Starting a Wedding Industrial Revolution with Julie of Up Up Creative

Julie Green of Up Up Creative is doing some revolutionary things with her business this month. I recently chatted with her about her new project and what it means for her, her customers, and the wedding industry in general.

In a nutshell, what do you do?

In a nutshell, I’m a graphic designer and an indie entrepreneur and I run a small in-house print studio. I specialize in modern, bold typographic designs, hand-drawn patterns, and non-sappy invitations and greetings. In the last year or so, sort of by mistake, I’ve shifted almost completely towards wedding stationery — invitations, thank you notes, maps, etc — mostly because I enjoy working with my wedding clients so much.

Tell me about the Wedding Industrial Revolution project (if that’s what you’re calling it. If not, correct me!). What is it and what does it do for your clients?

My project. It has a few different little names. I started out calling it Up Up Yours in my head because that seemed funny and clever and just seemed to suit me. But then I started calling it an industrial revolution because part of my goal is to get a dialog going about how we can change — and by change I mean make more meaningful and more personal and more thoughtful — the wedding industry.

I get a lot of flack for being part of the big-bad wedding industry, and sometimes I’m even embarrassed to tell people what kind of graphic design I do most. But really, I think the wedding industry is kind of completely awesome, or at least it can be awesome.

Weddings are community events. They bring together family and friends but they also bring people together with the professionals who work in their own communities. They bring people together with artists and artisans. They bring people together with indie businesses. In fact, I can’t think of another event or industry that encourages just these kinds of comings-together. When else will most people hire a photographer for anything? And do you think a florist pays the rent and feeds the family on foot traffic through his flower shop?

The truth is, while you can certainly buy elements of your wedding at Walmart (not to pick on Walmart; seriously, I’m not into making that argument now), you really can’t just go buy a wedding there. You can’t have a wedding without supporting your community and the people who live there. Or maybe you can, but it’s hard. You’d have to work hard to avoid supporting local artists, sellers, makers, and doers.

But I think I’m digressing. Back to the experiment.

After a very mainstream greeting-card-industry spring, I found myself very navel-gaze-y in terms of my business. I spent a lot of time with numbers and spreadsheets and articles on business growth. I fiddled. I faddled. I frowned and furrowed. I thought hard about pricing structures and things that make college students fall asleep in their required intro to business courses.

And suddenly I found my own self falling asleep and I realized I needed to do something crazy, and quick.

So I got to thinking about the things that make me tick. The things that make my business tick. The messages I want to send and the questions I want to ask. The conversations I want to start. I considered dying my hair fire-engine red and then instead I decided to do something crazy risky and bold, but something that had real potential to wake me up and get me excited.

I decided to let my customers name their own prices on their wedding invitations. For the whole month of September.

This is not something people usually do with tangible goods because when you’re selling real things that take real time to create, you’re looking at pretty sizable costs. Which is to say it’s very very possible that I could end up getting really screwed with this experiment. Which I can’t even come close to affording.

It’s not a position I recommend putting yourself in, truth be told.

But something about it is really exciting to me, because in my heart I just believe that this is going to be so awesome. It’s going to get people talking to me about things I think about often: things like value. The value of handmade. The value of working with a human being. The value of getting what you want. The value of awesome design. The value of one-on-one.

What inspired you to begin this project in the first place, and what do you hope to gain from it?

Pricing is one of the things we entrepreneurs obsess over, and one of those things brides (and other people involved in wedding planning) do, too. But it’s not something we get to converse about. It’s not something we usually get to negotiate or discuss between us. And I want us to talk about it. I want to see what my work is worth, but also what my approach to weddings is worth. I want to see what indie business means to people. I want to see what happens when I invite people to think hard about what they can afford and what choices they can make with their money.

How can folks spread the word about this project?

I’d love it if my project would get people talking. Even if you’re not in the market for invitations (and by the way, nothing says they have to be for a wedding — you could use them for whatever event you’d like to invite people to), I’d love it if you’d take this project as an opportunity to talk about value. To talk about how we decide what something’s worth. To talk about how we decide what to spend money on and what not to spend money on. How we prioritize. I’d love it if you’d spread the word thoughtfully, in other words. Tell your friends. Let them get in on it, too. But do so in the spirit of getting the conversation started.

What I’m doing is crazy and risky, but I hope that it will have rewards in it not just for me and my business and my customers but for all of us in the handmade community. I hope that I’ll walk away from this month-long experiment with good stuff to share — lessons and advice and thoughts. But I need people to know about it in order for that to work. The more people who participate, the better the results.

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What do you think about naming your own price? Tell us in the comments!

Want to participate in Julie’s project or simply learn more? Check out her project web page (and be sure to watch the cute and informative video – it’s well worth it!).

we scout wednesdays: weddings!

casual summer wedding

i’m truly not very romantic. i have very few fantasies about white horses or moonlight dinners or sunsets.

we got engaged on christmas eve, my husband had dutifully kept his extra gift secret. he asked my mother’s permission via text message. when the time came, he handed me the box and said, “ya know i want to marry you, right?”

i took me a minute to realize he meant – soon. like for real.

oh! yes.

so like any bride who works at a place that sells copious amounts of magazines, i bought every bridal magazine i could get my hands on. what i wouldn’t give to have that money back! although i knew that my wedding would be represented no where in their glossy pages. i bought a wedding gown in january. it was beautiful if inexpensive as these things go. i toiled to create a wedding around this gown.

i just didn’t work. it wasn’t me. i was depressed and stressed and a mess. from january until july, i hmmmed and haaaawed over ideas – not details, mind you. ideas. finally, we decided on a casual preparty and then a small ceremony a few weeks later. plans never really solidified on the ceremony although somehow i got my act together enough to pull together the party.

the week before the party, mike & i said “screw it. what the hell? this isn’t us.” we arranged to get married at the party. no fancy dresses, no silk ties, no pomp, no circumstance. i wore a cream jcrew jersey skirt & hoodie, mike wore shorts. we surprised our family and friends and had great fun. we exchanged rings and that was that.

wedding pinata

i wish i could tell you that i had all sorts of fancy diys or clever details. i didn’t. although, it was all diy! we had bbq and cupcakes and there was lots of beer. the most memorable part was watching the kids beat the tar out of a pinata. all the kids got to give it a good whack before mike’s nephew finally opened the sucker up and the kids started grabbing up candy.

so… it’s almost wedding season in the states. it’s time to think weddings for a bit! here’s how we scout wednesdays work:

  1. write a blog post or post a flickr photo related to weddings in some way.
  2. link back to scoutie girl or this post. you can also grab my button on the left sidebar.
  3. then come back here and leave your link in the “mr. linky” below. and then check out other scouts!




put your thinking cap on :: weddings

short chiffon wedding dress by claire la faye
wedding gown by claire la faye

i wanted to give you a heads up that this week’s we scout wednesday is all about weddings! btw, we scout wednesday is the opportunity to post on a given theme each week and share your link on scoutie girl. i’ve been looking for an excuse to share some pics from my wedding and this seems like a good time. so put your thinking caps on – posts could be about your own wedding, wedding appropriate products you make, your love story, why you’re never getting married… the sky’s the limit!

i’ll also be sharing some items that make me wish i could do it all again. okay, well, maybe not quite – but you know what i mean.

get your post ready for wednesday and then link up!

by the way, i just love the look of a short wedding dress. flirty – fun – and perfectly modern.

planning a green wedding? gowns by threadhead

threadhead - eco-friendly wedding dress

wedding season is just around the corner. i didn’t have a big frilly wedding (btw, i’m totally posting pics of my own wedding soon, just because) but there is just something so inspiring about wedding design. it’s all about details, a heightened sense of reality, and joy – pure joy.

i stumbled upon these gowns by threadhead while watching the “recently listed” items flash buy on etsy. they are constructed from sustainable, organic, or otherwise eco-friendly materials such as organic cotton, unbleached chiffon, and hemp! the gowns range in price from $700 to $1200 – which i think is a great price for sustainable design & handmade quality!

threadhead - ecofriendly wedding gown

for more inspiration & beautiful gowns, click through to threadhead!