Vellum is the one material in wedding stationery that does something no other paper can: it lets you see through it.
That translucency isn't just decorative. It creates layering possibilities that flat card simply can't achieve - text floating over a floral illustration invitations, a guest's name on a vellum jacket over a photo, a delicate botanical print that seems to appear from behind the invitation. Used well, vellum makes an invitation feel genuinely considered. Used poorly, it feels like an afterthought. Here's how to tell the difference.
What vellum actually is
Modern vellum paper is a synthetic translucent material - not animal skin, which is what traditional vellum was made from. It's smooth, slightly waxy to the touch, and semi-transparent. The degree of translucency varies by weight: lighter vellum is nearly see-through, heavier vellum has more opacity while still allowing light and color to show through.
This translucency is what makes vellum useful in stationery - but it also creates constraints. Standard inkjet and laser printing doesn't always adhere well to vellum. At Paperlust, our vellum printing is handled specifically to ensure ink adhesion and consistent results. Don't assume any printer can handle it.
How vellum is used at Paperlust
There are two main ways vellum appears in our designs:
Vellum overlay invitations combine a base card (printed on standard matte, linen, or cotton stock) with a translucent vellum sheet placed over the top. Both layers are drilled and pinned together with a gold pin included in the order. The overlay can be printed with text, a design motif, or left plain for a frosted effect. The artwork or illustration on the base card shows through the vellum, creating a layered, dimensional look.
Printed vellum invitations are printed directly onto vellum stock - no base card underneath. These work especially well for minimalist designs where the translucency itself is the design statement, or where a colored surface underneath (like an envelope) becomes part of the visual. See our minimalist invitations design
Foil can be applied to vellum across both formats. Gold, rose gold, and other foil options are available - and foil on vellum has a particular quality of shimmer that you don't get on flat card.
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Styling a vellum suite
The choice of what sits underneath vellum matters as much as the vellum itself. A watercolor illustration on the base card, half-visible through the overlay, reads completely differently from a geometric pattern or a solid color block. Consider the undertone of your base card when choosing vellum weight - a heavily saturated base can make the overlay look muddy if the vellum is too sheer.
Envelopes: colored or patterned envelope liners work especially well with vellum invitations. The liner glimpsed through the vellum as a guest opens the envelope extends the layered effect.
Assembly: vellum overlay invitations arrive with the pin included. If you're adding ribbon or twine ties, use a hole punch sized to your ribbon width and tie through both layers together. Wax seals can be applied directly to vellum - on the back where both layers meet is the most secure placement.
Wording: vellum overlay invitations typically carry the main text on the vellum layer with the illustration or photo on the base card. This keeps the reading experience clean while letting the artwork remain visible.
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Print methods that work on vellum
Digital printing and foil stamping are both compatible with vellum at Paperlust. Letterpress is not suitable for vellum - the material doesn't compress in the way letterpress requires and can crack or distort under plate pressure. If you love the letterpress look with a translucent element, a blind deboss on the base card paired with a plain vellum overlay achieves a similar feel.
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Weight and feel
Vellum has a distinctly different hand feel from cotton or coated card - slightly cool, smooth, and with a gentle flexibility. Heavier vellum weights feel more substantial and hold their shape better; lighter weights are more delicate. For invitations that guests will handle multiple times (opening envelopes, passing around), medium-weight vellum tends to perform best.
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Cost relative to standard invitations
Vellum overlay invitations cost more than single-card designs because of the additional production steps: two cards, drilling, pin assembly, and specialty vellum stock. It's a legitimate premium, and it shows in the finished product. If budget is a constraint, printed vellum as a single card (without the base card layer) is the more accessible option while keeping the translucent look.
First-order discount: sign up with your email and save $20 off your first order. If you're ordering 3 or more card types in your suite, the 15% multi-card discount applies automatically - a meaningful saving when your suite includes a vellum invitation plus RSVP, info card, and envelope liners.
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FAQ
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A vellum overlay invitation has two layers: a printed base card (matte, linen, or cotton) with a vellum sheet pinned over the top. Printed vellum is a single card printed directly onto translucent vellum stock. Overlays create a layered effect where the base card shows through; printed vellum is simpler and relies on the translucency itself as the design element.
Yes. Gold, rose gold, and other foil colors can be applied to vellum. Foil on vellum has a particularly striking shimmer quality - it catches light differently than foil on flat card. Contact the team if you're looking for a specific foil color not shown in the standard range.
No. Letterpress requires the paper to compress under plate pressure, which vellum doesn't do well - it can crack or distort. Digital printing and foil stamping are the appropriate methods for vellum.
On the back of the invitation where both layers meet is the most secure placement. This anchors both layers and creates a clean, intentional look. Avoid placing wax seals on the front vellum layer where the seal may not adhere consistently to the smooth surface.
Vellum is not as moisture-resistant as coated card. For destination weddings or outdoor ceremonies in humid climates, keep invitations in envelopes until distributed. Brief exposure to humidity won't damage them, but prolonged moisture contact can cause vellum to warp or the ink to smear.
Yes. Our $5 sample pack (7 designs, including a letterpress sample) or $20 full swatch kit provide access to our paper options. The swatch kit is the best way to see and feel the vellum weight before committing to a full order.
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