Red Roses Quinceanera Invitations, Cardmaking, Papercrafting Guide and Ideas

I’m weird. While my competitors churn out twenty invitations using AI while face-rolling their keyboard for dramatic effect, I make one. Yeah, that’s it: one invitation. To be fair, it’s one invitation design, some ephemera, and an A7 envelope, and a whole complete cute final papercrafting design with an important function to fulfill, but still face-rolling twenty AI invitations wins because today’s algorithms prefer quantity. Twenty is ALWAYS more than one. Yup, that’s prime algorithm logic: “must boost those who face-roll twenty, instead of those who hand-make one, what is even a hand, must be something slow”

Red Roses Quinceanera Invitation

So, I’ve decided I’ll just do what I want to design, because I really like the process of design, because only then I can come up with something new and fresh for the market (at least till it gets popular, because that’s when competitors start copying frantically, and horribly most of the times, like they have no chill). Some people even copied my SEO and Collections themes and names. Like WTF? I can’t even call you a robot because robots actually are proving to have more creativity than these nasty human things that copy. Like bruh/sis, those nice big corporations made real nice AI apps for you to face-roll twenty of them while I make one, so just let me have my one, and you just face-roll twenty more in one day. How about that? No? You still want to copy my stuff because you greedy? Come on! Let me have some sales at least. You got to take everything?

Yeah I’m definitely going to prefer more robots in the future. In the past, it was a pleasure working alongside real designers, now that’s an endangered species.

Bringing Design Back – Assembling Red Roses Quinceanera Invitations

If you’ve purchased my Red Roses Quinceanera Invitation Template Kit in Ready-To-Print Digital Files format, then you’ll receive Invitation front side and back side laid out on 8.5″x11″ sheet for U.S. customers, and on A4 sheet for customers from rest of the world.

Print them on only one side of cardstock. You may manually cut them out using a pair of scissors. Then stick the front side and back side, back to back, to increase the thickness of the overall card.

Or you may ask your print shop to die cut a 5″ diameter circle out of the separate 5.25″x5.25″ square PDF file I provide. Or you may print it as 5″x5″ square, if you prefer that.

If you purchase printed cards from my Zazzle shop, the backside will be printed on the same card, since the thickness of the card is already quite good. You will have the option to print the cards as circles, squares, or squares with rounded edge.

You’ll also receive an ephemera sheet of roses and butterflies in the ready-to-print digital files format. If you love crafting, then you’ll love cutting these out manually!

I don’t have a cricut/svg option right now, though I will add them in the future.

Red Roses Butterflies Ephemera Fussy Cuts For Cardmaking Papercrafts Junk Journal by Soumya's Templates

You may embellish the final card with ephemera, fussy cuts, and pearl stickers, as shown below. I got my pearl stickers from Amazon. Just search for “pearl stickers” or “rhinestone stickers”.

When you stick the butterflies, add glue to only the middle portion of the butterflies, leaving the edges of the wings glue-less, so that the wings can have a subtle curvature, giving them a semblance of a realistic dimension.

For this kit, I’m giving you an 8.5″x11″ or A4 sheet for making a matching A7 envelope.

Get This Look

Collection ID: I Didn’t Know You Love Roses

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