DIY Wedding Favors That Do Not Look DIY
The favors people actually pocketed at my wedding were the cheap ones with a good tag, and I have the leftover ribbon to prove it.
The favors people actually pocketed at my wedding were the cheap ones with a good tag, and I have the leftover ribbon to prove it.
Seven table numbers I either used or handed a friend after she texted me a photo of guests circling the room looking lost.
I tested seven save the date templates on my own cheap printer, and here are the ones that did not make me cry.
The seating sign was the one thing that made my reception feel like I knew what I was doing, and it cost me about four dollars in cardstock.
I made my welcome sign on the dining table at 9pm with a glass of wine and zero calligraphy skill, and people asked who lettered it.
I planned a Nashville bachelorette from my couch with a stack of test pages and a near-dead printer, and these are the prints that actually made the trip.
The cards I actually handed out, plus the two I almost sent and changed my mind about at the last second.
I made our invitations at a copy shop on Glade Ave for less than dinner for two, and I would do it again.
I tied ninety little tags to jars of honey at my kitchen table and only cried once, so let me save you the tears.
I cut sixty place cards on my coffee table the week before the wedding, and only three of them ended up in the recycling.