DIY birthday invitation card

So, master class.
1. We will need double-sided tape, a glue stick, a corner figured hole punch, A4 white thick paper and colored paper, all sorts of different ribbons, stamp pads of various colors (I have black, blue, red).

2. We make a blank for a postcard. We cut A4 sheets along the middle of the sheet and bend the resulting halves again, but already across.

It should be the following.

3. We prepare the main phrase in a text editor (Invitation or Invitation or whatever your heart desires). On colored paper, taking into account the size of the base, we print out our text and cut out rectangles, which at the edges should be smaller than the base of the postcard. By default, I have the word "Invitation" and a picture with the letter R and a rose (my mother's name is Rose).

If you put the rectangle on the base, there should be empty spaces around the edges. I got 1.5 cm from the top and bottom, and 1 midrange to the right and left. You can do it everywhere exactly, say, 0.5 cm.

4. With a corner figured hole punch, we make patterns at the corners of colored rectangles.

5. I thought that it would not look bad if the patterns stand out in a contrasting color. Therefore, we take any colored paper.

We cut small squares according to the size of the pattern and glue them on the back of the rectangle.

6. The ends of the rectangle are "smeared" with a stamp pad.

Thanks to this, the edges seem to stand out against the white background of the base.

7. In the center of the base along the entire length, glue the tape on double-sided tape. In principle, the most important thing is to fix it on the front side, and on the reverse side, it will not go anywhere. The length of the ribbon should be sufficient so that its ends can be tied into a bow.

8. Inside the invitation we put (glue) a leaf with the text of the invitation.

9. Glue our rectangle over the tape. In theory, the invitation is ready.

10. If you use different ribbons and paper, you will get almost individual, non-repeating postcards.