Life by Design : Grove Street Press

While wedding invitations are our bread and butter, that’s not the only work our hearts are married to. As our careers keep evolving, Ben and I find ourselves doing more home and furniture design, which inevitably makes me think of the way we live and how design inspires every aspect of that, too. We wake up every morning with the (oftentimes harrowing) flexibility of self-employment, which affords us the opportunity to design our days and moments together. Every single day I am thankful for that. For me and Ben, having breakfast together, having dinners each night with our friends and family on our porches and then taking a long walk around our neighborhood are the things that give our days structure and joy and we don’t sacrifice them if possible. So, for our newest interview series, Life by Design, I’ve been sitting down with other creatives like us to learn more about how to live a gracious life filled to the brim with the people and moments and things that we love, even if we can never know what each day will bring.

We’re starting this series with Kate Wyman and Anna Boyer, first cousins who own and operate Grove Street Press, their charming letterpress shop on a cobblestoned street in the Warehouse District in New Orleans. Their instagram account is filled with magical vignettes of New Orleans, their pup, Mildred, their beautiful letterpress work and studio, and their preppy-chic style that makes your heart long for a trip down south. As my southern sisters in paper world, I’m excited to make them our first Life by Design guests. Welcome, ladies!

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Our senior designer, Sauce, says that when you’re an artist or designer professionally, “every choice is a design choice.” Do you see that in your personal life outside of your work?

Absolutely!  The cultivation of an artful life is very intentional, but it shouldn’t be forced. It’s hard to trust the authenticity of someone’s taste if it’s not also reflected in a curated home, a purposeful wardrobe, or even thoughtful vocabulary in manners.  It’s all organic, or part of a piece.  Our card designs and choices therein give a glimpse into the people we are. What is often forgotten, though, is that editing is a huge part of design, as it is in writing.  An author wouldn’t send an article for publication without careful editing; so too with other creative endeavors.  Editing helps refine and define choices both in and outside of work.  The choice one makes to edit out elements (e.g. only choosing the single best photograph of your vacation day to post to Instagram, not all 30) often matter more in keeping tastes pure than what is kept.  We edit the decor of our shop and the posts to our Instagram feed, with the hope that people will be drawn into our world and want to participate in our joy by sending one of our cards.  We’re hoping to design and share joie de vivre with our choices!

What would your best day be like?

We believe that every single day should, on a micro scale, have some part of all the things that we want from life— family, friends, prayer, work, study and leisure. Some days are more balanced than others, and some days not all of these things happen, but it’s a goal.  We also regularly talk about how the best days are simple, leisurely, beverage-based days, with small pleasures.  The ideal day would combine all of this:  Coffee on the porch in the morning with home magazines; a walk in Audubon Park with Mildred; heading to the shop to run a new print we’ve been working on for a long time (the first crisp letterpress print of a design we’ve only seen digitally never gets old!);   a light lunch out with iced tea and family that, on some lucky days, might extend into an afternoon coffee while strolling the boutiques on Magazine Street;  a return to the shop to package orders with an Old Fashioned to-go (thats a thing in nola!) ; and finally, an al fresco dinner at home with friends with wine and good chats.  Come to think of it, our best day may need to be longer than 24 hours…

Do you make an effort to design your routine and your life around the things and moments that give you joy? 

Our effort is less focused on seeking out the joy, and more focused on realizing that joy is a choice, and opting to choose / infuse joy even into small things:  errands or tasks around the shop.  Of course, we try to surround ourselves with joyful things — our collections, friends, etc (all of those varied design choices!) —  and intersperse levity into the day — teaching Mildred tricks, taking a break to arrange an Instagram, etc — but we also believe that true joy comes from within, and consciously try ourselves to be moments of joy for the people that come into our shop.

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Who was one of the first pop or movie celebrities that you admired?

Princess Diana — both in her personality and her style! 

Every person is a little weird in some way or another, and those weird things are important parts of what give us our personalities. For instance, I collect books with white spines and sleep with my baby blanket, and those objects feel significant to me and to my story. Tell me about a weird thing thats essential to you.

Both of us never leave the house without a stack of bangles on, no matter if we’re wearing shorts or going to a cocktail party.

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We rarely wear necklaces, and rarely wear just a single bracelet — always a stack!  We even briefly considered running a blog called ‘Wrist Watch,’  where we’d take street fashion – type photos of people’s arm parties.  We often spend as much time deciding which bracelets we’ll wear for a photograph as we do an outfit! We also have a nickname for everyone.  It may be a Southern thing, but our family was a nicknaming family, and we’ve continued the tradition.  I can’t remember the last time our mothers called either of us by our given names.  After a few meetings with new folks, we also have a hard time calling someone by their proper name.  

Thank you so much, Kate and Anna! We’ll see you sweet readers here next week for another Life by Design interview!

You can keep up with Grove Street Press here: Website, Facebook, and Pinterest

Marriage Mondays: Erin Austen Abbott

Today I’m excited to tell you we are launching a weekly interview series called Marriage Mondays where we’ll be chatting with some of our favorite creative people about their own weddings and marriages (which are two very different things). My hope is that these questions and answers will open the door for honest conversation with our engaged readers who are in the overwhelming midst of wedding planning. Marriage begins after the wedding, and truly—that’s the best part. The wedding invitation is the first page of a new family’s story, and we’d like to invite you good folks to let your thoughts wander to those sweet chapters of life.

Our very first post comes to you from Erin Austen Abbott, wife of Sean Kirkpatrick, mama to Tom Otis, owner of Amelia, fellow Mississippi artist, and all-around darling of the creative movement happening in our state (which you may have read about in the New York Times). Her shop on the Oxford square holds so many lovely treasures, from pretty paper to fancy bath products, and as a new friend, I’m excited that she’s leading the way on our interview series. So, let’s get started!

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Tell me about how you met and how you felt about each other that first day. What eventually happened that made you each believe you would get married some day?

Sean and I have a long story about how we met… I’ll give you the short version. I was sitting in a coffee shop in Oxford one day, and he walked in. I, without a doubt, knew the moment I saw him, he was who I was going to marry. We never spoke nor made eye contact. My heart just knew. I didn’t meet him until eight months later, in San Francisco. The first encounter was like slicing butter. You could feel the chemistry. We didn’t meet again for six months, this time in Los Angeles. After that night, we talked on the phone everyday, as we were apart the first four months. We knew we were going to marry because it was like nothing either of us had felt before. We were okay when we had to be apart. We could still follow our own creative path and the relationship was going to be fine. Independence within the relationship has always been so healthy for us. 

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 Tell me the things that mattered most to you about your wedding day.

We wanted a very small wedding. One where we could be with all of our guests, talk to them, so we had a small church wedding and dinner of about 25 people, then ten days later, we threw a big party for our friends and family to attend.

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 Planning a wedding can be stressful. It’s expensive. Your feelings all become so elevated about the event, and before you realize it’s happened, your relationship and the actual marriage can get put on the back burner almost like a reward for getting through the enormous party. How can a wedding become less about planning a party and more about the new family that’s beginning?

Something that we thought about doing, after the fact of course, was to just elope then go on a long trip, traveling around to family and out-of-town friends, making introductions and meeting those near and dear to the other. It would have been a fun adventure and a great honeymoon. Planning a wedding is stressful and making sure you don’t hurt someone’s feelings is really hard to avoid. We thought the idea of travel would have really introduced us as a new family to all of our friends and family. And we could have sent out a really fun invitation suite to show everyone where we were traveling to. 

 How do you each envision your marriage 10 years from now?

Sean is a musician, so I hope that he’s where he wants to be in his career by then and myself in mine, with my writing and the shop. I see us continuing to support each other in our chosen creative fields, doing a lot of traveling together, with our son, Tom Otis. I want us to see the world. We don’t need stuff, just want to come home to a comfortable, loving home. 

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What advice would you give to a newlywed?

The first year is the hardest, so don’t feel like you made the wrong decision. Start a savings account and add to it yearly. The single most important thing in a marriage is to communicate. Always tell the other what’s going on, because letting it build up is never a good idea. You aren’t a mind reader and neither is your partner. Come at problems in an adult, calm way and you can avoid saying something you might regret. Also, have fun!!! Marriage is fun! You get to spend everyday with your best friend. It’s awesome. 

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Thank you so much, Erin! We’ll see you sweet readers here next week for another Marriage Monday interview!

You can keep up with Erin Austen Abbott here: Website, Twitter, Instagram, and Pinterest

 

OSBP Designer Rolodex

Since we started making invitations way back in 2009, Nole of Oh So Beautiful Paper has been one of our very biggest supporters and promoters. When she introduced the Designer Rolodex, we were one of the first shops to join and I’m so thankful for the continued support she’s shown us over the years. I can say with 100% certainty she’s one of those people in our story who made it possible to do this as a full-time career. Today she did her weekly installment of ‘Meet the Rolodex’ on her instagram and it was our turn, with 4 posts all about our work and our shop, and we made so many new friends because of it. What an enormous blessing it is to have people who lift us up and make our dreams possible.

Goodness. Thank you, Nole!

Studio Tour

A lot has changed since our last studio tour in 2013. The biggest change of all was Big Ben joining Lucky Luxe full-time as co-owner and stepping up from the supporting role he’s had since we started our little company back in 2008. You can read all the dirt on that over on my personal blog here. This old 1910 flatiron building was our first home together after our wedding, and it was very reflective of my colorful style from my early twenties. Now, as I’m closing in on 30 and sharing the studio space with my all-American husband, and as we’re growing our not-so-tiny-anymore business and developing a line of history inspired goods for the home—it felt like it was time for a change. So, y’all come in!

Since you last visited, we’ve painted the stairs kettle black and Ben built a pin board to display some of our recent stationery projects.

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The kitchen/photography room now bears the logo of our new line coming this fall!

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My office got a coat of Dover White paint (Sherwin Williams), and Ben built new wainscoting that’s more befitting of grown folks. I also hung some canvas dropcloths for curtains in my office that slide easier than the old linen curtains and will block out the extreme heat in the summertime a bit. I can’t get enough of the rumpled softness of a dropcloth.

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We hit the flea markets in search of artwork and struck gold with these oversize oil portraits. I don’t know who these people are, but they remind me for the world of my grandparents, Ralph—the WWII sailor, and Jack (her name was Jacqueline but she went by Jack—isn’t that adorable?), whose engagement portrait was more glamorous than any movie starlet of the era. My sweet grandparents are now my paintings’ namesakes.

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I bought a few clocks from Ikea to keep me in sync with our most common client timezones.Screen Shot 2015-04-14 at 12.59.05 PM

And then Ben’s office. He’s in charge of so much mailing and sample coordination, it was a natural decision to turn our sample room into his office. He exposed the brick wall, got fresh paint and new wainscoting as well, and I’m feeling pretty jealous of his antique hand-knotted rugs bought for a song on eBay. We’re working together on the new line of home wares called Lucky Luxe Dry Goods and he’s heading up Scotsman Co., his own line of historic, early American-inspired reclaimed wood furniture. He’s always built dinner tables and armoires for family members who can get on his schedule, but he realized last fall that his specialty would be standing desks like the one he made for himself because when searching for furnishings for his new office there just weren’t ANY options for great looking wooden standing desks, especially for someone who’s 6’6″.

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It’s crazy how our business is expanding as our interests change and grow. Home design has been a fascination for me since childhood, and now our work is not just about historic type and paper design for us these days, but historic design at home, too… Which feels an awful lot like a dream to me.

We’re so excited to show you everything that’s in the works for 2015, but for now…

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We’re so glad you stopped by and took a look around!

 

Lucky Luxe + Riley & Grey

We’ve been holding out on y’all with an exciting secret. We’ve teamed up with our favorite purveyor of gorgeous custom wedding websites, Riley & Grey, for their first-ever paper collaboration. You can now get Toile for your invitations and for your matching website! It’s making our tactile paper hearts feel all fluttery seeing the designs adapted for web viewing. Go check it out!

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Introducing Old Try & Lucky Luxe

We’re excited to introduce The Marrying Type, a letterpress marriage certificate that’s also the first marriage of work between Old Try and Lucky Luxe:

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From Micah at Old Try, “We’re fans of good type, and nobody makes more beautiful compositions than Lucky Luxe. So when we started talking about teaming up to make something, the first thought our minds went to was something type heavy. We’re all about making Goods for Home at Old Try, and we thought that nothing feels more like home than our loved one. So a wedding certificate just seemed to make sense. We had some slugs of type cast to mix with the wood type we use. To make ‘home’ really come out, Erin designed fifty state seals. And since both our companies are Southern, we had to honor the homeland by printing them up on 100% cotton.”

This collaboration has been years in the making when you consider our shared love for the South, good type, and our dear old alma mater, Ole Miss. The Marrying Type makes the perfect wedding/anniversary present, and we’re already working on more things for a partnership of gift items for the home. Stay tuned!

Lucky Luxe for Violet

After so many months of waiting with bated breath, we can finally tell you all about the amazingly inspiring project we’ve been working on. Back in November, we received an email from Perion, a company owned by the former CEO of American Greetings, introducing us to a new concept unlike anything that exists for the wedding industry. This site would be be launching in 2015, and would be a little like if Beholden, Pandora and Pinterest were combined to thoughtfully design and curate every element of your beautiful wedding, beginning to end. Lucky Luxe along with 4 other stationers from across the country were commissioned to create the new designs, and in December 2014, we created 8 of the 20 invitation suites exclusively for their collection that reflect vintage, rustic, and classic themes. I’ve been so excited for this baby to be born, and I’m so very proud to show her off to y’all. Meet Violet!

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Violet is the first do-it-yourself wedding design tool and features an intuitive way to help brides discover, envision and personalize their perfect wedding day. In addition, the site uses inspirational content from real weddings and their associated photographers, as well as aesthetic content from actual wedding designers, helping brides and grooms envision their perfect day from the actual experiences of others.

How does Violet work? Newly engaged brides and grooms that visit Violet are immediately given a variety of wedding style and mood options to choose from, helping them create beautiful and inspiring combinations that speak to their personalities. Currently, brides and grooms can choose between 20 different style and mood combinations, but they plan to more than double the style and mood combinations by the end of 2015.

The Lucky Luxe for Violet flat print collection includes:

Timeless Romance (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

Audrey

Garden Party (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

Botanicals

Chantilly Lace (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

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Fifth Avenue (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

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Fitzgerald (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

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In Full Bloom (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

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Natural Beauty (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

Meadow

Homespun Affair (click here to design your wedding based on this style from Violet):

Terrain

The website is in the Beta phase currently, but soon clients will be able to purchase Lucky Luxe stationery through Violet and connect with the best vendor matches for their style and location. If you’re engaged, this is the place to begin designing every detail of your dream wedding, curated by professionals and personalized just for you. Y’all have fun!

 

Time Machine

A few weeks ago was our city’s annual fall festival—the Loblolly Festival (it’s a pine tree species—our town was put on the map because of the great lumber barons that settled it). I’ve recently become friends with Michael N. Foster, a very talented tintype photographer from up north in Oxford, and somehow convinced him to come to the festival to shoot portraits for the day. And I’m so glad he did! Sitting for new Lucky Luxe headshots and seeing the process from start to finish, the wet plate developing, the chemical washes, the timing, it was kind of a miracle. If you ever have the opportunity to have a tintype photo taken, please do! It was like stepping into a time machine and coming out on the other side much prettier and cooler than you actually are in real life. Which is always good for the morale, isn’t it?

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Click here to see more of Michael’s beautiful work.

Introducing Flora

The Lucky Luxe Collection has been historically style-centric from the very beginning, and I realized we might be leaving out our more bohemian brides searching for an aesthetic that’s colorful and organic and those brides on a budget looking for interesting flat print options that don’t sacrifice high style. Letterpress might be the glamorous madame of printing methods, but it’s not for every budget, and it’s not always a great option for the client who wants a layering of color and gradients. The weddings we’re seeing of late are not stuffy. The bridesmaids are wearing what feels good on them, choosing a dress from their grandmothers’ cedar chests or Anthropologie. We’re seeing more intimate ceremonies in gardens and courtyard that focus less on a big party and more on what matters—the new family that’s beginning. So I’ve been thinking of ways our wedding paper design can more accurately reflect the feel of these simple, nature-inspired events.

We are excited to introduce Flora, a new design, created to be a reflection of that couple tied to the land and their love—not tied to the standards of wedding paper formality. The couple packaged the suite with simple seed storage packets from Williams-Sonoma and labeled and filled them with seeds from the iconic wildflower fields in Rabbit Valley, Colorado. They tied dried lavender in with gold and cream baker’s twine to complete the bundle. They make a sweet gift for the couple’s friends and family, and season after season, they are the perfect reminder: “A flower cannot blossom without sunshine, and man cannot live without love.” 

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The script for the suite is painted by hand in watercolor, and all the fine text is an understated typeface taken from our old Remington typewriter. The invitations are then flat printed on 100% cotton Crane Lettra paper. The lettering choices, layered with colorful antique engravings from Furber’s Twelve Months of Flowers, published in 1730, create a composite that’s altogether modern, bohemian, and nostalgic. We’re thinking of Flora as the new flower child among her sisters in the Lucky Luxe wedding collection.

We’re also really excited to see her popping up over on Oh So Beautiful Paper in a feature today!

Lucky Luxe now available at Paper and Pearl

We’re really proud to announce that we’ve formed a wholesale partnership with a brand new online stationery boutique, Paper and Pearl, based in Rhode Island. You can find the Lucky Luxe wedding paper collection alongside the beautiful work of other stationers like Ink and Ivory,  Haute Papier, Sugar B Designs, and Rag & Bone Bindery. Hooray for expanding and making new friends in the world of pretty paper!

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