Budget is a constraint, not a compromise. Know the difference.
The invitations above are Paperlust's digital print range - the most accessible price point in the collection. What digital print means in practice: your design is printed with high-quality ink on premium paper stock, without the setup costs of letterpress plates or foil stamping dies. The result looks excellent. Most guests can't tell the difference between a well-designed digital invitation and a letterpress one from across the room. The difference is in the touch, not the look.
Here's what actually drives invitation cost, and where it's worth spending versus saving.
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The four levers that control invitation price
Print method is the biggest variable. Digital print is the base. Letterpress adds cost because of custom plate setup and longer run times. Foil stamping adds cost because of heat-pressed metallic dies. If budget is the priority, digital print is the honest choice - not a consolation prize.
Paper stock matters more than most couples expect. Standard thick card looks clean and professional. Cotton-based paper has a premium hand feel that letterpress or foil can't replace. The good news: even digital print on standard card stock at Paperlust is heavier and more substantial than what you'd get from a generic online printer.
Quantity has an inverse relationship with per-unit cost - the more you order, the lower the price per card. If you're on the fence between 80 and 100 invitations, ordering 100 is often only marginally more expensive per card and gives you spares for last-minute additions and keepsakes.
Suite size is where budgets can quietly expand. An invitation is one card. A full suite - invitation, RSVP, info card, envelope liner, wishing well card, menu card - is six cards. Each card has its own cost. The most effective way to reduce total spend is to be deliberate about which cards your wedding actually needs versus which ones are on the list because they're traditional.Â
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What to keep, what to skip
The invitation itself: never skip. This is the card that sits on fridges for months, gets photographed at the wedding, and ends up in keepsake boxes. Put whatever quality you can here. Minimalist invitations often the most budget-friendly design choice and ingle-color designs such as black and white invitations reduce print complexity
RSVP card: genuinely useful if you need a formal headcount mechanism. If you're collecting RSVPs online, a printed RSVP card is optional.
Info card: useful for complex logistics (multiple venues, accommodation blocks, travel directions). Genuinely unnecessary if your wedding website covers it.
Envelope liners, belly bands, wax seals: these are the extras that elevate the unboxing experience but add nothing to the information conveyed. Worth it if presentation matters to you; easy to skip if it doesn't.
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The false economy to avoid
The one thing more expensive than a good invitation is a bad one you have to replace. Couples who order from unverified discount sites to save money frequently end up ordering a second time - from a reputable printer, at full price, on a rushed timeline. The savings evaporate.
Paperlust has a 100% happiness guarantee: if something isn't right, you get a free reprint or a refund. That guarantee is the actual value proposition of ordering from a company with a reputation to protect. Free worldwide express shipping via DHL on orders over $350 USD, and free white envelopes are included.
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Smart ordering tactics for a tighter budget
Order 3 or more card types in one checkout and 15% comes off the total automatically. That's a meaningful discount on a multi-card suite - the kind that makes ordering the RSVP card alongside the invitation actually cheaper than treating them separately.
Sign up with your email before placing your first order: $20 off applies automatically.
Samples before commitment: $5 for 7 designs lets you see paper weight and print quality in person before spending on a full print run. For budget-conscious couples especially, this is worth it. You want to know the finished product looks right before committing 150 of them to print.
Designer proof included: every Paperlust order comes with a designer proof before printing. This catches errors that would otherwise cost you a reprint - which, on a budget, matters.
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What "affordable" means at Paperlust
Every design in the collection - from the most accessible to the most premium - is made in Melbourne and shipped worldwide. The design quality, the customer service, and the happiness guarantee are the same regardless of print method. Affordable here means lower cost, not lower standard.
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FAQ
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Digital print is the most affordable print method. It produces a clean, professional result on quality card stock without the setup costs of letterpress or foil. All the designs in the grid above are available in digital print.
Yes. Order 3 or more card types in a single checkout and 15% is automatically applied to your total. This is the most straightforward way to reduce the cost of a full invitation suite.
Free white envelopes are included with every order. Free worldwide express shipping is included on orders over $350 USD. A designer proof is included. The main extras that add cost are premium paper upgrades, foil stamping, letterpress, and additional card types beyond the base invitation.
Absolutely. Many couples order only the invitation and RSVP card, directing guests to a wedding website for all other information. This is a legitimate and common approach that meaningfully reduces total cost without compromising the invitation itself.
Paperlust has a 100% happiness guarantee. If there's a quality issue or something isn't as expected, you receive a free reprint or a refund. This applies to the full order, not just a partial replacement.
Order at least 8-10 weeks before you need to mail them. Digital print production is faster than letterpress, but you still need time for the designer proof, approval, printing, and shipping. If you need faster turnaround, 24-hour rush printing is available.
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