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Ms. Ferris Wheel, San Francisco Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Fiance's Age and Occupation: 27, Psychologist Engagement Date: May 23 and 28, 2010 (one for each of us!) Wedding Date: November 2011 Venue: Parc55 Hotel (city lights ceremony, ballroom reception) About Me: Born in the Southeast, educated in the Northeast, and over-educated on the West Coast, I finally earned my city-girl credentials and have put down roots in gorgeous San Francisco. I’m a raging perfectionist with a lightning quick wit and a terrible sense of both time and direction. Our wedding task list is endlessly growing because of my predilection to think that DIY projects I can make = DIY projects I should make (so not true!). I always go to bed wishing there were more hours in the day to enjoy all the things I adore, whether that be hobbies, friends, my career, our two dogs, or Mr. Ferris Wheel. Ours is a story of a non-traditional couple living an oddly traditional life planning a not-so-traditional wedding in this city we adore. Together we are bustin’ out all of our best skills (and some of our worst ones) to plan a laid-back-chic DIY-craftastic love-alicious affair!
About Ms. Ferris Wheel

Once all the *duh-rama* of choosing my Party People had subsided, I was finally ready to tackle that whole “asking them” thing. Being the creative and crafty woman that I am, I was jumping out of my skin to get elbow deep in some paper and adhesive. Based on a lot of inspiration I’d culled from the far-and-wides of the interwebs, here’s what I put together:

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco N n

{Clockwise from top left: box top, box bottom with pleated paper medallion, booklet invite (with name blurred)}

And now here’s the step-by-step process, in case you wanted to know. ;-)

First I purchased the boxes that my booklet invitations would go in. I found these shiny black jewelry boxes on eBay for two dollars each, after shipping. Usually I would scoff at spending two dollars for a little box, but because I already owned the other necessary materials, it seemed like a reasonable expense.

Using ribbon I had on hand (but that I admittedly bought months ago for potential wedding projects), I began to layer them until I found a design I liked. I trimmed the ribbon long enough to wrap around the edges of the box top and melted the edges to prevent fraying. (Sorry, forgot to take pictures of this part.)

I ran permanent adhesive onto both the top and bottom edges of the ribbon. Then I just stuck the ribbon onto the box top, wrapping it around the edges and tucking the raw ends into the inside of the box top. Once I had layered the ribbons until I was satisfied with the overall effect, I had an easily removable and totally chic booklet box ready to be filled!

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco Img 02301 IMG_02301

{Three-inch wide silver satin, one-inch wide black patterned, one-eight-inch wide cobalt blue}

Moving on to the insides—I planned to make the booklet a quarter inch smaller than the box measurements so that it would be a perfect fit. So if your box is 4 x 6 inches, your final booklet size will be 3.75 x 5.75 inches. To cut the correct size of card stock for the orientation of this booklet, you keep the height measurement the same and double the length measurement (because you’ll be folding the card stock in half). That means my card-stock booklet covers were 3.75 x 11.5 inches. I cut these using my paper trimmer.

In order to have a “spine” for the booklet that will allow the front cover to easily open, I scored the front cover. I didn’t allow quite enough room for my spine, so I would suggest scoring at half an inch in from the cover fold.

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco S s

To make the names on the front I used my Bosskut Gazelle (OMG-how-i-love-this-machine!), which is sort of like a Cricut except that it doesn’t use cartridges. Instead you design the cut files yourself, and the thing I might love the most is that you can use *any* of the True Type fonts on your computer. I cut out the name and then backed it with blue for contrast. I chose that oh-so-trendy technique where you round opposite corners, and I liked the modern funky vibe that gave my design. Mounting that on the patterned paper brought in some of the wedding style and gave it a finished look.

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco L03 l03

{The bottom left corner is rounded, too (kills me to blur out all those lovely letters!).}

For the inner pages, my theme was “reasons you should consider being in my wedding party.” I made a list of all the reasons I wanted to include, then I went searching for images to fit the sentiment. I didn’t give photo credit in my booklets, and I don’t recall where the images came from. But I can tell you that I found all of them through Google images.

Once I found my images, I laid them out in Microsoft Publisher within rectangles that were the size of the booklet. I printed them on my home printer and trimmed them with the paper cutter. I included a blank sheet at the back so I could write a personal note to each Party Person. I ended up making a second document containing the white circles with words, which I cut out and adhered onto the printed booklet pages. In hindsight, I wish I’d just printed the words directly onto the images. Having the circle cut-outs didn’t add that much (in my opinion), and it would’ve saved me a step in the process. Oh well, live and learn. (And then get Luvs! Anyone recall that commercial? Anyone?)

Here are all the pages I included (after it was bound—I’m getting to that step next):

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco Ferriswheel

At this point you have the completed cover and all the inner pages. I quickly scored the inner pages at the same measurement as the front cover. Now you stack it all up and you’re ready for “binding.” For this I used my Crop-a-Dile Big Bite to set two one-eighth-inch eyelets into the spine. To use the Crop-a-Dile, you first set it to punch the appropriate size holes. Then you insert the eyelet and squeeze. (The full instructions are a bit more complicated than this because there are so many different things this tool can do, so I encourage you to read the manual.)

For the finishing touch, I included a small pleated paper medallion/rosette/pinwheel/starburst (yes, it’s called all of these names depending on where you find it online) to sit under the booklet and again give a little hint about the wedding style.

Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites :  wedding bridesmaid san francisco Img 025 IMG_025

And that’s about it. Hope you enjoyed the first of many tutorials!

How will you/did you ask your wedding party people? Any other happy Bosskut Gazelle owners out there?

Tags: bridesmaid, san-francisco |
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12 Responses to “Boxed Booklet Wedding-Party Invites”

1.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Pony (message)  4,171 posts, Honey bee

These are so sweet and perfect, I bet your party people loved them!

 
2.
stephbonthego
Member
stephbonthego (message)  687 posts, Busy bee

Your friends are lucky to have you!

 
3.
Miss Seal
Bee
Miss Seal (message)  1,179 posts, Bumble bee

You are SO sweet! I LOVE THESE!

 
4.
tocarat
Member
tocarat (message)  324 posts, Helper bee

These are awesome, I’m loving the pinwheel! I made one for my party also, it was a good first step to crafting the wedding :)

 
5.
RedRoses2
Member
RedRoses2 (message)  72 posts, Worker bee

It would be so fun to get one of these! You are a great friend to your buddies.

I am just going to give them a card asking them, but will be making each card full of inside jokes, etc…

 
6.
Mrs. Meerkat
Bee
Mrs. Meerkat (message)  3,216 posts, Sugar bee

Those are so cute! What a great way to ask them!

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Mrs. Earrings (message)  2,477 posts, Buzzing bee

These are so creative!

 
8.
Miss Tartlet
Bee
Miss Tartlet (message)  3,207 posts, Sugar bee

These are incredible!!! I’m so excited for your future tutorials. :D

 
9.
Member Icon
Member
miss.qwerty (message)  895 posts, Busy bee

Those look great!

 
10.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Cotton Candy (message)  436 posts, Helper bee

Wow these are amazing!

 
11.
Bee Icon
Bee
Ms. Ferris Wheel (message)  345 posts, Helper bee

@tocarat: I agree! I totally used these to wade into the wedding crafting as well.

@RedRoses2: Yay for personalizing with inside jokes! Love it!

@Miss Tartlet: Thanks, Tartlet!

 
12.
Guest Icon
Guest
hopeandpray

They look amazing! Of course first thing I thought was that you had really messy writing on those names, yikes it seems my brain gives up a little after midnight

 

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Ms. Ferris Wheel
Ms. Ferris Wheel

Ms. Ferris Wheel, San Francisco Age and Occupation: 29, Psychologist Fiance's Age and Occupation: 27, Psychologist Engagement Date: May 23 and 28, 2010 (one for each of us!) Wedding Date: November 2011 Venue: Parc55 Hotel (city lights ceremony, ballroom reception) About Me: Born in the Southeast, educated in the Northeast, and over-educated on the West Coast, I finally earned my city-girl credentials and have put down roots in gorgeous San Francisco. I’m a raging perfectionist with a lightning quick wit and a terrible sense of both time and direction. Our wedding task list is endlessly growing because of my predilection to think that DIY projects I can make = DIY projects I should make (so not true!). I always go to bed wishing there were more hours in the day to enjoy all the things I adore, whether that be hobbies, friends, my career, our two dogs, or Mr. Ferris Wheel. Ours is a story of a non-traditional couple living an oddly traditional life planning a not-so-traditional wedding in this city we adore. Together we are bustin’ out all of our best skills (and some of our worst ones) to plan a laid-back-chic DIY-craftastic love-alicious affair!

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