A photo card wedding invitation turns a functional piece of paper into a keepsake. When your guests receive an invitation featuring your engagement photo, a genuine, joyful image of the two of you, it immediately makes the event feel personal rather than ceremonial. Photo card invitations are among the most-kept pieces of wedding stationery: guests pin them to their bulletin boards, keep them in drawers, and display them for months before the wedding and years after.
How Photo Card Invitations Work
Photo card invitations from Paperlust follow a semi-custom approach. You choose a professionally designed template, a layout that specifies where your photo sits in relation to your names, the wedding date, and any decorative elements. Your photo is placed into the template, the wording is customized, and a designer proof is delivered within 1 to 2 business days. Two rounds of edits are included at no extra charge, so you can refine your design until it's exactly right.
The design does the heavy lifting. A well-chosen template turns any high-quality engagement photo into an invitation that looks considered and deliberate. The photo is the focal point; the typography and any design elements frame rather than compete with it.
Getting the Best From Your Photo
Not all photos work equally well in a photo card format. Here is what produces the best results:
Resolution: the photo should be high resolution, at least 300dpi or 2MB in file size. Low-resolution phone photos can pixelate when enlarged to invitation size. Use a high-resolution file, ideally from a professional photographer.
Lighting: natural light, or soft studio light. Harsh direct flash creates unflattering shadows and washes out skin tones.
Background: clean and uncluttered. A photo from your engagement shoot in a natural setting, a meadow, a vineyard in Napa, a Charleston waterfront, or a mountain backdrop in Colorado, reproduces better than a busy urban scene. Neutral tones in the background allow the couple to be the clear subject.
Composition: some templates are designed for landscape photos; others suit portrait (vertical) images. Check the template orientation before choosing your photo.
Digital Print Is Best for Photos
For photo card invitations, digital print is the right choice. Digital printing reproduces full-color gradients, skin tones, and photographic detail accurately. Letterpress and foil stamping are both unsuitable for photographs, as they work with solid color elements only.
Photo card invitations start from $2.04 per card for digital print. Order a sample pack to check paper quality before committing to a full order.
Explore More Styles
Looking for a different aesthetic? Browse minimalist wedding invitations, destination wedding invitations, or vintage wedding invitations for more inspiration.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Paperlust's photo card invitation templates are designed to accept your own image. You upload the photo during the customization process; a designer reviews placement and quality as part of the proof. For best results, use a high-resolution image (at least 300dpi or 2MB) taken in natural light with an uncluttered background.
No. A well-designed photo card invitation on quality stock looks genuinely beautiful. The difference between a cheap photo invitation and a premium one is the template design, paper quality, and print method. Paperlust invitations are printed on premium cardstock with accurate color reproduction; the result feels and looks like a professional product.
Many couples use a photo save the date and then either a photo or non-photo invitation. A common approach is a casual engagement photo for the save the date and a more formal or styled photo for the invitation. Both can be designed from the same template family for a cohesive suite.
A high-quality photo from a smartphone in good natural light can work for invitations, as resolution is the key factor, not equipment. That said, an engagement shoot produces the best results and gives you multiple high-quality images to choose from. Many couples schedule their engagement shoot specifically to have photos ready for their stationery order.
Aim for at least 300dpi at the intended print size, or a file that is at least 2MB. Most photos taken on a modern smartphone in full resolution meet this threshold. If you are unsure, upload your photo during the design process and your assigned designer will flag any quality concerns before the proof is finalized. Paperlust's designers can also help with minor brightness and contrast adjustments on request.
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