Confession: I always, always forget to sign a couple's wedding guestbook. Whether I'm attending the wedding as a guest or as the photographer (hey, we can leave our well-wishes, too!), the thought of signing the guest book never crosses my mind. So when it came time for Mr. C and I decide on how our guests will leave their mark on our wedding day, I had absolutely no idea what direction I wanted to go.
Let's explore our options, shall we?
The Photo Book
The photo book guestbook is by far one of the most popular wedding guestbook options. Guests can take a look at your engagement photos, and, if you've plastered them all over every social media possible by the time your wedding rolls around (guilty), Grandma and Great Aunt Lois will really enjoy seeing them for the first time. They also have plenty of space for guests to write comments, even though some guests will no doubt write a well-meaning word of advice right over your faces. Although I absolutely love my engagement photos, and would love seeing them in book-form, we decided against this idea rather quickly. Mr. C and I already have our favorite engagement photos printed out, and we plan on making a higher-quality photo book with our wedding photos. For any bride-to-be that's set on a photo book but wants a higher quality book than say, Shutterfly, can offer, I personally recommend Artifact Uprising! Their books are pricier than other companies, but the quality is so spot-on, and they're just so friggin' pretty to look at.
The Polaroid Guest Book
The photographer in me was immediately drawn to this guestbook idea. The budget conscious bride in me looked up the cost of the camera and the film and died a little inside. Also, the thought of film being wasted when slightly-intoxicated guests and/or grandparents tried to operate a non-iPhone camera was something I knew I didn't want to chance. While the execution of this idea might have been totally successful and lovely, I wanted a much cheaper, stupid-and-buzz-proof guestbook option. Note: still totally jealous of couples that get this type of guestbook to "work".
The Stone Guestbook
When I was originally getting some inspiration for possible guestbooks, the "stone" idea was popping up left and right. The idea is for guests to write well-wishes and words of advice to the lovely wedding couple on...rocks. While I totally get the concept, I know stones and rocks will never be a part of Mr. C and I's design aesthetic in our home. Plus, I've never written on a stone. What kind of marker/pen would I need to provide? Does every table have stones? Or is there one big stone jar? The logistics were too much, and Mr. C wasn't exactly on board, so the stone guestbook was abandoned and it was back to drawing board.
The Thumbprint Guestbook
This guestbook idea is one that basically exploded overnight thanks to the popularity of Pinterest. Guests are asked to ink up one of their digits to quite literally leave their mark on the guestbook with their own fingerprint. These fingerprints can make up the shape of a huge balloon, "leaves" on a tree, or friggin adorable little bumblebees, as seen above. The only wedding I've been to that had a fingerprint guestbook was a friends, and her stamp pad left my thumb the darkest shade of blue for a couple days. If heading this direction, definitely make sure the ink you use is washable! Mr. C and I wanted to do something a little bit different than the thumbprint guestbook, while still having a guestbook we could hang up in our home and admire for years to come. Which is why we decided on...
The Poster Guestbook
A wedding guestbook poster is kind of exactly what it sounds like...a big poster that guests sign that will eventually make it's way into the couple's home, to be hung up and admired (until it is inevitably replaced by their children's school photos, family portraits, etc.). Granted, there isn't as much blank space on these posters as there would be in an actual guestbook, or even the photo book version. What I loved the most about these guestbook prints/posters was that I could design one myself and totally swag it out. After getting the A-okay from Mr. C to go ahead and start designing our own guestbook poster, I gathered some inspiration for what I wanted ours to look like.
I was drawn to floral-y type designs that were pretty, fuss-free, and minimal. I wanted our guests to have as much room as possible to sign, so I wanted to keep the design smaller and simpler. The monogram poster (as seen above) was one of my favorites, so I knew I wanted to head in that direction. Thanks to Mrs. Tractor, I discovered the incredible, beautiful online world that is
Creative Market, and I got to work finding design elements that would create the pretty, fuss-free, minimal, floral-y guestbook poster idea I had in my head.
The guestbook poster God's must have been smiling down on me when I found these floral design letters. Hallelujah!
I purchased the floral monogram letters for $10, and got to work creating my guestbook poster! All of the designing was done within a Mac App called iScrapbook. It's basically a dumbed-down version of photoshop, but still has all the bells and whistles I needed. Although our final guestbook poster design is pretty simple, it took a lot more time that I'd like to admit to finally decide on it as the "final" version. All creative brides know how that goes!
 |
| Note: The actual poster does not have a dark-gray trim. It's an all-white poster, I just added the border to you can see the dimensions. |
I love the design I ended up with, and I know I'll love seeing it hanging up in our house for years to come! The plan is to place it in a gold frame (with the glass removed) so that guests can write on the poster during the reception, then place the glass back on when we hang it up. I'm having it printed through the private photo printing place I use for my photography business, so I'll be able to get this 16x20 poster printed for around $13. The total cost for this project was around $25, including the cost of the print and the floral monogram letters. Both Mr. C and I love how this little DIY-project turned out, and we can't wait to see it all filled up with the names and well wishes of our nearest and dearest!
How did you decide was type of guestbook to use? Do you still look at yours often?