When you work with Paper Love Spell, you’re getting a full-service, high-touch, totally bespoke wedding branding experience — and that magic takes time. The design sketches, color palettes, custom artwork, production coordination, and vendor collaboration all rely on one thing: you honoring your wedding invitation due dates. This keeps your custom wedding invitation timeline and wedding branding on track.
01 YOUR WEDDING INVITATION AND BRANDING TIMELINE
02 WHY DEADLINES ARE ON-NEGOTIABLE
03 RUSH FEES
04 FEEDBACK RESPONSE TIMES
Within one week of booking, I upload a step-by-step timeline to your Client Portal so you always know exactly when forms, feedback, and approvals are due.
You’ll also see due dates:
You’ll also see due dates clearly noted:
Basically… there’s no “I didn’t know” moment for your wedding invitation due dates.
Your stationery timeline is built around your event date and my other client projects. If you miss a due date, I can’t just slide your project one day forward. That one-day delay might push you two weeks out (or more) depending on vendor schedules, holidays, and other couples who submitted on time.
I also can’t bump another couple’s project to fit yours in — it’s not fair to them.
If delays on your end shift your project timeline, here’s what happens:
If you’ve already paid your balance in full, any rush or expedited shipping fees will be invoiced separately and due within 3 days. You’ll always be notified before billing.
Once your design month starts (will be noted on your project timeline), I’ll send you your proof forms via your client portal. From there, you’ll have 3 days to submit your feedback.
Why it matters:
How it works:
Important: Feedback must be submitted via the designated proof form — no emails, texts, or DMs. If others need to be included in the approval process, let me know before we start designing.
Ready to work together and create your wedding wonderland of creative visuals? Start with my inquiry form. From there, we’ll talk timelines, your vision, and how to create wedding branding so you it couldn’t possibly belong to anyone else.