A DIY Guide for Making Your Own Wedding Stationery
An Overview of Stationery, Plus Imaginative Use of Fonts and Borders
Wedding stationery means much more than just invitations or thank-you cards. Many pieces of stationery play a part in your
celebration, and you can learn valuable tips about selecting the right paper or graphics. There are also fonts, borders and wingdings that will dress up anything from the tiniest escort card to the most elegant wedding program. (A wingding, in case you’re unfamiliar with the term, is a “font” that you download–but when you type, it creates small images or symbols.)
Items like wedding programs and invitations provide tangible souvenirs, not just for you but for the friends and family who will share your special day. Long after your wedding, people will enjoy coming across a saved invitation or other item and experience again the texture of the paper you chose and the artwork involved. This first section gives you a general overview of the specific pieces used for weddings and also contains information on using special fonts or borders. It all starts here:
- Should You Make Your Own Wedding Stationery?
- Tips and Resources for Making Your Own Wedding Invitations
- Four Free Elegant Wedding Fonts
- Using Edwardian Fonts (see special section for wedding use)
- Ten Fantastic Resources for Wedding Borders and Clipart
- Use Free Wedding Dingbats to Dress Up Wedding Invitations
Managing Your Guest List
When you’re ready to announce your engagement, think about whom you’ll be telling as well as how. You can use Google Docs to
create a fun way for yourselves and your family members to collaborate on a guest list. Perhaps you prefer a simple Excel spreadsheet to document prospective guests; use it later to generate a merge doc for mailing labels. Either of these tools allows you to track your shower and wedding gifts and thank you notes, reception meal choices and seating, plus more.
Speaking of thank-you notes, be certain to write yours within the time frame dictated by etiquette. If you receive a gift from someone who you know will not attend the wedding, your note should go out within two weeks of receipt of the gift. People who attend the wedding must be thanked within two months of your wedding day—or you’ll turn into an unappreciative cretin! Avoid humdrum repetition in your notes by exploring interesting, thoughtful ways to express your thanks.
- Planning Your Wedding with Google Docs
- Wedding Planner Worksheet in Excel
- Unique and Clever Thank-You Sayings for Newlyweds
Engagement Party Invitations and Save-the-Dates
Once you’ve put together a list, you can send out invitations to an engagement party or just mail save-the-date cards or notes. An
engagement party takes place pretty much whenever you like after the two of you announce your plans. Save-the-dates are mailed six to eight months before the wedding. Considering the busy schedules people have today, save-the-dates will provide a reminder for family and friends to list your wedding on whatever calendar (electronic or not!) they use.
- Get the Celebration Started with Free Engagement Party Invitations
- Be Certain Your Guests Save the Dates with These Free Templates
- Wording for Save-the-Date Cards
- Alternative Ideas for Save the Dates
Bridal Showers
Before you know it your bridesmaids will be planning your bridal shower! Typically the shower is held two to three months before the wedding. Pass along these ideas on putting the right touches to shower invitations using Publisher—along with catchy wording to get guests’ moods soaring. If you feel better using Word, pick up one of the package templates available in your local office store and let your creative juices flow.
- How to Create a Bridal Shower Invitation using Publisher
- Wording Examples for Bridal Shower Invitations
- Create & Print Your Own Bridal Shower Bingo Cards
The Invitation: Make It Art
Your wedding invitations should be mailed eight weeks ahead of the big day. Many couples draw the line at making their own for a
couple reasons. You are less likely to save money with DIY invitations, because for a quality result it doesn’t pay to skimp on the paper you choose. It’s also vital to have a good printer at hand, and you should plan on using plenty of ink.
However, as mentioned earlier, your own invitations allow you freedom of expression and follow-through with a specific pattern or design. You can seek guidance using a popular invitation product or tackle the stark challenge of beginning from scratch with Photoshop or Word.
- Use Photoshop to Make a Wedding Invitation
- Custom Wedding Invitations from Wilton
- Make Your Own Eco-Friendly Wedding Invitations
- Wedding Invitation Stuffing Etiquette
- Wording for Wedding Invitation Envelopes
Theme Weddings
Stylize your wedding with a specific theme that fits the two of you. Consider these ideas for themes, from winter and winter holiday to a beach event to a Halloween affair. You might prefer a Christian ceremony or enjoy a romantic, renaissance, or fairytale theme. Use themed accessories to decorate your reception hall to carry through your ideas.
- Free Beach Wedding Invitation Templates
- Winter Wedding Invitations – Free Downloads and Design Tips
- Renaissance Wedding Invitation Wording
- Christian Wedding Invitation Wording
- Halloween Wedding Invitations
- Fairytale-Themed Wording for Wedding Invitations
- Romantic Wedding Invitation Verses and Wording
The Order of Events
Wedding programs have gained popularity in recent years, and they serve as a vast canvas to express your ideas. You can put just
about anything in a wedding program: Most people start with the events of a wedding (processional and presentation of the bride, for example) and move on to name the cast of characters—everyone from the grandparents to the littlest flower girl. Still others choose to list specific musical selections chosen for the wedding and reception or offer remembrances of family members who have passed on.
Turn your program into a keepsake that will last forever. Besides a couple ideas for standard wedding programs using MS Word, you can make and decorate a multi-layered wedding program fan (decorate it with your floral motif!); and we also have just the right quotes to express your feelings on this magical day.
- Sample of a Wedding Program Using MS Word
- Create a Wedding Program Using Microsoft Word
- Finish Off Your Wedding Program with the Perfect Quotes
- How to Make Wedding Program Fans
The Reception Begins…
With a few simple DIY clicks of your desktop publishing mouse, you can embellish the tables at your reception with ingenious ideas for place cards, and why not design your very own wine bottle labels? Seed packets make great gifts for your guests, and they cost next to nothing when you make them from scratch and fill them with seeds that fit your floral theme.
If you’re having a Monte Carlo theme, you can download playing cards from Publisher. The template here works with or without the playing card theme; what if you skip the cards and just use the template to make menu cards for your place settings? Or, put a plate of fortune cookies at each table, with lucky or romantic sayings in each, so your guests will have a little fun speculating about their own futures even as yours is unfolding.
- Exciting Place Cards For Your Wedding
- Make Custom Seed Gift Packets in Publisher
- Create a Wine Label in MS Word: Technique and Free Templates
- Ideas for Making Your Own Wine Labels: Free Templates for Download
- Make Your Own Playing Cards: Free Templates Included
- Make Your Own Fortune Cookie Papers with Microsoft Word
Your Wedding Day: A Story to Be Treasured
No wedding is complete without a guest book. Why not honor each guest with his or her own section in the book? There are many alternatives to traditional guest books. You can even begin well before you get to the guest book by starting a scrapbook, from the day of your engagement to the writing of the last thank-you notes.
- Make Your Own Wedding Guest Book
- Alternatives to the Traditional Wedding Guest Book
- 10 Great Wedding Scrapbook Layouts
References
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Screenshot of Google Doc created by writer
All other images created by the writer using Word and clipart