… and the Lobster wedding invites are done.
Hello. We’ve been working hard and after a week of cutting liners, gluing backings, learning to tie twine, our wedding invitations are officially in USPS’ hands for guests to receive after the hot holiday weekend!
No line at the post office, what??
Before I do the reveal, I want to give a big shout out to Derek at 4fifteen who created a design that perfectly suited my tastes and our wedding style. He walked me through every step of the way and took care of things I am unfamiliar with including finding a reasonably priced letterpress printer! If only the Internet had feel-o-vision:


Mmm, letterpress
I shared most of the paper details in my previous post so we’ll just get to the pictures:
Initially, I wasn’t sure if 1 spool of twine would be enough. But it was more than enough even after using over 2 feet per invite (I made 100).
twines
my work station
My wonky printer made it so that I had to hand feed each envelope with a post-it to avoid printer dashes.
Annoying dashed lines!!
A 100 card backs and 100 invites? No problem with some double stick tape and World Cup soccer in the background.
In case you’re interested, a twine tying pictorial:

Cross your twine, twist it, flip it over, tie a bow, and cut to length.
Upon opening the envelope, this is what the guests will see:
Then this:
And the main invite:

Finally, the full invitation suite:

Printing the envelopes was the most time consuming and stressful part of this process. After that was the twine tying. While most guests won’t even bat an eyelash before untying the sucker, I still *had* to do it.
By the time the last invitation was sealed, I was soooo over these invites. And yet I still found it difficult to just drop them in the mail. I asked one of my bridesmaids, “should I go get them hand canceled? or just get over it” to which she responded, “just let it go, girlfriend.” LOL. But I couldn’t…
So early on Saturday morning, I made Mr. Lobster accompany me to the post office for a proper send off after he informed me that the first 50 were free and 5 cents thereafter. The postal worker kindly counted out my invites, put them in a bin, and said OK, they’ll be delivered in 2-5 days. What? I don’t get to hand cancel them myself? I didn’t get to say a proper goodbye…
Did you find it difficult to “let go” of your invitations? What was your favorite or least favorite part about the invitation assembly?
This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.






