Holiday Party Invitations for Business & Pleasure

The term “holiday party” covers a number of soiree types—Christmas parties, Hanukkah gatherings, New Year’s Eve celebrations, hideous sweater-themed shindigs, and baked good exchanges...there are so many, in fact, that we almost ran out of synonyms for the word “party.”

Oh wait, there’s more: open houses, art fairs, holiday bazaars, you get the idea. We’ve got loads of party invitation templates—no matter your fete—so check ’em out, customize with a few clicks, send out your invite, and get ready to be the hostess with the mostess! (Pssst: also check out our loads of holiday graphics!)


Winter holiday party invites

Make sure your guests know what kind of party you’re inviting them to by including as much pertinent information as you can on the invite. Is it black tie or BYOB? Are kids welcome to join? Should your guests RSVP or just drop by? Think about what you need to say, so you don’t have to field a million email/text/phone call questions later.

Need-to-know info may include:

  • Location info: Time, place, date.

  • Whether or not an RSVP is required/how to RSVP.

  • If it’s a kid-friendly affair or a pets-welcome party (not kidding).

  • Whether plus-ones are permitted/if they need to be included in the RSVP.

  • Theme info.

  • What to bring: food, libations, gift for an exchange, etc.

All right, great, you know what you need to say. But how do you wanna say it? Holiday party invitation wording also reflects the vibe of your party. For example: “Please join us for a holiday dinner party at 7 o’clock in the evening” has a totally different feel than “Grub and good times start at 7!”

For your consideration, a few phrases to get your word-generating wheels a-turning:

  • Come toast the holidays with good friends and good cheer

  • Please join us for a night of fun at a festive holiday soiree

  • Kick the season off right with an evening full of laughter and light


New Year’s Eve party invitations

New Year’s Eve is a mega party night, and tends to be more frou-frou than other holiday parties. But it doesn’t have to be! Whether you throw a super fancy fete, or a kegger on the patio, the party will be a success if everyone has a safe and enjoyable time.

Design tip: Traditional New Year's Eve party colors tend to be black and white and gold, but why not experiment with adding a pop of bright blue or pink to this palette for a fresh take on a classic.

Making cards and need New Year's message ideas? There ya go.


Small business seasonal soirees

Celebrate another year of great work with your employees and honor your staff with an evening of kicked-back fun or formal dining with a holiday work party. Whether it's spiked punch in the office, or champagne in a hotel ballroom we have invitation templates to match every style of soiree.

Did you know? All of our card templates are a standard 5 x 7 inches which is perfect for printing, but you can resize your card to any dimensions you want for posting to Facebook or Instagram, or for sending via email.


How to customize an invitation template in PicMonkey

Take a look through our plethora of holiday invitation templates until you find the perfect Christmas/Hanukkah/Kwanzaa/New Year’s Eve/winter brunch design. Pick your look and click Customize this template to open it in PicMonkey.

Already on the PicMonkey homepage? Just click Create new > Templates and search for "invitations."

Once your template is open, you're free to customize its look however you want. Add your own images, words, colors, graphics — anything, really!

Pro tip: Check out theme sets like Santaland and Winterland for fast access to holiday graphics, fonts, effects, & more.


Holiday invitation design tips

Whether or not you decide to start with a template, there are two things that can make the difference between an invite so amazerating you just might use it again next year, and an invite that becomes such a source of frustration you decide to scrap the whole idea and stay home alone. Keep these things in mind when designing your holiday party invitations...

Holiday color palettes beyond red and green

You can generate a color palette from a photo in one click using PicMonkey's Color Palette Generator tool

In design world, two-to-three colors is usually the sweet spot, depending on your project. Think about the mood you want your invite to evoke, or the holiday you’re celebrating. For example, metallics and black/white combos are great for sophisticated New Year’s invites, Christmasy reds always say “ho ho holiday,” and black/red/green schemes pack a lot of meaning when it comes to Kwanzaa.

Explore color theory a bit to learn how colors work together, plus check out our massive compilation of color combos...it's sure to leave ya with a few ideas.

Pick out some festive fonts

Fonts have feelings, too! Or, rather, they evoke different feelings. Make your invite feel whimsical with a display font like Budmo Jiggler, or dress it up fancy with a calligraphy-inspired font like Great Vibes. Remember to keep your words readable, and don’t bring in too many fonts or your design may not look as polished.

Check out these font pairings for guidance, or learn how to pair fonts yourself.

Once your invite is ready to rock, email or snail mail it to the people you want to celebrate the holidays with (or at least tolerate for a few hours). Oh, and have yourself a merry little holiday!

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This article was written by PicMonkey Staff, a multicellular organism of hive-minded sub-parts who just wanna get you the ideas and information you crave, so you can make powerful images that level up your business.