Holiday parties. Birthday bashes. Weddings and engagement parties. When you’re throwing an event of any kind, the experience doesn’t start when your guests arrive, it really starts the second when the invitations go out. Whether it’s an online invite or a paper card, that invitation sets the stage for your gathering. Is the gathering small, or is it a big bash? Is it formal, or more casual? What’s the theme?
All of this comes through in the design, so how do you design the perfect invitation? Here are five key considerations and five easy steps to create the invitation of your dreams on Adobe Express.
1. What’s the occasion?
Are you hosting a dinner party for no occasion other than that you feel like cooking and having some friends over? Or maybe it’s your partner’s milestone birthday, and you’re hosting a black-tie cocktail party. Maybe it’s a Friendsgiving potluck, or a New Year’s bash. Is it a work happy hour? Or maybe it’s one of your biggest life milestones: a wedding.
Usually, the occasion helps define whether the gathering is formal, casual, celebratory, or something else.
2. What’s the theme?
Once you've determined the occasion, the next question to ask is whether or not you want to layer a theme on top. How do you want people to dress — in costume? 80s? Black-tie? How will you decorate? Are we talking balloons or floral arrangements?
All of this will majorly affect the invitation design you choose.
3. Who’s invited?
Consider age, interests, and expectations. Is this party for Gen Z or boomers? Are families invited? Is it a couples’ thing? A 1-year birthday party for your daughter will be dramatically different from your own 30th birthday party. Does everyone who is invited know each other from the gym, from work, or from your run club? Maybe it’s an annual shindig, so everyone knows each other from past parties (and they all expect your famous punch). Whoever is coming, your invitation design will reflect that.
4. What’s the mood/tone?
Is this formal, casual, corporate, or celebratory? Should it be elegant, playful, professional, or quirky? The folks who are on the invite, the theme you choose, and the occasion all factor into the mood of the party — and the tone of the invitation.
Will your invite be digital, print, or a hybrid of both? A formal event like a wedding or a 100th birthday usually calls for paper invitations to be sent. You’ll have to consider the stock and weight of the paper for the invite, RSVP card, and the envelope. Something less formal like a Friendsgiving or a rooftop summer cocktail party usually calls for a digital invite.
5 steps to creating an invite
Now that you know exactly why you’re creating an invite and the event you’re inviting people to, it’s time to design the invitations. Adobe Express makes it easy to do, and here are five quick steps:
Step 1: Choose a design. The occasion, theme, and invitees will all impact the design you choose.
Step 2: Pick the right size. Standard invitation size is 5" x 7" (or 10" x 14"), printed on sturdy card stock.
Step 3: Write your message. Try to personalize each invite by using the recipient’s name where possible and giving more details about your gathering.
Step 4: Incorporate photos. Images will give recipients even more specifics about what to expect from your party and how they should show up.
Step 5: Send it out. Print your invitation. Or send digitally