Two years ago I was blessed with the task of creating invitations for our family reunion. Six generations of my mom’s family were going to gather at the homestead that my great-grandfather built in 1898. Talk about pressure! I was honored to accept the task. There were so many elements that I wanted to include in the invitation to ensure that the recipients would be filled with nostalgia and be excited to attend.
Here is the finished product. You can easily create the same type of invitation, and you probably already have all of the supplies that you’ll need.
Supplies:
Two different colors of cardstock, brads, brown ink (or any dark color that coordinates with the cardstock you’re using,) hole punch (for the brads,) corner-rounder
I used a two-column word doc to create the photo and wording of the invitation, and then I printed them onto Very Vanilla cardstock. The photo I used is an actual photo of my great-grandparents, great aunts and uncles, and grandfather in front of the house that my great-grandfather built (and where we had the reunion.) I’ll bet when they posed for this photo they had NO IDEA that it would one day end up on the worldwide web. (By the way, that’s a baby goat in the photo.)
Try to gather a photo that includes as many generations as possible. I think it adds a nice touch.
Here’s the wording I used and you can use, too, since most family reunions include the same type of stuff, right? Food, music, fun, and games!
Now, to create a vintage look, there are three things you can do. First, before you attach the two pieces of cardstock together with the brads, scrape the sides of the cardstock directly against the ink pad. This will put ink along all of the edges. Then take the ink pad and randomly and lightly blot some ink directly onto the paper.
Second, add the brads to fasten the two pieces of cardstock together. After you add the brads, use a hammer and bang them flat. Finally, rub the sides of the cardstock against a metal edge (like a metal ruler or a pair of scissors,) to make the sides wrinkly. Don’t worry if you make some little tears; it looks better that way!
That’s all there is to it! The only difficult part of this project was creating the word doc. I always go crazy when I have to center things in columns, etc.
Have fun making the invitations for your family reunion. 😉
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That’s really shrewd! Good to see the logic set out so well.
Just finished a great meal with the Mrs.; pan seared ribeye steak, german fried red (actually purple skin) potatos with onions, and peas:>)I’m gonna sleep good tonight.Shabbat Shalom, y’all
Thank you Becky.I have been saving those shaker containers from games to do this very thing… (I've been using the tiles from games and throwing those shakers away!!!) What was wrong with me!!blessingslove your blogbarbara jean
i agree with nev. this is creepy, an ending that describes what the thing looks like and how it went around killing everybody is disgusting at best. just because nobody dies doesn’t make it less creepy. kinda reminds me of that story where the guy gets stuck in a tomb/cellar for a night and wakes up with bloody hand prints on his face, but that one was more sweet.VA:F [1.9.21_1169](from 0 votes)