After getting the DIY baby shower invites out the next thing to tackle was the menu and the decorations. The mom-to-be and I have always joked that she is never lacking black and white outfits. I figured a black and white color scheme would be perfect and wouldn’t you know it my friend wore a black and white outfit to her shower without even knowing the color scheme!!! I guess I know my friend pretty well. =)
The brunch menu came together quickly. Although there was definitely too many sweets in the end with a good amount of left over, but who doesn’t like left over Oreo truffles?!?! I was pretty pleased with the variety of options for the brunch. Everyone came hungry so there wasn’t a crazy amount of left overs.
Check out the details of the baby shower.

During the wedding planning process I started reading a lot of blogs. Sooooo many brides were doing DIY projects. The wedding blogs really got my planning/artistic juices flowing. I would read about how simple it is to make X all on your own and immediately I would want to take on the DIY project. I would gently remind myself I am not the artist in the family, that would be my sister, the MOH.
My friend from work was kind enough to share A LOT and I really mean A LOT of her wedding/party planning expertise with me. One of her suggestions was to check out her friend’s blog called Aisle with Style. As I was browsing the posts I found a post for the wedding invitations my friend had done for her brother’s wedding. When I stumbled upon the blog post I instantly wanted to make my own invitations. I emailed my friend and asked her for the details on the invitations she made for her sister-in-law’s wedding. Then I forwarded the post to my then fiance and mother.
Both liked the invitations; however neither was excited about the DIY part. My husband was very concerned about hidden costs of DIY as well as the time it would take us to do the invites. I started pricing out invitations online. The non diy invitations would still cost a pretty penny even from the online vendors I found. While visiting my parents for Thanksgiving we spent sometime doing wedding stuff. Sunday we went with my mom to register at Bloomingdale’s. There just happen to be a paper/invitation store in the same complex so we stopped in to check out the invitation designs as well as pricing. As I had assured both my mother and husband the invitations were expensive! Both were finally, mostly, on board with a little (or a lot as the case maybe be) DIY action.
Read the rest of this blog post about DIY wedding invitations here.
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I know I am a bad blogger and I still haven’t told you about how we made our own wedding invitations, but that DIY project was a HUGE undertaking. Honestly, I’m not completely sure how to walk you through the process step by step … YET. So instead I started thinking maybe I would just begin by sharing our DIY rehearsal dinner invitations.
After determining the location, invite list and all that fun stuff for the rehearsal dinner I decided we (the husband and I) should DIY own rehearsal dinner invites. We had left over card stock from the wedding invite inserts as well as extra envelopes (from our DIY Calligraphy). I mean it would have been such a waste not to take advantage of the left over paper materials, right?!?!?! ;)
Early on I found Wedding Paper Divas. They have fabulous invitations for various occasions, in fact it is the website we purchased our save the dates from. I quickly found this rehearsal invitation, which served as my inspiration for our DIY invites.

Image Credit: Wedding Paper Divas
What you need:
Photoshop has a 30 day FREE trail you can download. We used a 30 day trial to create the initial draft of our wedding invitations. In the end we ended up purchasing Photoshop. We planned to use it not only for wedding stuff, but also for my budding photography hobby! If you plan to go the 30 day trial route, make sure to save the final version of your invitation as a PSD, JPG and TIFF file. This will ensure you are able to print the design even after your trail expires.
To ensure we could use some of our left over envelopes, I knew the invitations would need to be 5x7. Once I had the size I found a free image online of a chandelier and downloaded it. From there I Googled rehearsal dinner text and placed it on the initial version of the invite. After that it was just a matter of finding a layout we liked as well as fonts.
The majority of the text is in a renaissance font, which is free to download! Then for our names I used the same font we used on our invitations for our names, again a free font you can download. I felt using a little of the same font as the wedding invitations tied everything together.
I didn’t take a lot of pictures of the process, which is a bummer, so I can only really describe what I did. I printed two invites on each piece of card stock and then used my handy dandy paper cutter to make them 5x7. I printed a number of test versions on plain paper before using the card stock.
This is one of the test versions, please excuse the crappy blackberry camera shot:

I had printed almost all of the rehearsal dinner invites when I remembered I had purchased a paper rounder punch. I decided to go ahead and use one of my test invites and round the corners to see how it looked. I ended up loving it and the husband was in agreement. A bunch of punches later we had rounded edges instead of sharp corners.
Here’s what the rehearsal dinner invitation looked like totally finished:

Here are a couple of extra tips:
Happy Planning!
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We had received a few wedding and other party invitations with super pretty writing on the envelopes. Specifically gorgeous calligraphy! Despite loving calligraphy I couldn’t justify the cost of paying for hand done calligraphy on something 99.9% of people just throw away after opening the invitation.
So we went the route of DIY calligraphy. By DIY I mean using the computer and printer, because my handwriting is less than ideal even for meeting notes. :)
View the full blog post and DIY direction here.

Good luck with your printing press! If you have any questions about the process, please leave a comment … I’m happy to provide additional details!!
Happy Planning and DIY!!
We got engaged in October and by the time we found our photographer, signed the contract and thought about scheduling our e-session it was FRRRREEZING outside. After giving it some thought we decided to wait until April to do our engagement photos.
A larger number of people use their e-pics on their save the dates (STDs). Since our save the dates went out priority to even booking the photographer we were going to have to find other ways to use the pictures. When we received our ~120 engagement photos I started wondering what we were going to do with all these pictures.
We did the typical print a few and put them up around the house as well as place a few favorites on the wedding website. But it just didn’t feel like enough and I started to think there just HAD to be more we could do with all these cutsie pictures.
I found five fun ways to take advantage our engagement pictures!
All of the engagement photos were taken by Korie Lynn Photography
1. Guest Book
Part of our photography package included a guest book. The hubby and I chose our favorite pictures and then our photographer designed and printed the book for us. If it isn’t included in your photo package it’s a super easy DIY project. Photobooks can be created on Shutterfly, MyPublisher, SnapFish, Blur and the list of places goes on and on.
Check out our book:

Photo Credit: Korie Lynn Photography
2. Framed Collage
We had a frame with pictures we weren’t loving anymore. We printed our top 9 photos and voila …

3. Table numbers!
I had serious issues trying to decide what to do about table numbers. I thought about naming each table a Washington Monument, wine bottles, luminaria with numbers and gosh probably a dozen other things.
In the end we picked our favorite engagement pictures added numbers with Photoshop … printed the pictures and purchased some plastic picture frames. It was a super easy DIY and pretty cheap too if you ask me.
Looks pretty … right?!

Photo Credit: Korie Lynn Photography
4. Thank you cards
These were a HUGE hit with our friends and family. We chose two different pictures and used Photoshop to add “Thank you” to the images. I ordered them from Shutterfly, however like the guest book there are a ton of places you can order customized photo thank you cards.

5. Custom Stamps for the wedding invitation
I wish I could take all the credit for this idea, but my mom really pushed me to follow through on this idea. I had toyed with buying custom stamps for the invitations, however I wasn’t sure if it was worth the extra money. In the end I decided it would be fun and I ordered the custom stamps from Zazzle.com. The stamps come in three different sizes so you have your choice of how big you want the stamp to be.
Tip: Make sure to take the invitation to the post office prior to buying the custom stamps so you know what postage rate you will need to purchase.

Photo Credit: Korie Lynn Photography
So there are my engagement picture tidbits. How have you (or your friends) used engagement pictures?
Happy Planning and DIY!
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