# How to Assemble Wedding Invitations: Step-by-Step Guide

> Assembling wedding invitations correctly — the right stacking order, how to handle inner envelopes, postage, and the small details that protect your stationery investment — takes about an hour once you know exactly what you're doing.

*Published 2026-06-24 · Updated 2026-06-24 · By Grace Bellamy*

In short
Assemble wedding invitations on a clean, dry surface with washed hands: stack inserts largest-to-smallest, printed side up, with the RSVP envelope on top and its card tucked face-up under the flap. Pre-stamp all RSVP envelopes, weigh a complete test suite at the post office before purchasing stamps, and hand-cancel at the counter on mailing day.

## What do you need before you start assembling wedding invitations?

Assembly day should feel like a quiet, pleasant project — not a rescue operation. It requires advance preparation that most guides skip. Gather everything before you begin: all printed invitation components (invitation card, reception card, details/accommodations card, RSVP card and pre-addressed RSVP envelope), outer envelopes, any inner envelopes if using, embellishments (belly bands, vellum overlays, wax seals), stamps for both outer and RSVP envelopes, a damp sponge for sealing, and your addressed envelope list.

Set up on a clean, flat surface with good lighting — a large kitchen table or a cleared dining room table is ideal. Wash your hands thoroughly and dry them completely. Oils and moisture from your hands can smudge fine ink or warp luxury paper at scale. If you are assembling a large quantity, consider lightweight cotton gloves; they are inexpensive and protect high-end cotton-fiber or letterpress paper from fingerprint oils.

Allow all printed pieces at least 24 hours to dry fully before assembly. Freshly printed ink can smear even when it appears dry to the touch, particularly on digital-offset printing. Letterpress and foil-stamped suites should be allowed 48 hours. This step is almost universally skipped by couples who are eager to begin — and it costs them re-printed cards.

One more critical preparation step: stamp all RSVP envelopes before you begin the assembly process. Pre-stamping the RSVP return envelope is both an etiquette requirement and a practical necessity that directly improves response rates. Do it first, before assembly, so a stamp is never accidentally sealed inside an outer envelope.

## What is the correct stacking order for wedding invitation inserts?

The stacking order is not arbitrary — it reflects both traditional etiquette and practical usability. The correct sequence, from bottom to top, is as follows:

**The main invitation card** sits at the bottom, face up, as the largest and most important piece in the suite. Everything else layers on top of it.

**Vellum overlay or liner**, if included, lies directly on top of the invitation card. Vellum was historically used to protect ink from smearing during transit; today it is primarily decorative, adding texture and a soft translucent layer over the printed card beneath.

**Reception card**, if ceremony and reception are at separate venues, goes face up on top of the vellum or invitation card. Not every suite includes a reception card; if your ceremony and reception are at the same location, this insert is unnecessary.

**Additional enclosure cards** — accommodations, details, directions, or a wedding website card — stack face up in descending size order on top of the reception card. Smaller cards on top; larger cards beneath.

**RSVP envelope** goes on top of the stack, addressed side down, with its pre-stamped flap to the left. The **RSVP card** is tucked face up under the envelope flap so the printed side is visible when the outer envelope is opened.
Wedding Invitation Stacking Order (Top to Bottom)PositionPieceOrientationTopRSVP envelope with RSVP card tucked under flapAddress side down; RSVP card face up2ndSmallest enclosure card (details, website, etc.)Face up3rdLarger enclosure cards (accommodations, directions)Face up4thReception card (if applicable)Face up5thVellum overlay (if applicable)Over invitation cardBottomMain invitation card (largest piece)Face up
## How do you stuff and seal wedding invitation envelopes?

Once the insert stack is assembled, it is time to place everything into the envelope. The sequence depends on whether you are using inner envelopes.

**With inner and outer envelopes (traditional):** Slide the assembled stack into the inner envelope with the printed sides facing the envelope's open flap — so when the guest opens it and reaches in, the invitation reads naturally. Leave the inner envelope unsealed. Place the unsealed inner envelope inside the outer envelope with the guest's name facing the flap. The logic: when your guest opens the outer envelope and reaches in, they find the inner envelope, open it, and the invitation faces them correctly.

**Without inner envelopes (modern):** Slide the assembled stack directly into the outer envelope, printed sides facing the envelope flap — same orientation as above, for the same readability reason.

Seal outer envelopes using a damp sponge, not your tongue. Moisture from your mouth can warp fine paper at scale and, for a large run, becomes genuinely unpleasant. Work in batches of 20–25 envelopes, sealing each before moving to the next batch. This prevents envelopes from drying unevenly.

Do not apply wax seals to the outer mailing envelope until postage is in place and you are ready to mail. According to [Minted's assembly guide](https://www.minted.com/wedding-ideas/assembling-wedding-invitations), wax seals on outer envelopes should be applied just before mailing and should ideally be adhesive-backed seal stickers rather than traditional hot-poured wax, which can crack or catch in postal sorting machinery.

## How do you calculate and apply wedding invitation postage?

Postage is one of the most commonly mishandled steps in invitation assembly, and the consequences — returned invitations or delivery with postage-due charges — are expensive and embarrassing. The correct process requires a trip to the post office before you purchase any stamps.

Assemble one complete test suite exactly as every guest will receive it: every insert, the belly band or vellum wrap, the wax seal if applicable, fully sealed in the outer envelope. Bring this single complete suite to a post office counter — not a self-service kiosk — and ask a postal employee to weigh it and assess any surcharges. In the U.S. as of 2025, a standard first-class stamp covers one ounce at approximately $0.73. Square or unusually shaped envelopes carry a non-machineable surcharge of approximately $0.40 per piece. Suites with multiple inserts, thick cardstock, or rigid embellishments frequently weigh more than one ounce and require additional postage.

If you have some suites with extra inserts for out-of-town guests — a hotel block card, a transportation schedule — assemble one of those as well and weigh it separately. It will likely require different postage, and applying the wrong amount to that subset will result in returns or postage-due delivery.

Purchase only USPS stamps through official USPS channels. Counterfeit stamps are common on third-party online marketplaces and will result in non-delivery. For a finishing touch that reflects the care you have put into the entire suite, vintage commemorative USPS stamps in colors that complement your palette are available at most post office counters and add a warmth that standard flag stamps cannot match.

## What is the best way to assemble a large quantity of invitations efficiently?

For guest lists above 80 households, an assembly-line method is significantly faster and less error-prone than building each suite individually from start to finish. Set up separate stacks of each printed component in the order they will be assembled. Work through the full batch one step at a time: add the vellum overlay to every invitation first, then add reception cards to every stack, then enclosures, then RSVP envelopes. Check one completed suite per batch of 25 before sealing, to catch any step that was missed across the batch.

One pro tip from [The Knot's stationer guide](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-to-assemble-wedding-invitations): write a small, nearly invisible number in pencil on the back of each RSVP card, corresponding to the numbered entry in your master guest list spreadsheet. If a guest returns an RSVP card without a name — which happens with surprising frequency — you can identify who responded by the number. This takes two minutes to set up and saves hours of detective work four weeks before the wedding.
Plan your mailing timeline: all invitation suites should be mailed on the same day. This prevents awkward situations where some guests receive their invitations weeks before others. Mail at a post office counter, hand all suites directly to a postal employee, and request hand-canceling — this prevents automated sorting machinery from printing barcodes across your envelopes and protects wax seals from mechanical damage. It is a ten-minute task that costs nothing and ensures your stationery investment arrives exactly as it left your hands.

## Sources

1. [How to Assemble Wedding Invitations Step by Step](https://www.minted.com/wedding-ideas/assembling-wedding-invitations)
2. [Everything You Need to Know About How to Assemble Wedding Invitations](https://www.theknot.com/content/how-to-assemble-wedding-invitations)
3. [How to Assemble Your Wedding Invitations Like a Pro](https://www.shineweddinginvitations.com/blog/how-to-assemble-your-wedding-invitations-like-a-pro)
4. [How to Assemble Your Wedding Invitations: Step-by-Step Guide](https://www.reveriepaperco.com/tips-and-advice/how-to-assemble-your-wedding-invitations-a-simple-step-by-step-guide)

---
Source: https://rosevow.com/stationery-gifts/how-to-assemble-wedding-invitations
Index: https://rosevow.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://rosevow.com/llms-full.txt
