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Real Parties: Lila’s Dol Celebration

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contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

Today’s Real Party feature is full of so much great DIY inspiration… not to mention the fabulous color palette and wonderfully contemporary vibe! It’s a colorful “Dol” (traditional Korean first birthday celebration) that Angie Bae created for her adorable daughter Lila.

There are so many meaningful & handcrafted details in this party… from the creative cookie invitations and fabulous paper globe centerpieces (representative of family members) to handmade candy pillars (see below), a shimmery cake inspired by Lila’s hanbok, and more!

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

Read on for lots more images and all the party details, as told by Angela…

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

“For Lila’s dol/Korean first birthday party, the inspiration came easily when I first saw her hanbok (traditional Korean dress.) I loved the combination of pinks, white and lime green. They reminded me of Lila’s bubbly and happy personality, so we incorporated them into all the party details.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

INVITATIONS/COOKIES

Along with invitations from Tiny Prints, we included a set of “button” sugar cookies in pink and green from Meli & Angi. Guests either received a set that read lila/1 or chook/dol (1st birthday) in Korean characters.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

Cookies were placed in a plastic case and filled with white tissue shred for cushioning.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

ELEVATOR PHOTO GREETING

Since the party was on the 4th floor, we printed out photos of Lila and taped them in the elevators to greet guests. It reads “Oh! You made it. I’m on the 4th floor!” I love Lila’s “oooh!” expression in this photo:

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

PHOTO WALL

When you enter the space, there is a blank wall so we filled it with large sized photos of Lila. They were from different months in her first year, and displayed like a gallery setting. We used 3M temporary hooks so we wouldn’t damage the walls/paint.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

What Will Lila Pick? Board
The “doljabee” is a traditional element of the Dol. Items are laid out in front of the baby for her to choose from. The item that she picks will foretell her path in life. Money = wealth. Pencil = scholar. Thread = long life. Rice = never go hungry. We also added in a Mic = musical and an Abacus = intelligence.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

Guests wrote their names on ballots and put them in the pocket they thought Lila would choose. From the selected item, we randomly chose guests to win prizes. Lila picked the abacus first, followed by the rice.

CENTERPIECES & BANNERS

These paper globes were made by following Heather Bailey’s template. Each centerpiece includes globes of varying height to represent our family of 3.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

The “planter” is a white bakery box with green scrapbooking paper and pink ribbon arranged to look like 3 stripes of varying widths. The “stems” were trimmed down wooden dowels (purchased at Home Depot) and bbq skewers wrapped in green tissue paper. We stood them in floral foam and topped each planter with green crinkle cut paper shred (from Michaels).

The globes themselves were made from various scrapbooking papers found on Amazon. For Lila’s birthday banner, we used the same scrapbooking paper to have consistent colors.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

BIRTHDAY CAKE

Lila’s “hanbok” cake was made by Ruth Shin of Brooklyn Cake. It was strawberry shortcake with buttercream filling, and so delicious! We love that she was able to translate Lila’s hanbok into a cake… especially the ribbon detail.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

GO-IMS

The birthday table traditionally has go ims (pillars) on display. To personalize them, I used red beans and Korean rice puffs to make: 1) a mouse because Lila was born in the year of the mouse, 2) “Sora”, her Korean name and 3) “chook dol” in Korean characters.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

I also made 2 more using white, green and pink Mentos in stripes and flower designs.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

In front, we have plates of fruit and dduk (Korean rice cakes) which later get packaged for guests to take home.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

DDUK TO GO

To package the dduk for guests, we used plain white take out boxes and printed out thank you labels with pink stripes from Avery.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

LOLLIPOP GARDEN

Guests were also welcome to take lollipops from this “garden“. All the materials used to make it were found at Michaels – a wooden CD crate, floral foam, green crinkle cut paper shred, individual letters that spell out her first and middle/Korean name, paint and craft glue.

contemporary Dol - traditional Korean first birthday party

We are so glad that Mary Jane Photography and some of our very talented friends (Albert, Sandy, Susan and Sam) were able to help us remember Lila’s dol through photos. I still can’t believe Lila’s 1st year has come and gone. It really did fly by, but I remember every moment like it just happened.

31 Comments

  1. Party Box Design February 23, 2010 at 7:47 pm

    LOVE this party!! So original!

  2. Janice February 23, 2010 at 7:57 pm

    This theme is SO GORGEOUS! Truely breathtaking!!

  3. youngmi February 23, 2010 at 8:46 pm

    i love it! this is the cutest dol i’ve ever seen :) i can’t imagine how long the pillars must have taken but they’re amazing. thanks so much for sharing!

  4. kamille February 23, 2010 at 8:54 pm

    awesome concept!! :) she’s the cutest!!

  5. anthony teo February 23, 2010 at 8:00 pm

    this is really fantastic… great combination of traditional elements and modern touch.

  6. Melissa Irvin February 23, 2010 at 9:26 pm

    INCREDIBLE!!!

  7. Sandy February 23, 2010 at 9:53 pm

    the globes are SOOO cute!! i love them, i want to make some to decorate my house, my work cube, everything!! happy birthday lila!

  8. Jordan - Polkadot Prints February 24, 2010 at 3:19 am

    What a great way to combine tradition & modern! The centre pieces are my personal favourite! :)

  9. amy February 24, 2010 at 7:34 am

    wow wow wow!!

  10. jenn s. February 24, 2010 at 10:03 am

    Tina –

    I know – Heather is AMAZING! I adore her work too :)

  11. Tina B-Being Wife February 24, 2010 at 9:59 am

    Thank you for sharing the link to Heather Bailey’s Blog! I am Head-Over-Heels for all of her AMAZING talent!

  12. nicole February 24, 2010 at 10:41 pm

    What a beautiful party so full of culture and great photo’s!

  13. Stacey February 25, 2010 at 10:30 am

    I can’t believe those candy pillars. Amazing! Will definitely have to try it sometime!

  14. jae February 25, 2010 at 10:30 pm

    Gasp. Amazing!

  15. Jeanne Benedict March 2, 2010 at 9:53 am

    Just spent yesterday browsing in an Asian food market and absolutely love the traditional ideas and artistic displays of the Korean culture at this party. Beyond fabulous.

  16. Tiff March 2, 2010 at 8:59 pm

    Beautiful, what a sweet little girl you have. Can you tell me how you made the paper globes?? Is there a pattern somewhere?? Good job!!

  17. jenn s. March 3, 2010 at 8:47 pm

    Hi Tiff –
    You can get the pattern for the paper globes on Heather Bailey’s website: http://heatherbailey.typepad.com/heather_bailey/2008/01/paper-globes.html

    Look for the “free patterns” area in the right-hand side of the website and click on “paper globes” to download the pdf :)

  18. Megan April 18, 2010 at 4:55 pm

    Sooo ipo-da and creative! I am planning our Lila’s “dol” in October and am inspired! What did you use for your pillars?

  19. karisa July 21, 2010 at 8:54 am

    i’m also curious what you used for the pillars?

  20. Julia Kim LaSalle July 31, 2010 at 11:53 am

    I love the hanbok cake!! I get so excited when I see events with Korean elements- I need inspiration on how to incorporate my mothers traditions into the celebrations of my life events, and this is a fantastic inspiration!!

  21. Angie August 25, 2010 at 10:04 pm

    im sorry this is belated, but i wanted to reply that I used paper towels as the base for the pillars. Here’s a link to a diy for go-ims, if that helps:

    http://meliandangi.blogspot.com/2010/06/go-im-diy.html

  22. ellen bessette December 14, 2010 at 1:36 pm

    Where did you find the small rice cakes and then the larger rice bday cake? thanks

    • Angie July 7, 2011 at 10:58 pm

      you can order the rice cakes from local korean rice cake shops or caterers. depending on where you are, perhaps a search on yelp using the phrase korean dduk or korean rice cakes would bring up a few options? ours were from jingogae ).

  23. gloria January 14, 2011 at 1:29 pm

    wondering if you can tell me how many mentos you used for the go-im towers and what flavors they are. i am trying to order these in bulk since they are so pricey…

    any advice?

    • Angie July 7, 2011 at 11:04 pm

      I would say I used about 40-45 packs of mentos – original white mint, fruit and strawberry packs. You can also try the new rainbow mentos which have beautiful color hues. i shopped around local supermarkets to get the lowest price which was around 60 cents per pack.

  24. Karen January 21, 2011 at 9:49 pm

    Lila is so adorable!! Where did you get the plastic case for the cookies from?

  25. Nicole June 11, 2011 at 6:22 pm

    I have seen the same lollipops that you have in the lollipop garden a few times on this site. Does anyone know where I could find some?

  26. Jessica G. July 27, 2011 at 9:28 pm

    LOVE the ideas for this party!! One question…did you make the doljabi board yourself?

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