Before the wedding
Our wedding invitation was created with chiyogami Japanese paper and wonderful materials from The Paper Source. The first page of the invitation was hand screen-printed with a gocco printer. The second page contained a perforated reply postcard, which, when removed, left our guests with the invitation, information, and directions still nicely bundled together. Click on the image to see additional, rotating pages:

A close-up of the gold gocco ink used to print the first page of the invitation:

I gave myself a break from desiging the rehearsal invites (phew!) and bought these cute pre-printed blank cards. At each placesetting in the Chinese restaurant was a to-go container filled with M&Ms (for Murphy, of course!):

For dessert at the restaurant, I had custom fortune cookies made. They were dipped in different types of chocolate and covered with sprinkles, and contained amazing fortunes such as, "You will attend a wedding tomorrow."

At the church
The wedding ceremony program - click to see inside spreads:

Bundles of paper flowers hung on each pew:

Nothing compared to the real flowers I held, however, which were the creation of our friend, Joanne:

At the party
Guests entered the country club to find a (fake) pumpkin into which I carved our new initials. I had also created a pile of leaves from fall-colored papers, and added glitter to some oversized pinecones for extra festivity:

The welcome table, with table seating chart, guest book, and multi-tier cake-shaped card box:

Our guestbook was designed to look like a large version of the wedding invitation:

The fantastically autumnal carrot cake (made by our friend, Jeff):

Joanne also created our beautiful bundled wheat centerpieces:

The wheat sat upon squares of jewel-toned velvet cloth that were assembled and hand-debossed by my mom, creating a decorative leaf pattern (she made a quilt out of the combined squares!) - this photo really doesn't do the arrangement much justice, unfortunately:

Each guest received a personalized miniature accordion book as a wedding favor:

No two books were the same, as I chose a variety of jewel-toned and autumnal paper and ribbon to create the books. Here are some scraps from the bookbinding project:
My dad built the table number stands, which he painted gold.

The table number cards had a multi-color jewel-tone beaded border adhered with super sticky tape:

A coloring book for kid guests was placed in each child goodie bag (along with crayons, finger monsters, and animated flip books) - click to see a spread (illustrations adapted from iStockPhoto):

A menu card was placed at each table:

Cocktail napkins were gocco printed, and emphasized our love of music lyrics:
And, with cocktails sometimes comes the need for a ride home. I wanted our guests to know that there were alternatives to getting behind the wheel, and these table-tents were placed throughout the reception hall after dinner:


I rubber-stamped boxes of matchsticks in a November-y pattern so our guests might light up their celebratory cigars:

So many of the desserts we provided were generously made by our guests, themselves. I wanted to be sure to acknowledge their delicious contributions:
Also on the dessert table, I placed a bunch of self-addressed, stamped envelopes containing a blank CD. Most of our guests took digital photos throughout the day, and they were able to easily share their shots with us after the wedding:

The dessert table also had a basket full of miniature tabasco sauces, commemorating the Mexican restaurant where John and I met — so cute!
4 comments:
It's just like I was there. Oh, wait! I WAS there! It was a wonderful day, and this blog post is amazing. (How did you do that "flipping through the pages" thing?) Everything looks wonderful.
You should post the favor! It was my favor-ite! And I just found my little bottle of Tabasco the other day, too. hehe. What am I going to do with that? I am toying with the idea of buying a really nice memorabilia box for such special items.
I am sad that I didn't see the coloring book. :( That does look wicked fun! Did you actually draw the pictures inside?
I'm really impressed. Girl, you such a pro.
Hey Boo, yes,I love what you posted on line.I agree with the comment about the minature tabasco bottles....very, very cute;and so you! I was a beautiful day, that went by too fast. :)Love ya, Bean
Boy, I sure wish I was there! Everything looks so lovely and FUN! So good to hear what you've been up to...miss you so much~
Hurrah! Very nice update. Thanks for calling my attention to it. So fun to see everything again. You are completely amazing, you crafty goddess.
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