34 Results

save the date

Search

Out-of-the-Box Save-the-Dates

The ‘Save-the-Date’ has become increasingly more popular in the last ten to fifteen years. They are a fun way to give your guests plenty of warning about the date of your wedding, given that the invitations are typically sent six to eight weeks before the event.

Plain stationary for save-the-dates is rarely seen anymore (which doesn’t mean it isn’t a good idea!) The fridge magnet is a popular choice, but I’ve found many other unique and beautiful options. Click on the pictures below to link to the source site. How about that balloon? And the matchboxes? Love.

2014 Summer Reading List Part 2

As I mentioned here, I have been doing a lot of reading since Isla’s birth. I’ve finished a number of wonderful books since my last post, and I want to share them with you. The last nine books have had some hits and some misses. The ‘must reads’ include Ella Minnow Pea, Eleanor and Park, Girl in Translation and The Cuckoo’s Calling. I would not recommend reading Save the Date, and am pretty iffy on The Vacationers and Austenland (links to all novels below). For summaries and my thoughts, read below! Please give me your suggestions! I’m currently reading the sequel to The Cuckoo’s Calling, titled The Silkworm. Loving it so far.


 

4328379926_ac86ac0a55

Ella Minnow Pea by Mark Dunn is a genius novel. It is set in the fictional island of Nollop, where the town’s ‘god’ is the man who fictitiously created the pangram ‘The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.’ This sentence hangs in the town, and as letters start to fall to the ground, the leaders of Nollop start to ban them from everyday language. It’s a very, very well written book, and I highly recommend it to any literary lover.


 

1352137632_The-ChanceThe Chance by Karen Kingsbury is a nice, easy read. I love Karen’s novels, and have read about 20 of them over time, so the only negative thing I have to say about this book is that it’s predictable. The story is based on two high school best friends who are torn apart due to the girl’s mother’s affair. Many years later, the two individuals paths are set to cross as they reach the date of a reunion set about before Ellie moved to California. Karen is a Christian fiction author, and I enjoyed reading this novel and being reminded about how God influences our daily lives.


 

girltranslationGirl in Translation by Jean Kwok is amazing. Seriously. I will admit that I thought it was an autobiography for 90% of the book, which made me cry even harder about the hardships this young Chinese girl faces living in the slums of New York. I love it, even knowing that it’s fiction! This novel will open your eyes about the conditions that immigrants face when coming to the United States and how difficult it is to land in a country with a foreign language. This is a must, must, must read.


 

GONE_GIRLGone Girl by Gillian Flynn… well, gosh. I loved it until the very, very end. Like, the last few pages – and it’s long. And even now, I don’t hate it – but the ending is not how I would have written it! This novel is also very well written, and is a definite page turner. I finished it in a day and a half – keep in mind, Isla feeds 7-8 times a day, so there’s lots of reading time. The premise of the book is that a man is framed for murdering his wife, but it is far more intricate than that. I don’t want to give anything away, but read it for yourself and let me know what you think about the ending. I cannot wait to see the movie, which comes out this year!


 

9781594631573_custom-4b106fc6a0849fb88eaa0e325b41623860b3f21d-s6-c30The Vacationers by Emma Staub is (truthfully) overrated. I see it ALL over Instagram that bloggers are reading it, and I really didn’t think it was that great. It’s an easy read, but not necessarily page turning. I get why a book about a family vacation gets dubbed as a summer read, but I don’t recommend reading it. The storyline is about a girl whose dad has an affair on her mother, but they are sticking together for a family vacation abroad, where they are joined by her brother, his girlfriend, and her mom’s best (gay) friend and his husband. If you’re looking for a book to read, try one of my ‘must reads’!


 

rowell_ep_usEleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell is absolutely incredible. I loved every page of this book. Eleanor is a very, very poor girl whose stepfather is very abusive. She goes to a new school, and is befriended by Park, a small Asian boy, who allows her to sit next to him on the school bus, much against his desire (due to intense ridicule from the popular kids). Their friendship develops without Eleanor’s parents knowing and then takes some interesting turns. Please, read this.


 

9781594631986B.JPGSave the Date by Jen Doll – I wouldn’t bother reading this. I don’t think I’ve quit reading a book ever in my life, but about 60% of the way through Save the Date, I did just that. I felt like it was a collection of (some funny, some complainy) wedding stories by an unmarried woman. It came off a bit feminist and ‘some people find that they have to get married to be happy, but I don’t!’ ish.


 

9781596912854_custom-0253823464e253deda04e02d8445d304f1b4c7e5-s6-c30

Austenland by Shannon Hale is another easy read, but very, very predictable if you have read any Jane Austen novels. I enjoyed it nonetheless. It’s about a girl whose late relative pays for her to go to England and experience a submersion experience ‘Austenland.’ All Jane wants to do in life is find her Mr. Darcy, and you sort of expect that she will from the first page.


 

9780316206846_custom-011797377029ae073fad95dcd2116402cac33bf0-s6-c30The Cuckoo’s Calling by Robert Galbraith (i.e. J. K. Rowling) is such an intricate, page-turning, exciting novel. I haven’t read this sort of detective novel in years, and I was seriously dying to find out ‘whodunit’ from the very beginning. It is about a model, Lulu, who is found dead and declared by the police that it was a suicide attempt. Lulu’s brother pays Cormoran Strike, a detective, to figure out the true cause of her death. I pinned it on about seven different people throughout the book and was very anxious to find out the true murderer.


Thank you for the great suggestions last time! Please give me more books to read if you have your own ‘must reads.’

Featured image by Palwasha N. Minhas

Our Wedding Stationery: Papellerie

As I’ve mentioned many times before, we worked with Papellerie on our entire stationery suite (save the dates, invitations, programs, custom napkins, etc.). I loved working with Riley and Amy so much – they were incredibly good at understanding exactly what we (probably more I) wanted. Every single piece of our stationery was better than I could have ever imagined. The only missing photos were all of the goodies they made for our guest boxes! I’m upset that I didn’t think to have Ryan to take any pictures of the final product (my very unprofessional iPhone pictures below). The only faux-pas we had was that our seating assignment board – a corkboard with pins and personalized wine tags for guest’s glass with their name and table number – was setup vertically instead of horizontally (as planned), which made the tags fall kind of… off? You’ll see below. It’s definitely not a big deal though. As an FYI, the calligrapher that Papellerie uses is Meant To Be Calligraphy and the map artist was Katie Gastley. Everyone was amazing.

Our Save-the-Dates

DSC_0445

DSC_0443

DSC_0441

Our Invitation Set

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_212

DSC_1216

DSC_1184

DSC_1187

DSC_1188

DSC_1207

DSC_1215

DSC_1205

Our Programs

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_214

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_012

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_008

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_215

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_337

Our Placemats and Menus

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_217

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_219

Our Table Numbers

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_223

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_233

Our Reserved Signs

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_235

Our Table Assignments – a slight deviation from plan, as it was set up vertically instead of horizontally so the personalized wine tags don’t hang quite right! You win some, you lose some!

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_417

Our Custom Drink Bar Sign

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_418

Our Cupcake Flavor Labels

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_565

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_566

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_567

Our “Write your favorite memory” Postcards (A + S were gifted by my sweet little cousin!)

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_569

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_573

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_570

#ASPWedding Instagram Sign and Taxi Vouchers

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_571

Grand Exit Sign (Noisemakers here)

Sasha_Ailee_Wedding_572

My iPhone Pictures of Guest Box Assembly + Seating Assignments

photo 5 (19)

photo 3 (24)

photo 2 (32)

photo 1 (34)

Booking 2020 Family Photos

While we were in Durango for the last five weeks, I had the privilege of photographing two of my best friends and their beautiful families while they were in town. I honestly adore my job – I get such a thrill from capturing people’s precious life milestones, and there is nothing greater than getting to do this for the ones you love the most! The Behenna and Armes kiddos were all so sweet and playful during their photos, which makes snapping their pretty faces very fun!

The crisp Durango weather that we had during Kirby and Sydney’s sessions is a stark difference from perpetually humid Houston, and it has me all excited for fall. I cannot wait to get back into the swing of ‘family photo season,’ and am so looking forward to seeing some of my favorite repeat clients and getting to meet new families!

This year, I am capping the number of portrait sessions in order to try to save my sanity which is normally gone by early December after a few months of late night editing! I recently emailed last year’s clients, who have snapped up most of the slots, but I still have eleven openings left for 2020!

I have details about my family session pricing here. If you are interested in booking portraits with me (woohoo, thank you!) – you can pick a date and book a session here! I can’t wait to meet you and your family! If you have any questions, please feel free to email me at ailee@snapshotsbyaileepetrovic.com.

The Ultimate Photo Book Guide

The two topics that I receive most questions about (via Instagram’s Direct Message or email) are printing photo books and managing photo storage. Alas, a post that covers both in great detail is very overdue, but actually very timely, given that most people start to think about printing photo books at the end of every year. Plus, most photo sites have great discounts right now (50% off everything at Mixbook until 1/1/18 at midnight, 50% off everything at Shutterfly until 12/28/17 at midnight, etc.).

If you’re new to Snapshots & My Thoughts, then you may not know about my love obsession with photo books. I started printing them in 2006, during my first year in college, and have printed many ever since. Beginning in 2010 (the year I graduated), I began to make an annual photo book in Shutterfly. I would pick a theme, but customize almost every page to my liking. Looking back at the early books, the designs are cringe-worthy but I absolutely love them. I would also print books for vacations and other special events. In 2013, I decided to do a photo-a-day book for Isla, which was quite the undertaking. I am so glad that I documented every day, because it’s amazing to watch her grow page by page, but with sweet Emilia, I am doing a photo-a-week, and you can see the transformation just the same (with much less work involved!). I will share these layouts below!

Every year, I would update the annual book at the end of every month, occasionally falling a month behind but always staying rather up-to-date. Well 2017 happened – a second baby, a busy work schedule and a husband who travels every week for week and alas, my fancy, customized-per-page Shutterfly book didn’t happen. Which I’m still coming to terms with, since I’m one for consistency and routine! I did, however, fall in love with another company in the transition.

I was introduced to Artifact Uprising a few years ago, as I used them to make our Christmas card in 2015. Last year, I decided to invest in one of their layflat books (which are pricier than Shutterfly, beginning at $179 for the 8.25×11 size that I love) for our family photos. Then in February, I chose to print Emi’s newborn photos in another layflat book and seeing the quality of these two ultra-thick, fabric bound books, I was hooked. I printed five layflat books total in 2017!

Fast forward to November 1st, I had this huge cloud hanging over my head: our annual photo book, which had two months of content in it, needed lots and lots of work (and time!). October through December are my busiest months, and I knew I couldn’t spend the time I needed to make the Shutterfly book I wanted. The obvious alternative was Artifact Uprising, as I knew if I couldn’t have ultra-designed, I wanted ultra-simple and white. I couldn’t wrap my head around spending $250+ on each book (I knew I’d need multiple books for how many photos I took this year). I decided to try their hardcover books, which begin at $79 for an 8.5×11 book. I chose the 50 page option, which allows you to fill 99 pages, and managed to get January through March photos included. Filling the pages went so quickly, and you can even chose auto-fill. I’ll go into detail on the uploading process below. I ended up having five books total, but could have done less if I had chosen to do the 150 page option for each instead (allowing you 199 pages) of 50 (allowing 99).

All in all, I am so in love with our 2017 annual photo books. It was not the cheapest option, but I used two Artifact Uprising coupons to bring down the cost (more on coupons in the FAQ section below!). I know that the interest in printing photo books is out there, as people always reply to my Instagram posts or stories saying that much. So, I pray that this post helps move you to action! Print those photos – whether that be prints or books. I love Artifact Uprising’s motto: Inspired by the disappearing beauty of the tangible. I stand behind that – if photos stay on digital devices, we are slowly losing the beauty of the tangible printed photos, which tell stories that generations beyond us can cherish.

There is a lot of content in this blog post. First, I’ll cover details on the books I’ve printed before: annual Shutterfly photo books, photo-a-day/week Shutterfly photo books,annual photo books using Artifact Uprising hardcover photo books and special occasion Artifact Uprising layflat photo books. This is probably my most personal post ever, as I’m actually sharing links to many of our family’s books. Let me tell you: when I made them, I had no intention of them ever being viewed by anyone outside of close family or friends, so they include very personal photos and details, but I really do want to help inspire people to make books, so I feel like it’s important to do this.

So, let’s begin!