Favors

Favors with your date on them — and a reason to keep them

The candy gets eaten and the candle gets regifted. A favor survives when it is personal, useful, or beautiful — ideally two of the three. This is the favor menu we print.

Laser-engraved keepsakes

Tokens, tags, bottle openers, and small wood or metal pieces engraved with initials and the date. Engraving reads as permanent in a way ink never will, which is exactly the register a wedding favor wants. Produced ahead in our shop and set at place settings, or engraved live at a favor table while guests watch the laser draw.

UV-printed stickers & decals

Your crest as a thick, glossy, waterproof sticker — guests put them on water bottles and laptops, which means your wedding art keeps circulating for years. They also work as welcome-bag seals and cup decals, tying the paper goods together for pennies a piece.

Patch pieces

Leatherette and chenille patches pressed onto koozie-style wraps, small zip pouches, or hats. Patches carry texture and weight, and pairing them with a hat-bar moment turns the favor into an activity.

Laser engraved white token held between fingers above a crowded event floor
An engraved token: small, permanent, pocketable.

Made ahead or made live

Two ways to run favors

Batch-produced: we make the full run in Orange County and deliver boxed and counted — the economical route, and the right one when favors are one of many pieces in your weekend. Live favor table: a small staffed station where guests personalize their piece — a name added to a token, a patch pressed onto a pouch. It costs crew time but earns a spot on the timeline as an activity. Many couples split the difference: pre-made favors at settings, one live element at the welcome party. Whatever the split, quantities follow the guest list plus 10% — and yes, your planner gets an itemized count.