Showing posts with label wedding wire. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wedding wire. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Wedding DIY Love Letter Wine Box Wood Burning

 When I first met my husband, he had a 3 slot wine bottle box that he'd gotten from a winery somewhere. I think it used to say Savannah. We kept the box when we moved and when I told him about alternate unity ceremonies for our wedding, he was really interested in the love letter wine box ceremony. I looked online for boxes and was shocked at the prices. I don't know how to carve, but I had the idea to do wood burning/etching on the box. I knew that I wanted the back to be our monogram theme that had been everywhere in the wedding. Although I designed the logo, hand drawing it would have been a disaster.

I printed out a large letter size copy of my monogram. Now obviously I can't see through the box to trace so I had to make my transfer by shading the back of the monogram. 

 It's best if you have charcoal, but a good drawing pencil can do the job as well. Shade the entire back (well only the parts that have the shape you want to transfer).

Using a pen or pencil, trace the outline of the image onto the wood. Then use the wood burner to trace your outline and burn the design into the wood. Make sure to cover areas you want to be darker and keep the heat lighter on the areas you want to shade lighter. 

 For the front of the box he had a family crest that I thought would be perfect. I also wanted our initials on each door and behind each door would be the glass for when we open the box.

 The method is the same as was done to the back. Print out the image, shade the back and trace.

The main difference between the front and back was that the front had color to it. I used color pencils to color in between the line and used a piece of tissue to rub in and even out the color.

My baby installed two locks on the front before the wedding day. We each got a set of each key for safe keeping. I should put that in the safe.

Here's the box opened.


 You can see the opened box at the end of aisle. Our mothers walked in the glasses and placed them on our respective sides. Within the week leading up to the wedding, we each wrote our letter to one another and after the preacher performed the ceremony, we placed them in the box without reading. We changed up the tradition slightly by adding that we want to do a recurring wine box every 5 years.

It currently sits at the top of one of our book cases in the study.

Saturday, March 15, 2014

DIY Wedding Flower Petal Aisle Runner

This project was completed with the help of 5 Superman movies, numb butt, trigger finger syndrome, several bags of flower petals and a few large sticks of glue. I also used several feet of tulle (80 feet total). The project included some early lessons learned. I'd seen a tutorial that said it would be fast to use adhesive spray and place the petals on top. The two cans I got was a waste of funds, IMO. I would have done better to just go the hot glue gun route right from the start. To make it easier to pull up the tulle without tearing, I use a cookie sheet flipped over as my work area. The silver and blue petals were all dumped into basket and shaken so that I could randomly pull and glue. I kept the white ones separate so that I could use them as the back drop.

 After each pan length would cool, I'd gently pry up the tulle from the pan and start the next section.

Randomly I placed the silver and baby blue petals all over the whites. I also made sure that the petals overhung the tulle so that the final produce actually spanned about 8 inches.

 I liked looking at my progress as the aisle runner took shape. But slowly I started to run out of space.

 The plastic on the floor was my first failed attempt using the adhesive spray. All I got for that was a sticky plastic and time wasted.

 When I ran out of space, I rolled up the finished portion and kept working. I completed everything over a few days, but took breaks in between. And Superman can be quite distracting. Even the bad ones like with Richard Pryor as a computer geek.

 At the end of the long hallway and into our bedroom, I placed a piece of tape at the 40 foot mark and as my roll increased, I'd go out and unrolled it out and measure.

 After nearly 18 hours total (with breaks in between), I completed two 40 feet by 6" role of flower petals.

The final product in the church filled me with pride. Since one of my MIL's coworker was so generous in letting us borrow some of her columns and artificial flowers for the church (you can sort of see them at the end of the aisle), I gave her the runners as a trade. Initially I'd planned to sell it, but the trade was worth it and we saved a bundle.

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

Wedding DIY: Foil Envelope Lining for Invitation

Here's a quickie tutorial. I ordered my invitations and envelopes from Vistaprint. The invitations were beautiful, however the default envelopes that came with them were really thin. 

I saw somewhere in the Wedding Wire forum where someone did the lining with colored paper. I wanted to keep with my silver and ice blue theme so I got a silver gift wrap and cut to the shape of the envelop. Sorry I'm missing some pictures, but hopefully you can get the gist. 


First I cut a rectangle the size of the envelope using my mat with ruler, I then sliced off a tiny bit so it could fit in the envelope. Then I put the rectangle in the envelop and folded it to the shape of the envelope flap. Since it was my prototype, I didn't care if it was crinkled. I used that and my paper cutter to mimic the sample and cut all that I needed (110).

After cutting up all of my lining, I stuffed them into the envelopes.  

 Then I used glue stick to stick the flap of the lining to the flap of the envelope. I didn't bother to glue the inner part of the lining. Placing the invitations in there kept it in place. Yes this cost me time, but I had that during my planning and it saved me some more dollars.


Wednesday, March 5, 2014

Wedding DIY Stamped Coctail Napkins

I wanted personalized napkins with the monogram/logo I'd designed for the wedding. I went online searching for someone to do the stamp and found a website http://www.rubberstamps.net/ to do my custom job. For about $15 I got my 1.5"X3" rubber stamp including the shipping. I picked up an ink pad (permanent) from Joann's on sale an used it and I was ready to stamp.

 With a movie ready, I stamped over 200 cocktail napkins that I'd picked up from Ikea. $1.99 for 100 in a pack. I purchased 2 packs. I used regular paper to do a couple of stamps at first to make sure there was no blotches, and then proceded. As you can see to the left of the two lower images, I'd lay out 3 napkins and stamp, stamp, stamp, stack and repeat. I made sure to apply even pressure. I had to reapply everytime to make sure I had a clear image for each napkin.

 This was the final look at the wedding. The worked perfectly and there was no running of ink onto anything or anyone. Athough my arm was tired by the end, I got a lot of use out of that stamp in many other areas of the wedding.



Monday, March 3, 2014

Wedding Gift Card Box DIY

When I ordered the rosette fabric for the godet and train for my wedding dress, I made sure to get extra of the rosette for other areas in the decor. One area was our gift card box,. I went to Ross and got a large hat box. I cut a 1" X 8" rectangle into the top of the box.
 Then I covered the lid and the bottom separately using fabric glue. In hindsight, I would have used hot glue gun, but the fabric glue work.

 First I cut a circle a little larger than the top of the lid and then made a slit in the same area that the rectangle was cut from. I didn't cut a rectangle, I wanted the excess fabric to fold around the hole.

 It worked best for me to cut a rectangle the entire circumference of the box and about 4 inches taller. Then I wrapped the fabric around the cylinder and then folded in the excess fabric (about an inch) inside the box and underneath (the remaining excess). I didn't bother to cover the exposed piece. I also cut out triangles out of the bottom to make sure the excess could lay flat.

 I used a blue ribbon around the lid and and 3 adhesive rhinestone usually used for scrap books or invitation decorations.

For a final touch, I got artificial grapes and when my then fiance was stray painting the bottles for the centerpieces, he sprayed the grapes silver for me. I used hot glue to adhere it to the top of the lid. The lid was a really tight fit because of the fabric. I liked it because not anyone could just go and pull off the lid and take a card away. It held up perfectly well for both wedding ceremonies and was large enough to fit every card that we got. 


Friday, February 28, 2014

Bass Ackward Blog

I'm terrible at blogging. To me it's like journaling which I've never been good at either. Except for weight watchers, I pretty much don't do a good job of regaling tales of my daily life or projects. I do take pictures and have the best intention of posting since so many others have helped me unknowingly with their blog posts. But no matter how hard I try, I end up doing a few postings and then slacking off. The title of this post adequately captures this blog. It was supposed to be me posting about the wedding planning and crafting, but you know what, that stuff takes a lot of time and there's no real time to post on blogs and in wedding forums when you're trying to plan a wedding and decide you want to do everything yourself (I'm economical). So over the next however long it takes me, I'm going to post the projects that I did for my wedding. I've been married now for 10 months as of two days ago. WOW time flies cause I just realized that when I looked at the date. Okay so things won't always be in order of how it was done, but I'll try to capture what I did. 
I'll say that the many things I learned in the process helped me with my decision to open my own etsy shop. I was so inspired. From the wine box that I etched with our logo and his family crest to my wedding dress, I'll do my best to show everything I captured. 

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Ouch

Hazards of wedding DIY. In trying to remove the metal piece from around the neck of the wine bottles, I've earned two new band-aids. I started the label peeling of the wine bottles.

Thursday, October 11, 2012

Goofed on first big order

I ordered a bunch of supplies from the Webstaurant store, but didn't pay attention to the guest towels. They were supposed to be plain (so I thought), but it turned out to have "guest towel" written across the front so there's no way for me to stamp the monograms on them. I'll have to order a new batch since I'd be out $20 by returned and ordering the new set. I'll make sure to read carefully this time.
The forks, dessert spoons, wave plates, cocktail napkins, wine goblets, tumblers and spoon straws all came in. I hope I'm still sticking to the budget.

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Save the dates.

Mailed out the save the dates on Tuesday or Wednesday morning. I'm so excited because everything turned out well. People have received and have been visiting the site.
Ordered the napkins, flatware, etc from Webrestaurant on 10/6 and can't wait for those to get in so I can stamp our monograms on them.
We also went to the wine festival yesterday afternoon and had fun, but I can't repeat that for a while because that will totally mess with my losing weight in time for the wedding.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

From Engagement until 10/2

Wow it's been about 6 weeks since I got engaged, August 17th, two days after my birthday to be precise. How time flies. On our website I shared the story of how it all happened, but even though I knew the proposal was coming it still caught me by surprise. As soon as I got back and shared the ring pictures with everyone and wanted to get right to trying on dresses to figure out my silhouette before going in for surgery. I was going to be getting a sessamoidectomy on my left foot which had been bothering me for well over a year. Almost as long as Brian and I have been together.
We selected our venues: Church of the Ascensions and Bay District Volunteer Firehouse.
We took our engagement pictures on September 14th at National Harbor...thanks to Garrett James of Capital Media.
Designed our monogram  and order a stamp to put or monogram in various places where possible.
Designed and ordered the save the dates.
Completed collecting the addresses of my A-Listers and plan to mail things out tomorrow.
Chose my caterer today, 10/2...Quality Street Kitchen and I'm excited with the way she tailored the menu to what we envisioned. Now I can start with the rest of the planning.

As for my dress, I did a fitting of my muslin on 9/28 and we decided to wait until February to start because I want to drop a few more inches and don't want to have to alter the dress later. In the meantime, I've got plenty of other projects.
I'm in the process of collecting wine bottles from everyone I know for the centerpieces.