Saturday, January 14, 2012

Leopard Lovebirds

My friend Lori asked me to do her invite with little idea of what she wanted for her big day. My direction was pretty much that she wanted gold, dark green and leopard. *sigh*. I guess that means anything goes, right?

I knew all of us gals (I was in the wedding party) were wearing leopard shoes with our vintage repro dresses and we would be in period appropriate hair and makeup. Lori has a love for all things vintage...clothing, furniture, hair, makeup...etc., so I wanted to come up with a design that had a little bit of retro to it—but didn't scream out kitschy and tacky. Despite our love for the music and it's vintage scene, I didn't want the invite to be too "rockabilly" for a traditional ceremony and reception. It also had to reflect the groom, who has absolutely no ties or interest in it whatsoever. I also wanted to bring the element of their mutually shared passion of animals and animal rescue.

The bride and groom both had "Z" last names. How weird is that? So, it was easy to come up with a little logo for them to use on the envelopes, thank you cards, seating charts, stamps, return address labels...whatever they wanted to put it on from that day forward. Little love birds sitting on their initial was perfection! I limited the color pallet down to the black and gold, as the green just didn't have the same energy I wanted the design to have, plus there was more gold being used in her wedding decorations than green.

Incorporating the leopard into the design had to be approached delicately. It's a strong pattern to begin with, and using it along with the gold she had in mind meant that the combo could be a little more band flyer than wedding invite. The logo gave me a good place to use a splash of the pattern without it being too overwhelming, but it wasn't enough to really create the look that I think she wanted the invites to have. (More leopard! Make my logo bigger!!!)

These were also going to be another DIY project, with the only costs being buying paper and envelopes, so I had to come up with a unique solution to getting the vision I had pictured in my head. I wanted something different, something with sparkle and a little pop! Glitter? No...didn't work. Metallic paper is calling! I got Aspire Petallics in two colors, Black Ore and Beargrass, a gorgeous gold metallic from Curious Papers, and nice green from Royal Metallics. After repeated attempts to do something with the gold, I gave up and realized I wasn't going in the right direction with it and thought I would try a tone on tone printing with the black.

By printing a four color black out of my Phaser, the ink sits on top of the paper so it looks like two different blacks (yeah, I know you're thinking...isn't black, just, black?). So, I created a background by allowing the ink to mask out the leopard print from the metallic (Black Ore) paper, giving it the illusion of it being glittery ink on a black sheet. The effect was far more impressive in real life than my attempt to fake it here in Photoshop—but you get the idea. The body of the invite, envelopes, thank you cards and table numbers were all printed on the shimmery warm white paper (Beargrass).


Everything was hand cut, folded and assembled. The envelopes were run through the Phaser as well. Thankfully it was a small batch of about 100. It was a fun project, I was extremely happy with the result as were the bride and groom.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Bad, bad, blogger.

Yeah I know. You don't care about my lame excuses anyway, so let me just post some (not so) recent projects and get on with it!



December was Henry's 1st birthday (dang this year went by fast!!!), and so we commemorate this momentous occasion with a party! Gives me an excuse to make cool invites too! A while back I had seen a tutorial somewhere on how to make your own scratch off tickets. Didn't know I would need to know this at the time, but I stashed the idea in my lid for future cards/invites/fun stuff. Seeing as we, ahem—I mean I
*I*—decided that we were going with the Robot/Space theme, what could be better than a glittery metallic invite? Nothing!!!

I used an image that my fantastic, photographer sister-in-law Linda had taken of one of Henry's robots as a starting point, found the moon background on Thinkstock, printed them all off on some fancy Stardream metallic paper using the trusty Xerox Phaser, and got down to cutting and glittering! Underneath the "space dust" is the message to the invitee with details of the party. 

The invites were sent out with metal type souvenir coins with the date stamped on them that I created at a local arcade (*EDIT*, I should mention it was Marvin's Mechanical Museum in Farmington Hills. Go check that place out!) that has a vintage metal type machine. I would LOVE to have one of these machines! Check this site out that I came across! THIS GUY is keeping metal type alive and will send you a personalized coin for a donation, how righteous is that? Very! 

I found some really cool silver glitter gift bags at a party supply store and filled them with spacey/robot prizes for our guests. Everything turned out really well, the kids were so excited to receive the sparkly good bags and invites were a big hit—one little friend asked her mom "Is it REALLY space dust?!".  Awwww!!!!!! Six year olds rock!

Creating the scratch off is super easy! You'll need: Acrylic paint, contact paper, dish soap, brush, container for mixing. Glitter optional.

**1**
Take your choice of acrylic paint (I used metallic silver) and mix with regular old dish soap in about a 1:1 ratio. (I recommend something unscented...I picked some cheap stuff up at the dollar store and it stunk to high heaven).

**2**
Mix paint/soap together and paint an area of the contact paper. You can do this one of two ways, either cut out your shapes out of the contact paper and stick them on your card first, then paint them OR do what I found to be easier, which was paint a big piece of contact paper, then cut the shapes after. In my mind, it would be easier and cleaner then painting on the invites themselves. Less room to mess up since there was no painting 'in the lines'.

**3**
Sprinkle copious amounts of glitter on the wet paint and let dry. After everything is completely dry, cut your shapes out (mine was the square to cover the invite details) and stick it to your card.

VOILA! You have some fancy personalized scratch offs! Be forewarned, you will have glitter on EVERYTHING...so I suggest doing this in an area where you don't mind it getting a little sparkly. Luckily for me, Henry's birthday is right before Christmas, so I just figured it was a little more holiday sparkle added to the house!

Here is a link to the original source and a step by step, including photos, of how it all works. Valentines day is coming up...glitter on people, glitter on.
 
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