Wedding Welcome Sign Ideas That Set the Tone
The first thing your guests see is a sign on an easel, so here are the welcome signs I would actually print again.
The first thing your guests see is a sign on an easel, so here are the welcome signs I would actually print again.
The bachelorette games I actually printed for my friend Dana, the two I quietly cut, and the one prize nobody shut up about.
I printed our invitations in the back room of a copy shop on Ashby, and three people asked who designed them.
The favors people actually pocket on the way out, and the tags I printed to make the cheap ones look like I tried.
I asked four people to stand up at my wedding and I overthought every single one, so here is the version where you do not.
The tables ate more of my budget than I planned, so here is what actually looked finished and what I would skip.
I made eleven signs for my wedding and used maybe five, so here is the list I wish someone had handed me before I bought the foam board.
I sent my save the dates eight months out, got the wording wrong on the first batch, and learned most of this the slow way.
I redid my seating chart four times and the last version was the one I made on a Tuesday while ignoring my actual job.
I sent my own wedding invitations for under forty dollars, and I still cringe at the one typo nobody caught.