Set the style before ordering
Stationery should connect to the event palette, venue and level of formality. Classic card, acrylic, vellum, laser-cut details and embellished finishes each create a different first impression.
Choose the design direction before committing to materials.
Send save the dates early if needed
For weddings with travelling guests, public holiday dates or peak season timing, save the dates can be helpful well before formal invitations.
Local weddings with a simpler guest list may not need them.
Order invitations with enough revision time
Invitations need names, dates, venue details, RSVP information and sometimes accommodation or wishing well wording. Allow time for proofreading and changes.
Spelling and guest name accuracy matter because invitations are often kept as mementos.
Plan on-the-day stationery together
Menus, place cards, seating plans, table numbers, welcome signs and bar signs should be planned as one family.
This makes the reception feel cohesive and avoids mismatched last-minute pieces.
Coordinate signage with hire pieces
A welcome board needs an easel or stand. A seating plan may need a frame, plinth or wall-safe display. Menus and table numbers need to work with table styling.
The stationery plan should include how each piece will physically sit in the venue.
Leave time for guest list changes
Guest names and table allocations often change late. Build a final proof deadline into the plan so the last week is not overloaded.
A calm timeline keeps stationery from becoming a stressful detail.
Key takeaways
- Choose stationery style after the event direction is clear.
- Plan invitations and on-the-day items together.
- Check how signage will be displayed.
- Allow time for proofreading and guest list changes.
Planning questions
Common questions
When should wedding invitations be ordered?
Most couples should begin once the venue, date and guest list are stable, leaving time for design, proofing and production.
Should menus match invitations?
They do not need to be identical, but they should share a palette, type style or material cue.