I used two pieces of folded cardstock for this step. One was used to pour and the other caught the excess powder. Then they would switch places for the next invitation.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03802 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03802

Tap the paper a lot to get all the excess powder off the page.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03803 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03803

You can go ahead and put powder on a lot of the pages before you heat them. I just lined them all up.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03804 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03804

Then get your significant other to do something and melt the powder with the heat gun. It’s really easy to tell when the powder has been melted, but my gun takes a minute or two to heat up all the way.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03901 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03901

You can tell in this shot that half of this one has been melted and half hasn’t.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03805 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03805

And that’s all there is to heat embossing!

For the third stage, I just cut a strip of ribbon to the length I needed, ran some adhesive down it (I used Tombow Mono Permanent Adhesive), and stuck it to the cardstock, with the ends folding over the edge of the paper.

Then in the fourth stage, I again used my Tombow to attach the white cardstock to the red, and the red to the pocketfold. Voila!

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03701 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03701

Here’s a close-close upclose up so you can see the texture.

Best of the 'Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding best of weddingbee crafts diy nashville tutorial Img 03702 Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial :  wedding diy invitations nashville stationery tutorial Img 03702

Our programs will also be mimicking this design.

Have you used embossing in any of your DIY projects?

Tags: best-of-weddingbee, crafts, diy, nashville, tutorial |
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13 Responses to “Best of the ‘Bee - Designing the Invitations, Part 2: An Embossing Tutorial”

1.
Guest Icon
Guest
Hannah

Gorgeous!!! I’m inspired to DIY invitations after this post. Can you tell us what font you used? They’re lovely <3

 
2.
Monument
Member
Monument (message)  25 posts, Newbee

Thank you for this! I’ve been wanting to add texture to my invites (oh letterpress you are unaffordable!) so this is a fabulous alternative that I probably will end up doing. Thanks for the fabulous tutorial.

 
3.
Guest Icon
Guest
Katie

So nice to ’see’ you again Fondue! Hope all is well with you… I read the ‘Bee back when you were blogging, and missed your posts… you are so inspirational!

 
4.
jordynrose
Member
jordynrose (message)  6,351 posts, Bee Keeper

Great tips! Glad to see you around!

 
5.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Glasses (message)  2,741 posts, Sugar bee

Your post helped me out so much in my own embossing process! Thank you so much!

 
6.
mrspaetz
Member
mrspaetz (message)  3,805 posts, Honey bee

thanks for re-sharing this. i’m about to start a Christmas embossing project and was wondering if I had to use the heat tool on each one immediately.

 
7.
Ms Fondue
Bee
Ms Fondue (message)  65 posts, Worker bee

@Hannah: I know I used Feel Script. I think the other one maybe Bookman? It’s a standard serif font that I just used small caps on.

@Katie: Oh yay! Someone remembers me! Yes, everything is great right now. I have a wonderful boyfriend and a budding photography business; it can’t get much better!

@mrspaetz: You don’t. You can just apply the powder and then set it aside and heat them all at once. That’s pretty much what I did.

@Monument, @jordynrose, and @Mrs. Glasses: Thank you!

 
8.
MissCasey
Member
MissCasey (message)  214 posts, Helper bee

These look AMAZING and so professional! I have a scrapbook paper embosser (raises the paper), but you can’t make it a different color like the stamp. I think I might use this idea!

 
9.
Guest Icon
Guest
Julia

Thanks so much for sharing. They are simply beautiful. My main question is where did you purchase the damask stamp?

 
10.
Chocolatte
Member
Chocolatte (message)  198 posts, Blushing bee

i just ran across this - i’m going to have to try this out when christmas rolls around! thanks!

 
11.
Guest Icon
Guest
sue

where did you buy the black satin ribbon from?

 
12.
Member Icon
Member
Jadyn10150 (message)  21 posts, Newbee

OMG I can’t wait for BF to pop the question!! These invitaions look amazing! So much work, but perfect!!

 
13.
Guest Icon
Guest
mrs.risha.abdin!

i love this diy!! i am definitely going to use this, but my question is…what did you do about the envelopes??

 

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Ms Fondue
Ms Fondue

Miss Fondue, Nashville Age and Occupation: 27, Technical Analyst Fiance's Age and Occupation: 25, Network Admin Student/Senior Game Advisor Engagement Date: December 25, 2007 Wedding Date: May 2009 Blogging Since: September 14, 2008 Venue: Ravenwood Golf Club About Me: I’m your average computer geek marrying a gaming geek and trying to find a good balance of elegance and geek chic in our wedding. I adore The Sims, Nintendo, cosplay, (good) music, TiVo, theme parks, and our two crazy felines.

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