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Printed Wedding Invitations |
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My fiance and I are trying to find ways to cut down the cost of our wedding and are thinking about printing our own invitations. I was wondering if anyone has done this for their own wedding and how the invitations turned out? I don't really want to spend the money on the do-it-yourself kit if it's not worth it.
tiffanyau
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
I printed both my wedding invitations as well as my programs, and bought a kit for each. I recommend this option because you can tweak the wording and font to your liking and personalize with ribbon, colored paper, etc. You could save even more by tracking down/buying the materials yourself and foregoing a kit, but I was only engaged for about 2.5 months and I didn't have time for all that!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
I found a site where you can print off their desigsn on your home printer for free! Just amend the wording and print. You need a color printer and a Microsoft Word.
http://www.wedding-invitation-ideas.com
Some of them are blank and some of them have suggestions for jazzing them up.
They'll save you a fortune though!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By irissa (Guest Post)
(09/15/2007)
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I am currently planning my wedding. I bought my thank you cards and wedding invitations from Walmart. On the box is a website that shows you how to print them and it comes with test sheets so you don't mess up your invitations. GOOD LUCK!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By verna (Guest Post)
(09/15/2007)
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I have been married for 24 years and I want to use my first wedding day picture on my invitation. Can I do this on a blank invitation? I saw some at Walmart, a pack of 50 for $15. Would they be okay?

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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Sunshine (Guest Post)
(08/12/2005)
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I would consider trying Quality Quick Print, they have all sorts of samples straight from the vendors, and make them way cheaper than what you would buy online. I saved $200.00 on cheapo invitations.
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Stephanie (Guest Post)
(06/05/2005)
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there is a great website to help all of you making your own invitations! www.verseit.com has all the different wordings and correct grammer for any style of wedding! another idea is going to a local paper or printing shop, usually if they are printed in house they will be A LOT cheaper than through a catalog!
Good luck to all...
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Lasine MI (Guest Post)
(05/12/2005)
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If you are creative on the computer, than yes, it's worth. If not than they will be ok, but you will have to spend extra money for a wedding invitation program (software). This is what I do, my problem is finding the blank invitations at a reasonable price for me and my clients. Now if you have any suggestions let me know. fulloffire2006 @ aol.com (remove spaces.)
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
We made our invitations by hand too. It took ages and ages but was well worth it.
I drew a picture and scanned it in, and printed it on the same coloured card, then ripped squares of contrasting tissue and woven paper which I layered and stuck the little picture on top.
I cut out hearts of matching tissue paper, and put them inside the cards and the effect was gorgeous.
Good luck, you'll enjoy it!
all the best for your married life!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By suzi homemaker (Guest Post)
(04/20/2005)
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Scrapbookers and Stampers are currently big into the wedding invitations. it would definitely have to fit your personality. The ideas are endless!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Mary (Guest Post)
(04/19/2005)
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Printing your own invitations is a great money saver and few will be able to tell if they are not from a printshop if you are very careful with spelling, line breaks, wording. Rule: the plainer, the better. Fancy, frilly, overly decorative screams amateur.
Line breaks are important. Keep names together on one line. Keep ideas, dates, locations, together on groups of lines. Break lines where they make sense.
For example, don't write:
Mrs. Sally Jones and Mr. Bill Bennet invite you to the wedding of...
Instead write:
Mrs. Sally Jones and Mr. Bill Bennett invtie you to the wedding of their daughter Susan Bennett
For a more professional look use black ink. Colors are fun, but don't work well on formal invitations printed at home. Stay away from clip art and little pictures of flowers, etc. This will also scream "amateur."
Good luck and a happy marriage to you.
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Allison (Guest Post)
(04/19/2005)
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We printed our own invitations and they turned out great. It happened by coincidence-- I went to OfficeMax just to get some printer paper, and they had a BUNCH of clearance racks outside. I bought all the wedding invitation stationary they had out on clearance. The invitations also came with smaller note cards which we are still using. (The wedding was almost 3 years ago.) After making the purchase, I compared my clearance price to the WalMart price and I found I had saved about 50% PLUS I got all those smaller note cards. That was probably the middle of June, when I found the invitaitons on the clearance rack. So if you are planning a July or August wedding, you could buy some to print at Walmart and save the receipt and don't print them yet-- wait and see if office stores in your area have similar clearance sales. Oh yeah, also, all my invitations did not match. I sent the fancier ones to family and close friends and the more plain ones to other people. Maybe that's tacky, but I figured they wouldn't compare invitations and I knew we needed all the money we could save to live on AFTER the wedding!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
My local Wal-Mart, in the office supplies section, has a do-it-yourself printable kit of wedding invitations with envelopes to match. If I remember correctly, it was a set of 25 cards/envelopes and sold for $9.99.
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Meari (Guest Post)
(04/19/2005)
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For my sister's wedding, we found print-your-own-invitations at Michael's and I printed them using a font she chose in the color she used in her wedding. They looked expensive and no one knew the difference! The invitations came with an envelope and tissue paper.
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Karen (Guest Post)
(04/19/2005)
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I am a wedding planner and couples today are looking for all kinds of ways of cutting expenses for the wedding and reception without making them look it. Today brides are printing their invitations, place cards, parking passes and anything else they can. Go ahead and have fun!
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
For my wedding I ordered a paper that had cream roses on the border and a cream inside to write on. I order them it from a place called paper direct (www.paperdirect.com) I found a font that I liked (Mono Corrisive) on my home computer and printed them myself. I found cream with a gold inside envelope at Office depot. I still have enough over to write notes on and even with postage it wasn't too bad of a price. Hope this help
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
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Post By Dana (Guest Post)
(04/19/2005)
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For my wedding I ordered a paper that had cream roses on the border and a cream inside to write on. I order them it from a place called paper direct (www.paperdirect.com) I found a font that I liked and printed them myself. I found cream with a gold inside envelope at Office depot. I still have enough over to write notes on and even with postage it wasn't too bad of a price. Hope this help
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
I printed my own invitations. I just bought a print shop software and printed them at home. The great thing is that once you have the software you can make all kinds of cards and posters. Including the software it only cost me about .15 per invite. Just buy envelopes at the dollar store and away you go. Hope this helps.
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RE: Printed Wedding Invitations
You can do your own invites by doing the following; Decide what size invite you would like to have first. Then, set up your page layout to the size of the paper that you would like. Go to a paper or stationery store in your area and choose your paper (it does not have to be a do it yourself kit) Paper-Source.com has great paper, and I'm not sure what area you are in but in Chicago there is a store called XpedX that has a great selection as well. The great thing about making your own is that you will spend minimal monies on the paper and be able to add such great embellishments. for example, say you choose a pretty card stock (ivory paper) - usually a pack of 10 sheets is $3.50 per sheet which = about $0.35 per sheet, if you choose a quarter sheet size invite, divide that by 4 and it's not even $0.10 per invite - add clear vellum over the top for another $0.10 and some ribbon @ about $0.05. You're still only looking at $0.25 per invite, you can make the Response cards on the same card stock and then just purchase envelopes. If you need any additional help - I can walk you through step by step. Just email me @ taylor_madeevents@yahoo.com (NO, THERE IS NO CHARGE INVOLVED)
GOOD LUCK!
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