My crazy wedding project: pocketfold wedding invitations
Once upon a time, I said I would never make pocketfold envelopes.
Screen cap from Weddingbee |
Please notice that was August of last year, mere days from when I placed our invitation order. A few weeks later, they arrived. The white mailing envelopes were not overly sturdy, and I was a bit concerned that our invites would get damaged in the mailing process.
What to do? The obvious was to get a new mailing envelope or to better protect the invitation. I debated making pocketfolds for weeks. After talking with Mac, I decided to go for it. Weddingbee’s Mrs. Teacup and Mrs. Deviled Egg had great tutorials, and I based our crafting off of theirs. Some thorough searching led me to Paper and More.
Ordering the paper for your pocketfold wedding invitations
- Decide on a paper color or pattern. I printed out the cardstock description of several colors and compared them to our invites. We opted for the Sunset Orange color to coordinate with our invitation suite.
- Determine what size cardstock you need and order enough paper. Our invites were about 5×7, so we used 12×12 paper. We ordered 3 50-packs of cardstock to make enough pocketfolds for 140 invitations.
- Gather more supplies than you think you could ever use. I invested in a scoring board, a bone folder, a corner rounder, a paper cutter, and tape runners. Overbuy tape runners. You will use them again.
How to assemble the pocketfold wedding invitations
- Verify the invite size. As I mentioned, ours weren’t exactly 7×5. I went with 8×12 to make sure the pocketfold was larger.
- Trim the 12×12 sheet down to 8×12. Save the 4×12 section to make your pockets.
- Score the 8×12 sheet at 2.5″ and at 7.5.” I marked my scoring board with Sharpie for convenience.
- Fold the scored lines with a bone folder for nice, crisp lines.
- Round all corners.
- Take your 4×12 scrap to make the pocket. Cut it down to 4×5. Score at 0.5″ and 3.5.” Fold these lines with the bone folder.
- Turn the paper 90 degrees and score at 0.5″ to create the bottom seam. Miter your corners by cutting across the score lines.
- Run the tape runner along each of the half inch seams. Center the pocket on the right fold and press down.
Sorry this picture sucks. |
I used a different color so you could see it. |
You’re done!
I basically followed Mrs. Deviled Egg’s post from Weddingbee. If you noticed, we made a bottom envelope, not a side one.