26 Hand-Drawn Wedding Invitations Your Guests Will Want To Frame
Your wedding invitation is the first glimpse your guests get into what your celebration will feel like, and a hand-drawn design tells them something a printed template simply can’t: that someone took time to make something just for you. Whether it’s a watercolor bouquet painted by hand, a calligraphy suite that took three drafts to get right, or a tiny illustrated portrait of you and your partner (glasses and all), these invitations feel like gifts before the party even starts.
The term “hand-drawn” covers a surprisingly wide range of styles. There are loose watercolor florals, bespoke venue sketches, whimsical cartoon couples, full calligraphy suites, and hand-drawn maps of your destination wedding island. The one thing they all have in common: they were made by actual humans, with intention, and it shows in every detail.
Whether you’re drawn to something romantic and botanical, playful and illustrated, or quietly elegant with hand-lettered script, there’s a style in here that matches the version of your wedding you’ve been imagining. And if you fall in love with any of these looks, click through to see the full wedding! For even more inspiration, browse our Real Weddings directory.
Watercolor Floral Invitations
Watercolor florals are the most popular style in hand-drawn invitations for good reason: they’re romantic, softly feminine, and every single one is different because no two watercolor paintings come out exactly alike. These four examples range from airy and delicate to bold and saturated, so even within this style, there’s a lot of room to make it your own.
Painted Birds with a Wildflower Garland

A hand-illustrated bird perched on a painted wildflower garland anchors both the invitation and the matching RSVP card, all in soft pinks, purples, and greens. It’s romantic without being fussy, and the loose botanical style would suit any garden or outdoor venue. The consistency between the invitation and RSVP makes the whole suite feel considered rather than assembled.
See Annalee and Errik’s Cherry Basket Farm Wedding →
Hand-Sketched Peony with a Botanical Border

A large hand-sketched peony in pale pink and lavender sits at the top of this invitation, with a delicate botanical border winding along the bottom and calligraphy reading “Emily & Sean” in a sweeping script. The deckled edges give the paper an organic, natural feel that matches the hand-drawn style perfectly. The matching RSVP card carries the same floral motif in miniature, so the suite holds together beautifully.
See this Rustic Chic Styled Wedding →
Full Watercolor Rose Suite in Blush and Pink

The invitation, rehearsal dinner card, and RSVP all carry the same watercolor rose-and-foliage border, so nothing feels mismatched when everything lands in the mailbox together. The pink and blush roses are painted in soft, layered washes, and the suite holds together without feeling repetitive. When your guests open the envelope and see the whole set, it reads as intentional rather than assembled from separate templates.
See Ramona and Luke’s Wedding →
Bold Painted Florals in Peach, Pink, and Yellow

A close look at this invitation reveals just how lush the illustrated border is: peach peonies, hot pink wildflowers, and yellow roses all painted around a gold oval frame, with the wedding details in terracotta calligraphy at the center. The colors are bold and joyful without tipping into chaotic, and the gold oval adds just enough structure to keep the design feeling polished. This one would suit a spring or summer garden wedding beautifully.
See this Citrus Inspired Florida Wedding →
Bold Navy Typography with Watercolor White Florals

The invitation reads “Emily Ann and Drew Zural” in bold all-caps navy sans-serif typography, which is a clean modern choice that most floral suites avoid in favor of script. The watercolor element is a soft arrangement of white flowers and blue-green botanical leaves at the top of the card, delicate enough to feel hand-made against the bold type. The matching RSVP and reception cards carry the same motif in miniature, and the cobalt blue envelope anchors the whole flat lay. If you love the look of illustrated florals but want the invitation to read strong rather than romantic, this is the style to reference.
See Emily and Drew’s Saint Paul Wedding →
Custom Portrait Invitations
If you want your invitation to look like no one else’s on earth, the answer is a custom portrait. Whether it’s a cartoon of the two of you, an illustrated pet portrait card, or a hand-drawn likeness that actually captures your faces, these invitations are personal in a way that a floral border simply can’t be.
Illustrated Couple Portrait in Black Ink

Instead of a floral border, Becka and Drew put themselves on the invitation: a hand-drawn portrait of the two of them rendered in black ink, with calligraphy names below and a pink ribbon and twine tied around the card. It’s charming, specific, and the kind of invitation guests hold onto long after the wedding. The illustration actually looks like the couple, not a generic silhouette, which is the whole point of commissioning a portrait in the first place.
See Becka and Drew’s Pasadena Wedding →
Watercolor Venue Illustration Paired with a Custom Pet Portrait Card

The main invitation card has a tiny watercolor-painted venue illustration at the top, the house rendered in precise detail with flowering shrubs. But the real surprise is the second card: a full custom watercolor portrait of the couple’s golden doodle, complete with bow tie. This is the rare suite that introduces where you’re getting married and the dog who will also be attending. The illustration style is warm and loose, not stiff.
See Jodi and Miles’s Wedding →
Cartoon Couple with Illustrated Orange Slices and Botanicals

The bottom of Sarah and Andrew’s invitation features a hand-drawn cartoon portrait of the two of them: him in glasses, her holding a cocktail, surrounded by illustrated botanical branches with bright orange slices in the corners. It’s playful and personal in exactly the right proportions — fun enough to feel like them, structured enough to still read as a formal invitation. The citrus motif carries through the whole design, which makes the suite feel genuinely cohesive.
See Sarah and Andrew’s Seattle Wedding →
Hand-Drawn Dog Portraits on a Black Editorial Suite

The calligraphy on Katie and Jeremy’s suite is beautiful throughout, but the hand-drawn dog portraits are the reason guests will hold onto this invitation. One square card features a face-on charcoal portrait of their bulldog, rendered with enough detail to actually look like the dog. The save-the-date has a second illustration of the same dog, full-body and sitting, in fine black ink. The whole suite is arranged on a black background with gold shoes and a kraft-wrapped gift in navy ribbon, so it looks editorial without trying too hard. Two different views of the same dog, two different illustration styles, both unmistakably hand-made.
See Katie and Jeremy’s Tennessee Wedding →
Bespoke Venue Illustrations and Maps
For couples who are deeply attached to their venue, or getting married somewhere that takes guests on a journey to find, a hand-drawn venue illustration or map transforms the invitation into a piece of art about that specific place. These are commissioned from illustrators, often from reference photos, and no two look the same.
Painted Venue with a Watercolor Landscape Envelope Liner

The invitation itself is a full watercolor painting of the venue, a stately manor framed by enormous painted roses and lush botanical foliage. Then you open the envelope and the liner reveals a completely different painted scene: a coastal waterscape with a sailboat on the horizon. Opening this invitation feels like unfolding a miniature art collection. This is what bespoke means in the invitation world, and it sets a high bar.
See this Romantic May Day Styled Shoot →
Hand-Drawn Island Map for a Destination Wedding

For a destination wedding in Santorini, Greece, this suite includes a hand-drawn watercolor map of the island on thick deckled-edge paper, with towns labeled in calligraphy and the coastline sketched by hand. The sage green envelope has the address hand-lettered in white ink, with a gold wax seal. It’s a love letter to the place as much as it is an invitation to the wedding, and it gives guests something to look at long before they pack their bags.
See this Greek Goddess-Inspired Styled Shoot →
Architectural Venue Sketch as the Envelope Liner

The blue envelope does the heavy lifting here: its liner is a hand-sketched architectural illustration of the venue, drawn in precise ink detail with a fine artist’s hand. The invitation card inside is clean and monogrammed, letting the liner be the surprise. This is a smart way to commission custom artwork without overwhelming the card itself, and it rewards guests who actually open the envelope carefully rather than tearing straight through.
See this Garden Celebration at Hillbrook →
Botanical Line Art Invitations
Botanical line art sits between watercolor and calligraphy: precise, elegant, and unmistakably hand-drawn. These invitations use fine-line botanical sketches rather than painterly washes, which gives them a crispness that works equally well in formal and relaxed settings.
Illustrated Botanical Flourishes with a Gold Foil Ampersand

Illustrated botanical branches and blooms in blush, sage, and lavender flank the names “Kassandra & Kyle,” curling around a large gold foil ampersand that anchors the whole design. The combination of hand-drawn florals with metallic print is one that can easily go wrong, but this one pulls it off cleanly: the florals are loose enough to feel hand-made, the foil is refined enough to feel special. It would suit a spring garden or outdoor wedding in warm tones.
See Kassandra and Kyle’s Murrieta Wedding →
Cherry Blossom Line Art on a Navy Blue Suite

Fine-line cherry blossom branches, drawn in a delicate pale ink, frame the couple’s names in clean calligraphy on the invitation. The deep navy envelope has the address hand-lettered in rose gold, with a matching leaf-motif wax seal. The contrast between the airy line art on the card and the rich navy of the envelope is striking in the way that only a thoughtfully designed suite can be. Simple, but nothing about it is generic.
See this After the Rain Styled Shoot in Seattle →
One-of-a-Kind Hand-Drawn Designs
Some hand-drawn invitations don’t fit neatly into categories, and that’s exactly the point. These three examples each do something unexpected: one turns the invitation itself into a calligraphy artwork, one rethinks the shape of the card entirely, and one commits so fully to a theme that the invitation becomes a keepsake before the wedding even happens.
All-Calligraphy Suite with a Blue Watercolor Wash

Everything in this French-inspired suite is written by hand: “Je t’aime,” the names, the details card, the menu, even the RSVP. All of it is hand-lettered calligraphy on deckled paper with a moody blue watercolor wash bleeding along the bottom edge. There are no illustrated florals, no printed elements, just a calligrapher’s hand present in every single stroke across every single card in the suite. For couples who love the look of handwriting elevated into art, this is the reference image to save.
See this French Impressionist Garden Styled Wedding →
Round Die-Cut Invitation with a Painted Rose Insert

The circular shape alone makes this suite memorable, but the coordinating insert takes it somewhere else: a full watercolor rose painting, loose and layered in pink and blush, printed on a circle to match. Amy and Josh’s invitation carries the same blush watercolor wash and delicate calligraphy, with a matching round RSVP. If you’ve seen every rectangle invitation and nothing feels right, this is a reminder that the card’s shape is part of the design too.
See Amy and Josh’s Riverside Elopement →
Hand-Drawn Mason Jar on Gingham Paper

The entire invitation is built around a hand-illustrated mason jar, large and charming, with “Kate + Billy” written in bold lettering inside the jar on a light blue gingham card. The matching RSVP carries a smaller version of the same illustration. It’s rustic and cheerful, and the kind of invitation guests actually describe to friends who weren’t invited. For a picnic, farm, or backyard wedding, you’d be hard-pressed to find something more on-theme or more genuinely illustrated.
See this Picnic Styled Wedding →
FAQs
What makes an invitation “hand-drawn”?
A hand-drawn invitation includes artwork or lettering created by a human hand rather than generated by a computer. This can mean watercolor florals painted by an artist, calligraphy written with a pen or brush, custom illustrations drawn in ink or pencil, or a combination of all three. Printed invitations can use hand-drawn artwork as a source file, which is how these designs get reproduced in multiples while still looking one-of-a-kind. The defining element is that the original was made by hand, not assembled from digital clip art.
How much do hand-drawn wedding invitations cost?
Pricing varies widely depending on the level of customization. Suites that use existing hand-drawn artwork (from an illustrator’s shop) typically cost $3 to $8 per invitation set, which includes the invitation, envelope, and RSVP card. Fully bespoke designs, where an illustrator creates custom artwork just for you (a venue portrait, a couple portrait, a custom map), usually start at $300 to $600 for the artwork alone, before printing costs. Semi-custom options from independent stationery designers fall somewhere in the middle, around $150 to $400 for a custom design printed on 50 to 100 suites.
When should I order hand-drawn invitations?
Order earlier than you think. For suites using existing hand-drawn designs, start the process four to five months before your wedding, which gives time to design, proof, print, and address without rushing. For fully bespoke designs where an illustrator is creating custom artwork, add another four to six weeks on top of that. Illustrators who specialize in wedding stationery often book up six months or more in advance, especially for the spring and fall wedding season. If you’re eyeing something truly custom, reach out to your illustrator as soon as your venue is confirmed.
Can I get a hand-drawn invitation on a tighter budget?
Yes, with a few smart approaches. Semi-custom suites from independent designers on Etsy or at local paper shops let you choose from existing hand-illustrated designs and personalize them with your names and details, which is much more affordable than commissioning original artwork. You can also consider printing only the invitation with a hand-drawn element and using a simpler, coordinated design for the RSVP and details cards. Another option: commission one piece of custom artwork (like a venue sketch) and use it only on the envelope liner, while keeping the invitation card itself simpler and less expensive to print.
What do people do with hand-drawn invitations after the wedding?
Many couples frame them, especially the ones with bespoke artwork. A watercolor venue illustration or custom couple portrait makes a meaningful piece of wall art that’s specific to your wedding story in a way that a generic photo print isn’t. Some couples ask their calligrapher or illustrator to create a slightly larger version of the artwork as a standalone piece for display. Guests who receive particularly beautiful invitations often frame them too, which is the best possible compliment a piece of stationery can receive.
