Monday, March 18, 2013

DIY for the Fibro Bride: Save-the-Dates


Note: Hi, everyone! I'm so excited to be contributing to this blog! I'm doing a DIY wedding blog series right now on ChickOpinion.com/FibroTips4Chicks and thought I'd throw a few of my posts over to this one because it's the perfect venue. I will, however, definitely write a few specifically for "A Very Spoonie Wedding" in the near future. xoxo Kinsey

Congratulations! You're engaged! Once you've figured out when and where you're getting married, the first thing you need to do is get save-the-dates. I assume that the reason you're reading this is because you want to make them! A lot of fibromyalgia patients have part-time jobs or are unemployed, so this is an easy way that you can get great looking save-the-date postcards without spending a lot of money or having too much stress put on you.
The front of my Save-the-Date postcard.
Materials

  • Card stock
  • Printer
  • Computer
  • Powerpoint (or something like it)
  • Scissors or paper-cutter
  • Postcard stamps
  • Pen
  • Time

Instructions

  • Go to WeddingChicks.com and find their "DIY Printable Wedding Template" section (the previous link is direct to this section).
  • Choose a template you like. This can take a long time! I liked most of them and messed around with a lot of them.
  • Input your information and your colors to the template.
  • Play around with them! Don't print anything without being 100% sure it's exactly what you want. You can be as picky as you want--it's your wedding!
  • "Create" your print.
  • Download it.
  • Save it. Save your work. lol
  • Open Powerpoint.
  • Review the USPS rules for postcards here to make sure you have the right size. If you don't have the legal size, they won't mail it and you won't be able to reuse it.
  • Review the main points of your Save-the-Date. I used mine as an announcement, too, so I told people that we're getting married, I told them the date, what city it would be in, my email address, and that an invitation would follow. There isn't anything else that needs to be on there. There's also not much room for anything else on a postcard.
The back of my Save-the-Date postcard.



  • Start with a rectangle that is the size of your postcard. You'll hide this later, but it's important to contain your objects.
  • I made the back of the postcard monochromatic (the red lines are from the screenshot, letting me know that our names are misspelled!) because I didn't want to completely deplete my ink supply. Obviously, you'll need to choose your colors according to what you want.
  • Try to match the font that you use on the back of your postcard with the one the template uses on the front. 
  • You can play with what is in the foreground and background to make any "watermark"-type situations you want. You can also do this by messing around with the transparency of an object.
  • Make sure you have your return address on your postcard. Mine is under the grey rectangle--don't need everybody knowing where I live! :-)
  • Once the back is exactly how you like it, group it together.
  • Save it.
  • Copy it and paste the copy next to the original so that you have two postcard backs next do each other.
  • Save.
  • Get yourself a new slide in the same "presentation."
  • Insert your previously downloaded front of the Save-the-Date on the new slide.
  • Copy and paste it so you have two postcard fronts next to each other (see below).
Screen shot of the two slides.


  • Make sure that they have the same margins, so when you print them they'll end up matching. This part can be tedious and very irritating. Be patient.
  • Save. :-)
  • Load your printer with card stock.
  • Print only one of the slides first. Eg. 30 copies of the front of the postcard.
  • Figure out how your printer works: do you need to flip the pages over or around or backwards to get the other side of the postcard to print where it needs to?
  • Print the other side.
  • Cut them out!
  • Get your postcard stamps out and start stamping! Make sure you use postcard stamps and not regular ones; you'll save about 50% of your stamp money!
  • Address them.
  • Mail them! :-)

You're done! I received a fantastic response to mine--people loved them! They look so professional and, while they do take a few hours to make yourself, it's completely worth it.

When you DIY, Destiny Is Yours! 

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