Eco-friendly wedding invites

Eco-friendly wedding invites

Inviting your friends and family to your wedding day should not be taxing on the environment. The idea of posting your wedding invites is a thing of the past (or it should be) purely based on the carbon emissions that it takes to get your invite to each individual guest. Save costs and save the planet with these eco-friendly wedding invites.

 

E-vites

Inviting your guests to your wedding by way of email is a sure-fire way to protect the planet. Not only does it eliminate the risk of the invite getting “lost in the mail” but it gives your guest an effortless response mechanism. You can detail your invite as elaborately or minimalist as you please. It also allows you to keep track of who is and isn’t able to attend. Voila, planet saved.

 

Seed paper invites

If you’re old-school and want to send physical invites, fine, but be sure to use plantable seed paper. This can be sourced online. The paper is customisable and durable. Seed paper gives back to the planet by growing new plant life, in return for your carbon emission – unless you hand-delivered the invites in an electric car, of course.

Make your own invites

Again, if you want to keep things traditional, add an eco-spin. Make your own invites using compostable or seed paper, use environmentally-friendly ink and ensure no glue, wax, glitter or plastic is used in the process. Request that your guests RSVP electronically to you over email so that nothing gets lost along the way. By doing this you’ll have a digital record of attendees that can be used to send thank-you mailers out after the wedding. A win-win.

 

Tips to remember:

– Delivering invites means carbon emissions are offset into the atmosphere.

– Glitter is a micro-plastic and is harmful to the natural world so avoid it at all costs.

– Use seeded paper for all your wedding stationery, it helps the planet and small local businesses to thrive

– An e-vite really is the most eco-friendly option available if you’re looking to keep your wedding as clean as possible.

 

Image: Unsplash

 

 

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