Pam Winters Studio

Creative Design and Illustration

  • Projects
    • Graphic Design
      • Business and Promotional
      • Special Event
      • Wedding
    • Illustration
    • Invitations
      • Wedding
      • Bat Mitzvah
      • Bar Mitzvah
    • Workshops
  • About
    • Meet Pam
    • Client Testimonials
  • Contact
  • Shop

Archives for May 2015

Invitations: Colorful Party

By Pam Winters

  • Colorful Party Bat Mitzvah Invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • bat mitzvah invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Colorful Party Bat Mitzvah Invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • bat mitzvah invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • bat mitzvah invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

When asked to create a modern, elegant Bat Mitzvah invitation suite for a young lady by the name of Sarah, I was more than happy to oblige, and equally thrilled to find out that the client wanted eye-catching colors to take center stage. Sarah and her mom, Jessica, were truly a pleasure to work with throughout the project, giving detailed feedback at every stage, in order to make sure the final product was a true representation of Sarah’s personality and the Bat Mitzvah festivities. Event planner Catherine Bachelier collaborated with us throughout, offering valuable insight into the look and theme of the party.

This invitation suite was unique in that brunch and party cards, as well as more than one RSVP option, were needed; I also made custom envelopes (by hand) for the party cards, and these tied in with the rest of the suite. There were three versions of the thank you card design printed, in order to have Sarah’s name appear in all three of her suite’s main colors: purple, green and blue. Shimmering silver paper and envelopes served as the perfect complement to the bold color scheme. Bright silk papers in green and purple served as an elegant double backing to the silver invitation card; the finished invitation was then wrapped with a satin ribbon in coordinating bright green. Needless to say, the client was extremely happy with the final product, which gave guests a sneak peek into to the colorful festivities that would greet them on the day of the big event.

There are five individual cards included in this suite: invitation card and envelope, RSVP postcard, party card and envelope, brunch card, as well as thank you card and envelope. All designs are pictured in the slideshow above.

Click here to read about Jessica and Sarah’s experience working with me. 

Filed Under: Creative Projects Pam Winters Studio, Uncategorized Tagged With: bat mitzvah, Bat Mitzvah Invitations, design, Graphic Design, Invitations, Portfolio, projects

Invitations: Baseball Ticket

By Pam Winters

  • Baseball Ticket Bar Mitzvah Invitation Suite

    Photos of custom Bar Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Baseball Ticket Bar Mitzvah Invitation Suite

    Photos of custom Bar Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Baseball Ticket Bar Mitzvah Invitation Suite

    Photos of custom Bar Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

This project is a Bar Mitzvah invitation suite I worked on for Jake, the eldest of two sons, and brother of Hannah, whose Bat Mitzvah invitations I had previously designed (see Hannah’s invitation suite here). Jake is a baseball player and a great young man. I worked with Catherine Bachelier, who planned Jake’s Bar Mitzvah party, as well as with Jake and his parents, in order to come up with an invitation suite that spoke to Jake’s love of all things baseball. The Bar Mitzvah party itself was to include sports nostalgia and vintage touches, and I kept that in mind while putting the visual elements of the suite together. We all agreed it would be fun to make the invitation card look like an authentic baseball ticket, complete with an actual perforated line separating the invitation from the main RSVP, so that the recipient could easily tear off the RSVP and send back to Jake’s family in the enclosed envelope. The final product was truly a collaborative effort, and most importantly, hit a home run with Jake!

There are three individual cards included in this suite: combined invitation card and child’s RSVP, adults’ RSVP card and envelope, as well as folded thank you card and envelope. There is also a digital save the date, which I designed and coded, and for which I provided instructions to the client (for emailing out in advance). All designs are pictured in the slideshow above (with the exception of the save the date).

Click here to read about Ronit and Jake’s experience working with me.

Filed Under: Creative Projects Pam Winters Studio, Uncategorized Tagged With: bar mitzvah, Bar Mitzvah Invitations, design, Graphic Design, Invitations, Portfolio, projects

Invitations: Golden Vines

By Pam Winters

  • Golden Vines Wedding Invitations

    Photos of custom wedding invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Golden Vines Wedding Invitations

    Photos of custom wedding invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Golden Vines Wedding Invitations

    Photos of custom wedding invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Golden Vines Wedding Invitations

    Photos of custom wedding invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

This is a custom wedding invitation suite I designed and made a couple of years ago for clients Amanda and Seth, a fun-loving local couple whose special day was being planned by the talented Catherine Bachelier. From my initial conversation with Amanda, it was clear she wanted an invitation suite that was personal and handmade, but also appropriate for a more formal wedding event. One of the great things about Amanda being local was the fact that we were able to meet early on in the process of deciding on the look of her invitation suite, which helped me tremendously during the design and revision phases of the project. Early on, it was decided that gold floral and flourish-like accents would add just the right touch of sophistication. The gold on ivory paper, combined with pops of orange throughout, turned out to be the perfect way to say elegant fun. Seeing all the elements come together for the first time seemed to literally bring joy to Amanda’s heart.

The final result reflects a clean, romantic design aesthetic, with distinctive handmade touches and bold color accents. The work I did by hand here includes: invitation card mounted onto a backing card (to show slight border), stamping and embossing with metallic gold powder (floral imagery), envelope liners and belly bands cut and assembled from fine handmade paper, as well as satin ribbon tied in a square knot (around the invitation and menu each).

There are three individual cards and a menu included in this suite: invitation card and envelope, RSVP card and envelope and information (“Directions”) card. The menu was included at each table setting on the day of the event. All designs are pictured in the slideshow above.

Click here to read about Amanda’s experience working with me.

Filed Under: Creative Projects Pam Winters Studio, Uncategorized Tagged With: design, Graphic Design, Invitations, Portfolio, projects, wedding, Wedding Invitations

Invitations: Magic by the Sea

By Pam Winters

  • Magic by the Sea Bat Mitzvah Invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Magic by the Sea Bat Mitzvah Invitations

    Photos of custom Bat Mitzvah invitation suite by Stacey Winters Photography, © 2015 by Pam Winters

  • Custom Bat Mitzvah Save the Date (digital only)

    Custom Bat Mitzvah save the date (digital only), © 2015 by Pam Winters

A Bat Mitzvah invitation suite with a special theme request came to me in the project pictured above, done for Hannah, the daughter of a warm, close-knit family. I later created invitations for Hannah’s brother, Jake (see the Bar Mitzvah invitation suite I designed for him here). For Hannah’s invitations, I worked with event planner Catherine Bachelier, and mother-daughter duo, Ronit and Hannah. Hannah is a very imaginative young lady. Our mission was to come up with an invitation design that showcased Hannah’s love for the magic of Harry Potter, along with her other favorites: the ocean and a rich shade of purple. I did some research and sketching, until I came up with a visual motif that fit Hannah perfectly, which is the Harry Potter-inspired “H” (for Hannah) cut out of the middle of a purple seashell silhouette I drew. The motif appears on all pieces of the invitation suite, as well as on a custom rubber stamp (not pictured here), which was made special for Hannah to have and stamp on her stationery at her leisure. I’m grateful for the creativity and fun that flowed (like magic) throughout the duration of this project.

There are three cards included in this suite: invitation card and envelope, RSVP card and envelope, as well as folded thank you card and envelope. There is also a digital save the date, which I designed and coded, and for which I provided instructions to the client (for emailing out in advance). All designs are pictured in the slideshow above.

Click here to read about Ronit and Hannah’s experience working with me.

Filed Under: Creative Projects Pam Winters Studio, Uncategorized Tagged With: bat mitzvah, Bat Mitzvah Invitations, design, Graphic Design, Invitations, Portfolio, projects

“If it is to be, then it’s up to me.”

By Pam Winters

Life Drawing StudyMy intention with an online journal is to post entries that not only mean something to me, but hopefully, inspire and/or interest others out there reading. Ideally, I would like this to be an area where I am able to string together and share the varied experiences of my life—this includes remembering the past, pulling from the present and looking to the future for new endeavors and experiences yet to come. These are glimpses into what personally shapes me as an individual, and by default, as an artist and designer. This journal should be a safe place above all else—a place for learning, growing and sharing. And with that, I begin …

It was the summer of 1996, and I had just moved to Washington, D.C., from San Diego to pursue graduate studies at Georgetown University. I had been accepted to their master’s program in Russian Area Studies, which was a next step after getting my bachelor’s in Political Science and Russian and Soviet Studies at UCSD. Georgetown offered me a university fellowship, which covered the cost of tuition. It was an exciting time for me, and only the second time I had lived on the east coast. Having never visited D.C. before being accepted to Georgetown, I was immediately drawn to the city and its energy. My living arrangement was ideal: I would rent an upstairs bedroom in a cute little house in a quiet neighborhood just off of Wisconsin Avenue, and a short walk from the National Cathedral. A young woman (we’ll call her Marie) lived in the house with her partner (Brad, as we’ll call him here), who was getting ready to move out in order to pursue his law degree in Indiana. My bedroom overlooked the lush backyard tended by Marie and Brad, both of whom enjoyed gardening. Marie and I would be rooming with a young man who had also just arrived in D.C. from California (we’ll call him Todd). Like me, Todd had recently graduated with his bachelor’s from one of the UC campuses; his goal was to obtain a full-time job at an organization focused on social change. Brad moved out as the two California transplants moved in, with occasional visits back as his schedule allowed.

Each one of us in our twenties at the time, we ended up having quite a bit in common, and the house dynamic was a fairly successful one (with the occasional hiccup, of course). We shared our hopes and dreams, almost from Day One. All of us had talents that quickly emerged. I remember early on looking through my sketchbooks with both roommates, one seated on either side of me—they complimented my drawing abilities and artistic expression. Marie paused at one drawing in particular that I had done a short time before (in a life drawing class in California)—“That looks like ME!” We all agreed the model’s face in my drawing did indeed closely resemble her face; it was a coincidence worth noting. Marie had her own creative outlet, diligently working at the dining room table in the evenings, after returning home from work, on a very detailed, beautiful quilt she was sewing together from scratch. One day, on a whim, Todd baked all of us a phenomenally delicious apple pie from scratch. We were amazed and encouraged by one another’s gifts. And we were able to share quality social time with one another at different points—movies, television, dinner, shopping or just easy conversation in the house—which made things a little bit better for the homesick among us (i.e., myself and Todd).

Soon after starting the graduate program at Georgetown, I realized that I wanted more creativity in my life. I could see that the rigorous class, study and thesis-writing schedule, combined with university- and student-sponsored activities outside of the classroom, were going to quickly fill up every waking hour in my day and evening, and then some. Russian studies in general and the study of the Russian language, in particular, fascinated me to no end. My intellectual spirit soared while an undergraduate at UCSD; I loved taking classes steeped in Russian and Soviet politics, history, art, literature, society and language. When I realized how much I loved learning about that part of the world, I took this inspiration and ran with it, all the way to Georgetown. But, when I got there, I was so intrigued by D.C. itself, and all that this new big city environment had to offer, that I felt a disconnect when sitting in a classroom (yet again), as opposed to going out and experiencing the world, and hopefully finding a way to let my innate talents and desire to draw lead that exploration.

In short, I stayed at the house for a few months after leaving the program at Georgetown. I signed up for an illustration class at the nearby Corcoran extension, and worked a little bit in retail at a shop in the Georgetown Park mall. The class turned out to be a highlight of my stay. I also soaked up all I could from the places I visited in D.C. and neighboring areas during those few months—from galleries to monuments to people watching. Looking forward to getting started on my next phase in life, I intended to draw. I moved back to California shortly before the holidays that same year, and soon after, got to work drawing political cartoons, which seemed to satisfy my thirst for politics and news, and my desire to put pen to paper to express my opinion. Since that experience living with Marie and Todd in D.C., I often think about a little framed quote that Marie had hanging on one of the walls of the house, which I passed by and took note of on more than one occasion: “If it is to be, then it’s up to me.” I never forgot that, and I hold myself to it today, as I continue down my own path of living a life filled with creativity, reaching for joy and inspiration at every opportunity.

Pictured above: a cropped image of my coincidental roommate look-alike drawing (The very one!), © 2015 by Pam Winters

Filed Under: Creative Journal Pam Winters Studio, Uncategorized Tagged With: art, blog, Illustration, journal, sketch

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • Next Page »

Get in touch

Phone: 760-761-4933
Email: pam@pamwinters.com

Stay in the loop

Let’s connect

Back to top
Copyright © 2026 by Pam Winters