Calling on inspiration from your grandmother's colorful china cabinet or handkerchief collection, this lovely suite is the perfect way to announce your backyard wedding or vintage-infused event. Coordinating ink colors of plum and moss green compliment each other on the textured natural white paper. The invitation suite shown comes mounted on cardstock for extra heft, while a response postcard and additional insert accompany the suite in a plum pocket and coordinating envelope. This suite also includes a label wrap. Price shown is for 50 - 5 x 7 Inch invitations. Envelopes, backer cards, enclosures, and assembly are priced separately. Please email Paper white at info@shoppaperwhite com or call 707-775-4200 for additional pricing information, to coordinate text information, paper and ink preferences, and any other changes to customize this announcement. You will receive 2 pdf print samples for your approval (by fax or email) within 3 business days after receipt of your order. Once you approve the final proof, your invitations will ship within 5-7 business days.
My June 14 bride is a graphic designer in Oregon. I received her custom invites in the mail a couple weeks ago and they are just superb!!!
I cannot wait to photograph her wedding!!!
Japanese Floral Invite
Letterpress-printed on crane lettra 110# cover in pearl white. Navy ink and blind letterpress (blind on invite panel only). Flush-mounted Japanese paper backer.
floral wedding invites
A guide for getting your perfectionism to work for you Is perfectionism a good thing or does it get in our way? In The Perfectionist's Handbook, clinical psychologist Jeff Szymanski helps readers navigate their way out of the "perfectionism paradox": if your intentions are good (wanting to excel) and the outcomes you want are reasonable (to feel competent and satisfied), why would perfectionism backfire and result in unhappiness and stress? Learn when perfectionism will pay off, and when and why it sabotages you. Specific strategies are outlined throughout the book to help readers transform their perfectionism from a liability to an asset. There is no reason to eliminate perfectionism altogether—instead, build on what's working and change what's not. The Perfectionist's Handbook helps readers to: Distinguish between intention and strategy as a way of improving outcomes Identify diminishing returns and how to redistribute time and resources Make the most of mistakes rather than being preoccupied with trying to avoid them Learn to focus on your "Top 10" list as a way of getting the most out of your life Access others more effectively as a way of improving performance Obtain more balance in their lives