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What to Know About Foil Wedding Invitations

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What to Know About Foil Wedding Invitations

This detail is the perfect way to ensure your invites shine.

Courtesy of Feel Good Invites

When it comes to your wedding day, there’s nothing wrong with featuring a little bling, and you can easily get a start on that by setting the tone with your invitation suite. A great way to add some shine to your wedding invitations is with a foil element. What is foil? Simply put, it's a metallic material that can come dyed in various colors like gold, silver, copper, and even a holographic style. The foiling method has been around for centuries, with stationers hand-pressing it back in the day. Today, you can get your invitations foil-printed by a machine in bulk—both in flat print and letterpress. And whether you’re going for a modern or rustic look, there are ways to incorporate this metallic style into your invitations. 

Foil isn't necessarily going to be the only material used in your invitation. “It just adds another level to the invite and makes them look classic and timeless. It’s super luxurious and makes a great impact,” says Joy Montgomery of The Stationery Bar. Want to know everything about foil wedding invitations? Here’s what you need to know to achieve that luxe look, according to Montgomery and calligrapher Laura Hooper.

Foil is a versatile printing material, not only in how many color options there are but in how you can actually incorporate it into your invitation suite. The most common way is by foil-printing the text— all of it or just some—but you can opt for foil edges on thick card stock, beveling, a foil jacket, foiling on the envelope, or a metallic card to place behind a translucent invitation.  

Foil edging is one of Hooper’s favorites as it creates a beautiful stacked look. She also likes mixing styles. “I personally really love it when we’re able to combine foil letterpress printing with a secondary print style such as watercolor digital printing or a blind letterpress or emboss,” she explains. 

“[Invitations] can be letterpress printed, embossed, flat printed—there are endless possibilities with foil. Because it is opaque, it works well with any paper color, even darker colors such as black, navy, forest green,” explains Hooper. “It’s helpful to keep in mind as well that once you use foiling in your invitation suites, it can be tied in throughout your reception stationery as well—programs, menus, signage, custom maps, and itineraries. It’s a fun way to tie the stationery into your overall wedding design.”

“I really do think [foil invitations] work with all styles,” says Montgomery. She finds foil to be both a classic and of-the-moment look at the same time, with trends right now skewing towards rose gold, gold, black on black, and holographic. “Metallics overall have been in trend for a bit recently,” adds Hooper. “Gold is certainly the foil color our clients choose most frequently.” Hooper prefers foiling on either modern or rustic invitations and says, “the script style and design overall set the tone.”

“There are so many ways to make it modern or make it softer depending on the printing style and the rest of the invite,” adds Montgomery. For one couple, she used holographic foil on a natural, raw edge invitation to merge vintage and contemporary styles for the couple. “It was a nice way to bring a modern feel but keep it soft,” she says. 

For a more traditional look, experts advise to go for gold. For a fresh take, use a color or monochromatic black on black. As we mentioned, rose gold and holographic (silver with hues of pink and purple) are also ultra-modern. 

“It’s top-of-the-line. It’s one of your more expensive forms of printing,” says Montgomery of foil invitation styles. “Engraving would take the cake, but foil is on the luxury side.” Though if you want to incorporate foil on a budget, there are ways to cut costs. First, the cost will depend on how much foil you incorporate. Adding a touch here and there will be easier on your wallet than full foil lettering. 

To save a bit, Montgomery suggests looking for pre-designed cardstock that includes a foil detail (a floral design or a foil edge) rather than going fully custom. On papier.com, for example, foil-detailed invitations sell for about $35 for 10 invites, and Etsy has some options as well. Also, digital flat printing is more economical than letterpress, which uses an actual metal plate to transfer the text to paper versus a printer. 

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