NEW PRODUCT – CONFETTI

Recycled paper heart confetti

Biodegradable recycled heart confetti

Complete with handmade envelopes
Fully customised
Various colours available

Each envelope contains approx. 100 pieces of hand punched heart confetti

Size hearts: 1cm x 1cm
Size envelopes: 10cm x 7.5cm
Colour: various
Paper: various from 120gsm- 180gsm ALL RECYCLED

Pink and white confetti  Recycled pink and white paper hearts in recycled white paper envelopes

Blue and purple confettiRecycled denim and purple paper hearts in recycled white envelopes

white and petal confetti

Recycled white paper with marigold, larkspur, and
cornflower petals in recycled grass paper envelopes.

Price: Envelope with confetti £1.50

Envelope only 85p each

Confetti only 85p (approx. 100 hearts)

#Savetheoceans

#savethewildlife

#avoidplasticandglitter

#ecofriendlywedding

Orangutan Greetings Cards

Orangutan cardsWe are supporting The Orangutan Foundation

Did you know that it’s been orangutan awareness week 11th – 17th Novemeber 2018? We are supporting the Orangutan Foundation here at Blushful Earth Handmade.

We are pleased to release a new range of greetings cards. Our rainforest range include baby orangutan, and our jungle range includes zebras, giraffes, and parrots; all in a 3d layered rainforest made from recycled grass paper.
We are donating £2 from the sale of each card to the Orangutan Foundation https://www.facebook.com/orangutanfndn/ to help them with their work.
These prints would also be great for a jungle /rainforest themed wedding, or birthday party invitations.
Cards are £4.00 including postage and packaging
Please get in touch for further details.
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#saynotopalmoil
#enddeforestation
#orangutanfoundation

Love Lock Tradition

Love Lock Tradition

 

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The love lock tradition is believed to have originated from ancient China. Symbolising love and commitment. A couple lock a padlock to a public object, often a bridge, and throw away the key to symbolise unbreakable love.

The most famous of these bridges where the locks can be seen is Pont Des Art bridge in Paris, France. I was lucky enough to see a much smaller version for the first time this year, at the Ajuy  caves in Fuerteventura.  But they can be seen all over the world.  However, due to the popularity some bridges are now becoming damaged due to the weight of the thousands of padlocks.

So why not incorporate the love lock into your wedding stationery?

Introducing our NEW love lock range

Our new range of save the dates offer a couple of options. Separate lock and key, or locking the padlock version.

Kraft brown love lock save the date

Gold love lock save the date

As always made from recycled card. You can choose different  colour combinations too.

Size 10cm x 8cm

Complete with C6 envelope

Price £1.00 each.

This design can also be used for invitations. Do get in touch to discuss this option further.

Ranunculus the new Peony

Ranunculus are the new Peony

We are pleased to introduce our new invitation. ‘Ranunculus delight’

Delicate hand cut layered Ranunculus lithographic flower. Layering to this invitation adds an extra texture, structure and dimension.

The black and white creates an elegant, sophisticated and romantic design. It  is also universal, as no matter what colour your wedding flowers will be it will match.

Made from recycled card and paper.

135mm x 135mm size.

Complete with white envelopes for RSVP and invitation.

Price starts at £3.00

For further details please contact us directly.

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According to a number of sources including Harpers Bazaar (1) Ranunculus will be a very popular wedding flower for this year, in particular for Spring weddings. Coming in at the 7th most popular wedding flower according to theknot.com (2)

Newer to the wedding scene than the likes of Roses and Peonies, but equally as romantic looking, and available from March through to May (3)

Popular for many reasons but namely their delicate multiple layers almost looking like Origami  (4), and bright colours.

Have a look at Pinterest for bouquet ideas.

1: (https://www.harpersbazaar.com/uk/bazaar-brides/a15923233/wedding-flower-ideas-trends-to-know/ )

2 & 3 (https://www.theknot.com/content/top-10-wedding-flowers)

4: (https://garden.org/learn/articles/view/757/

Winter Wonderland Range

Are you having a winter or Christmas wedding? These shimmering eco friendly wedding invitations are perfect for a winter wedding.
Winter Wonderland Range

Introducing our winter wonderland range. Flat A6 size invitation and matching RSVP. Each card is made from recycled gold and silver leaf paper. This adds a beautiful magical shimmer perfect for a winter or Christmas wedding.

Available with different winter foliage. Pictures show acorn and holly prints.

Price starts at £1.25 (Code: WWL01/02)

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Acorns

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COMPETITION TIME

🌼COMPETITION – GIVEAWAY TIME🌼
Would you like to win EIGHT customised plantable wildflower seed favours?
Each envelope is made from recycled confetti or grass paper. Inside the envelope contains a number of wildflower seed hearts that can be planted. With watering etc your guests can have a little wildflower garden. A perfect way for your guests to remember you wedding day.

The seeds contained within the hearts are; Birdsfoot Trefoil, Black Snapweed, Black Medick, Common Vetch, Meadow Buttercup, Musk Mallow, Ox-eye Daisy, Ribwort Plantain, Red Campion, Self Heal, White Campion, Yarrow, Browntop Bent, Red Fescue, Crested Dogstail, Meadow Fescue and Smooth Stalk Meadow Grass
Full instructions are on the back of the little envelopes.

Your names and wedding date will be added to the favours.

All you have to do is comment on this post on our facebook page with yours and your bride/grooms name and wedding date. You will then be entered into the competition.

Winner will be announced in 7 days time. (Thursday, 2nd November 2017) Good luck <3

TO ENTER VISIT

https://www.facebook.com/blushfulearthhandmade/photos/a.1419911931664506.1073741828.1416896518632714/1939181966404164/?type=3&theater

wildflower seed favours

Customise any design

03/02/2017

All our designs can be customised.

Our bare tree design is very versatile. Any ribbon colour/style can be added. Plus the invitation can be mounted with coordinating card to complement your ribbon choice. Get in touch and let us know your requirements and let us produce you both a unique design.
The design in the picture below is mounted on recycled navy blue card, this complements the red tartan.
#baretreeweddinginvitation #personalised #tartanwedding

https://www.facebook.com/blushfulearthhandmade/photos/a.1419911931664506.1073741828.1416896518632714/1789677601354602/?type=3&theater

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New for Designs 2017 & 2018

NEW DESIGNS FOR 2018

 

New vintage design

We are excited to launch a new vintage range for 2017. The vintage lamp post wedding invitations. Made from 100% recycled card and paper.Currently available in black and white (classic vintage) or kraft brown and black (rustic vintage). The sign on the lamp post is individually sewn with twine or cotton to give an authentic look, the sign post does actually move! The lamp post sign can be customised in many ways to; add your names, wedding invitation, you are invited etc… It is also available in a number of sizes.  The images show are A6 (105mm x 148mm)size. Please message for further details quoting Lmp01. Price starts at £2.00.

Watch this video: https://www.facebook.com/blushfulearthhandmade/videos/

https://blushfulearth.co.uk/handmade/new-2017-designs/

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How Blushful Earth Handmade Started

The price of the average wedding is now over £20k; how to do it for much less and give the finger to ‘Brides’ magazine

wedding-featured

Flanked by an advert for the Ocean Club honeymoon resort in the Bahamas, with young bride and groom toasting a glass of champagne, Brides – “the UK’s number 1 bridal magazine” announces to its readers that “Planning your wedding starts here” (1). It continues: “Sit down together, or with your parents if they’re going to contribute, and work out what you can afford to spend. As a guide, here are the average amounts that ‘Brides’ readers spend: Reception £4189, catering £3069,….” Another seventeen items later, and the total cost for the day is given as £24,716. There are other glossy wedding magazines in addition to Brides. Wedding Ideas puts the average total cost of a wedding in the UK at £17,000; while You and Your Wedding magazine puts the figure at £20,500.

My daughter is getting married, and my wife has been helping her with arrangements. Before this I did not know that there were wedding magazines, and I did not know that it was now a big business “cashing in on couples’ happiness”, as Billy Bragg once sang. I had been completely ignorant of how things had changed since I married my wife in a Catholic Church, gave the priest a small donation, then went to the pub with family and friends for a “do” afterwards.

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According to Maxine Briggs, the editor of You and Your Wedding magazine, these high costs are because couples “want to throw a party of a lifetime”, and that “there is a move towards one-upmanship and high profile weddings such as the recent Kardashian’s is [sic] setting the bar higher” (2). She goes on to remind readers that “50% of brides expect to go over budget to get the day of their dreams”.

My daughter is not outwardly religious, but I was surprised to find that she and her fiancé had been searching for a barn to get married in. Seemingly, again according to Maxine Briggs, finding the right venue is ranked at the top of the “21st century bride’s survey” in terms of importance, and the top three marriage venues are: castles, stately homes, and then barns. I imagined an old stone-walled, dirt floored structure with a corrugated iron roof; but it was made clear to me that this was not the right sort of barn. The type in which brides and grooms aspire to be wed is a centrally heated, double glazed, and carpeted barn, with a gravel drive leading up to it rather than rutted soil.

The availability of these alternative wedding venues is a consequence of the Marriage Act 1994, which permitted that a marriage ceremony could now be solemnized in other “approved places” (3). It opened the door for a whole new way of making money, particularly if you happen to own a castle, stately home, or barn. The amounts being paid are not trivial either, as Ms Briggs goes on to report, with venue hire the biggest wedding expenditure at an average price of £3,397. They charge this because they can, as competition is fierce, and people are willing to pay for their “special day”. Not only is every Saturday invariably booked up often two years in advance for the best venues, but Friday, Sunday, Bank Holiday, and weekday weddings are commonplace, and so the property owner can make a small fortune.

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I did some research and found that in comparison, a registry office wedding costs at its most basic, £70. Bizarrely, this standard fee is actually quoted at £35 per person, as if perhaps they expect to get less (or more) than two applicants. There are extras on top such as a date reservation booking fee of £25, and also a room can be hired with prices varying between £100 to £200.

Weddings are also advertised on The Church of England website. In style and content this competes with the glossy magazines. There are no adverts for Bahaman holiday resorts, but the front page portrays the flexibility offered, with pictures and stories of “biker weddings”, “football weddings”, and a couple who got married at the same time as their son was christened. It is also advertises that “there are now more churches to choose from”. Regarding cost, the Church of England promotes their weddings at “less than £450”. This fee, it is stressed, does not include extras like “organist, bells, or even “heating the church”. These costs are at the church’s “local rate”.

The Roman Catholic Church still have no charge attached to their weddings. They consider that marriage is a sacrament, like the Holy Communion, and as such the sacraments are dispensed by the Church as gifts from God to the community. No payment is therefore expected, although it is asked that if the couple want to, they can make a donation of whatever value they wish.

This historic Christian tradition where love between two people grows with age, strengthening them against adversity, and forming a bond which cannot be broken, must still remain, for despite having lost all of its financial benefits and most of it social importance over the last few decades, people still want to get married. The latest figures available for the UK are 260,000 weddings per year (4). These natural instincts for love and companionship are innate, and not just restricted to human beings. Monogamy is common in many other animals. North American beavers are a good example, building a shared home and living compassionately together all their lives. Other examples include wolves, foxes, gibbons, lizards and 90% of birds. In particular swans, barn owls, magpies, and crows are popularly known for having one mate for life.

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So, despite these glossy magazines and their advertisers stirring up business, encouraging waste, and debt, selling fashion weddings and status to a generation raised on the Disney culture, there is hope. And, in the list of top twenty wedding “themes” (there are such lists), alongside the categories of Hollywood, Glamour, Beach and Military, there is D.I.Y. This does not mean that the bride, groom, and guests will be wearing overalls, but that they will be doing everything themselves. My daughter and her fiancé come within this category.

To help them out, my wife offered to provide for the stationary and flowers (wedding invites, table settings, etc). She also wanted sustainable and ethical products only, but when searching for options, she could fine none. So she began sourcing her own materials and making everything herself. It allowed us to know that there was minimal waste, and that every part of the wedding was doing as little harm as possible to the environment. It turned out that in everyone’s opinion, what she made was far more beautiful too.

So, my wife has now started making wedding stationary for others, and has teamed up with a local independent florist. As a consequence she is also branching out into other areas. All materials are handmade, using paper that is recycled, reclaimed or tree-free. Some of the paper contains flower seeds so that it can be planted after use. Others are made from recycled denim, banana, hay, and even reindeer, giraffe, and rhinoceros poo. For decoration, she uses bio-degradable twines, recycled textile, and natural paints. Because of this, and because materials are usually sourced locally, she has found that she can make this stationary at usually less than half the price of others that are advertised. She also does not charge 100% or more for profit, which has led to her receiving unpleasant accusations from competitors that she is intentionally undercutting them. Everything my wife makes is made to order, and is sustainable; and although there are a range of designs available, she usually makes bespoke stationary to meet customer’s specific requirements. For details see here.

  1. http://www.bridesmagazine.co.uk/planning/general/planning-service/2013/01/average-cost-of-wedding
  2. You and Your Wedding 15th January 2015. Available from: http://www.immediate.co.uk/news/brand/you-your-wedding-survey-reveals-the-average-cost-of-a-wedding-is-over-20500/
  3. Great Britain, Parliament. The Marriage Act (1994), chapter 34. May take place in other than religious or licenced offices.
  4. Office of national stats. http://www.ons.gov.uk/ons/rel/vsob1/marriages-in-england-and-wales–provisional-/2012/stb-marriages-in-england-and-wales–provisional—2011.html

Written by Andrew Rollinson. First published at: http://www.lowimpact.org/the-price-of-the-average-wedding-is-now-over-20k-how-to-do-it-for-much-less-and-give-the-finger-to-brides-magazine/