Jungle & safari kids' birthday invitations

Go wild with our customizable kids' jungle and safari birthday invitations. Track RSVPs, ask guests questions, and send via email, text message, or shareable link.

Animal House - Rifle Paper Co. envelope

Animal House

Wild Party - Rifle Paper Co. envelope

Critter Collective

Jungle Jamboree - Petit Collage envelope

Jungle Jamboree

Jungle Hang - Hello!Lucky envelope

Jungle Hang

Safari Squad Photo - Paperless Post envelope

Safari Squad Photo

Plushie Parade - Paperless Post envelope

Plushie Parade

Safari Squad - Paperless Post envelope

Safari Squad

Tiger Leap - Happy Menocal envelope

Safari Party

Jungle Birthday Bash (Invitation) - Little Cube envelope

Jungle Birthday Bash (Invitation)

Watering Hole - Meri Meri envelope

Watering Hole

Text message invites are here.

Send all of our invitations and cards via text, shareable link, and email, too.

* SMS delivery available for US phone numbers only.

Throw a roar-somely good jungle-themed birthday party for your little one this year, starting with our fantastically eye-catching jungle birthday invitations. Simply select your design from our wide range of jungle and safari-themed invitations, personalize with your event details and custom photos, and send out to your guest list! Manage your RSVPs at the click of a button and send reminders quickly ahead of the big day.

Safari birthday invitations

Our safari party invitations feature safari friends like zebras, lions, crocodiles, rhinos, tigers, and toucans. We have a variety of safari templates to choose from. Our design partner Petite Collage features wood-cut styling of safari animals, whereas Hello!Lucky features neon illustrations and bright graphics in their safari themed birthday invitations.

Jungle theme birthday invitations

Jungle theme invitation templates are a fun choice for your little party animals. Our jungle designs include a monkeys , zebras , parrots , and lions . Craft a jungle in your living room or head to a climbing gym park to do as the monkeys do. Whatever you have planned, bring your theme to life with fun and easy-to-track jungle birthday invitations.

When to send your jungle safari birthday invitations

Send your invitations five to six weeks before the day of the big event, in order to give those on your guest list plenty of time to respond. Send reminders easily and quickly to make sure no one misses out on celebrating your little one’s birthday. If you’re hosting your event at an outdoor climbing center, gym or other venue, make sure you have confirmed their availability for your date before you send out the safari birthday invitations.

Decorations for your jungle-themed birthday party

Invest in some high-quality jungle safari party decorations to create a cohesive theme for your event. Browse Paperless Post Party Shop for jungle-themed tableware, including plates , cups , and napkins . Choose from safari party hats , party bags , candles and pool floats to welcome your guests to the party. Check out our fun lion masks so your little one can be the king of the jungle on their special day!

Games and activities for a jungle safari birthday party

Put a jungle twist on some classic kids’ birthday party games and get your guests in the mood to have a fantastic time! You could play:

  • Pin the tail on the tiger – all you need is a tiger cut out and a furry tail to pin or tape onto it
  • Jungle obstacle course – use hula hoops, bean bags, balloons and climbing frames to make a DIY adventure obstacle course
  • Safari treasure hunt – hide toy animals around your yard and see who can find the most
  • Jungle fancy dress competition – have your guests come dressed as their favorite jungle animal and judge the winner
  • Stuck in the mud – this adaptation of ‘tag’ involves no extra items
  • Sleeping lions – have your guests lie down and stay as still as they can, the last one to move wins!
  • Jungle animal charades – have your guests act out the motions of well-known jungle animals until their team guesses correctly

125 Stanford Stories

Happy birthday, stanford.

opening ceremonies 1891

Stanford University opened 125 years ago, on Oct. 1, 1891

It was 125 years ago  – on Oct. 1, 1891 – that Stanford opened its doors, an anniversary that the university is celebrating with events, interpretive signage and festivities on campus and beyond.

On that day in 1891, a few hundred people gathered in the newly built Inner Quad as co-founders Jane and Leland Stanford  opened their “university of high degree”  on their Palo Alto stock farm as a memorial to their only child. With 15 faculty members, a handful of classrooms and some 400 students, Leland Stanford Junior University – still its legal name – was a far cry from the leading research and teaching institution it is today.

Yet the key values the founders proclaimed on that day have remained touchstones over Stanford’s 125 years – a commitment to innovation, to affordability, to public service and to impact in the world. Stanford has celebrated its expression of these values with events and a  Stanford 125 website  throughout its 125th anniversary year, culminating in several events planned for October.

It’s an exciting time for reflection, with the inauguration Oct. 21 of Stanford’s 11th president, neuroscientist  Marc Tessier-Lavigne .

“This milestone in Stanford’s history is an opportunity to reflect on the strong and compelling mission that Jane and Leland Stanford established for their university,” Tessier-Lavigne said. “We are grateful for the vision and foresight of the Stanfords, which continue to guide us today.

“Much has changed in 125 years, but the commitment to pursuing academic excellence, inclusion and impact in the world remains a constant at Stanford,” he said.

October event highlights

Alumni families gathered at the 2016 Stanford National Black Alumni Association Weekend at Stanford Sierra Camp in May to celebrate the 125th anniversary. Alumni hosted more than 40 similar gatherings throughout the world with help from the Stanford Alumni Association’s Birthday in a Box initiative.

Upcoming events from Stanford 125, an initiative of the Office of Public Affairs, and its partners include:

  • A public reflection Oct. 6 on the university’s past, present and future  by distinguished Stanford historians James Campbell and David Kennedy, co-sponsored with the Stanford Historical Society in Cemex Auditorium
  • Stanford Stories from the Archives , exhibits in Green Library and the Arrillaga Alumni Center opening Oct. 6 that reveal the evolution and unique aspects of student life on the Farm
  • The public  Stanford Live Inside/Out Arts Open House  on Oct. 9 at Bing Concert Hall
  • 125-themed events during the Stanford Alumni Association’s Reunion Homecoming, Oct. 20-23, including the  Founders’ Celebration  on Oct. 23
  • An employee celebration Oct. 27 at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory marking the university’s 125th anniversary

Moreover, Stanford is installing a campus-wide system of interpretive signage to share with visitors and community members alike its story of transformational impact over 125 years.

Telling Stanford’s story

Suzy Huizinga of Stanford's Sign Shop puts finishing touches on an informational kiosk near the Oval.

Rich with new photographs and archival images, as well as maps and textual information, the kiosks were developed in partnership with University Communications, Stanford’s Department of Land, Buildings and Real Estate, and departments and schools across campus.

The kiosks contextualize familiar landmarks such as Hoover Tower and Memorial Church.

They also spotlight new initiatives equally expressive of Stanford’s impact, such as Stanford Energy System Innovations (SESI), the campus energy system that opened in 2015. SESI, along with Stanford’s solar and geothermal power procurement initiatives, reduces campus emissions by roughly 68 percent and conserves 15 percent of campus potable water.

Still other kiosks explain how Stanford’s people and places exemplify its commitment to interdisciplinary research and education, community and residential education.

“Remarkable achievements abound at Stanford,” said David Demarest, vice president for public affairs. “The interpretive kiosks tell stories of significance at each campus location. We hope that the kiosks will help bring these stories to life for visitors and members of the Stanford community alike.”

A Braille plate on each kiosk directs visually impaired readers to a webpage that they can read on their Braille readers.

Showcasing students’ public service

meals

Students are observing the 125th with #125days125ways, a campaign launching this week by the Haas Center for Public Service, hub of the university-wide Cardinal Service initiative.

The campaign showcases the diverse ways that more than 1,000 students each year make public service an essential part of their Stanford experience. Student public service projects include tackling global hunger, bringing music to disadvantaged children, promoting mental health, seeking environmental justice and registering voters.

Each day for 125 days, their photos will be featured on the new  cardinalservice  Instagram account as well as the  Haas Center website . Alumni, faculty and staff are also encouraged to post using #125days125ways.

“It’s a reminder that service takes many forms, and that each of us can make a difference in a unique way,” said Astrid Marie Casimire, ’19, a 2015-16 Haas Center Frosh Service Liaison. Casimire and her peers have been organizing the campaign with Haas Center staff during the anniversary year as part of connecting students with service opportunities.

A year of celebration

img_0565

Over the past year, the Stanford community has celebrated in creative ways, from anniversary-themed  archaeology  to alumni clubs holding 125th birthday parties.

On campus, the 125 logo graces such diverse sites as the free, energy-efficient  Marguerite shuttles , the trade shops’  elegant landscape design for the campus Oval  and the Cardinal football field, where a 125th-themed Axe flag proclaims the Cardinal’s intent this fall to retain the  Stanford Axe , trophy of the Big Game, for the seventh straight year.

Stanford 125: A Visual Exploration , a  commemorative book  by acclaimed street photographer Alex Webb, captures the campus community at work and play over 10 days in autumn.

Public symposia in October 2015 and February 2016, “ Thinking Big About Learning ” and “ Celebrating Founders ,” highlighted Stanford’s strengths in education and entrepreneurship.

“Throughout the 125th anniversary, we have been sharing the Stanford story – the history of this great university and its mission, its values, its contributions to society and the world,” Demarest said. “It’s a story that will continue to be told for many years to come.”

oval-125-sept-160904-6664

Rick Herns Productions

Press & News

Publications and Articles

Northern California Home & Garden Tycoon Magazine Shift Magazine Gentry Magazine Ripley's Believe It or Not The San Franscisco Chronicle

safari themed birthday invitations

Northern California Home - Garden

Rick Herns: Party King 

By Belinda Delgado 

Whether your dream party includes a live mermaid aboard a pirate ship or a giant disco ball made of blue suede shoes, Rick Herns can make your fantasies come true. Herns is a special events producer, putting together some of the Bay Area's most lavish and imaginative parties. Herns and his staff animate private and corporate celebrations throughout the year. ‘A perfect party appeals to the senses, and I take care of all of them,' declares Herns.

The end of the year, however, is a special time for Herns, as the holiday – and party – season kicks into high gear. From early November to late January, Herns and his production staff spread cheer with the ultimate in yuletide revelries. Although many of his parties are large-scale, Herns also coordinates simpler celebrations that can include a sculpture made of pasta or a surprise visit from Santa. But no matter what its size, a holiday party, he notes, must have certain extra touches to succeed. ‘I have to make sure the place smells like cinnamon sticks!' he laughs.

However simple or grand the celebration may be, Herns makes sure his parties always contain plenty of what he calls ‘the WOW factor.' This may take the form of a 24-foot-long ice tunnel lit with crystal lights or a Christmas tree that lights up, dances and sheds candy canes off its branches. ‘It's a show without a rehearsal,' remarks Herns. ‘Guests arrive at a party and are inevitably surprised to see such unexpected delights.'

Coming up with elaborate productions and themes has never been a problem for Herns. Born into a theatrical family (his father was an actor, his mom a choreographer), Herns studied music in college and was a professional drummer for 10 years. He then switched careers, concentrating on his culinary skills as a restaurant chef. Soon after, Herns was introduced to the special events business when he was hired to coordinate parties for a production company. After spending the next three years jazzing up parties for someone else's company, Herns decided to start his own business. His wife Henri Mansfield, an English designer whom he met on a cooking job, helps complete clients' parties with table centerpieces and custom-made invitations. ‘This business gives me the opportunity to combine my three passions – music, theatre and catering,' explains Herns. ‘I can't imagine doing anything else.'”

safari themed birthday invitations

Tycoon Magazine  By Harvey Chipkin

“In the realm of New Year’s bashes this year, one couple had Rick Herns of Rick Herns Productions in Redwood City, California, put together a do called “Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil.” It is unrelated to the book, but featured the conversion of a staid country club into an elaborate garden maze trough which guests wandered to try to collect seven keys by answering questions correctly or winning games from a variety of characters, including a satanic magician, a nun and a gargoyle. At midnight, the seven keys gained them admission to a Secret Garden, where they found a fabulous dessert and champagne setup.

A Silicon Valley outfit called Silicon Graphics wanted to launch a new computer product. Rick Herns came in a did the flying saucer thing – an 18-foot saucer that flew independently (Herns won’t say how) right onto the landing platform…Very earthbound, however, was another Herns event where, to celebrate the completion of a new house, he put on a dinner that features blueprint place settings, Lincoln Log centerpieces, food served on sawhorses and lumber, and metal lunch boxes.”

safari themed birthday invitations

Shift Magazine By Michelle Goldberg

“Bay Area event planner Rick Herns, a former musician, describes an ultra exclusive event that played on the attendees' million-dollar egos. Herns works out of an historic Redwood City converted theater with sloping ceilings. There are purple chairs with yellow polka dots in the lobby that look plush and comfy, but turn out to be disconcertingly hard – they're props from a previous party, sculpted out of fiberglass.

The centerpiece of the event, Herns recalls, was a piece of equipment he bought from the Israeli army: a round machine, equipped with jaws, that was designed to dig up land mines and then fly off with them. The party was for the Young Presidents Organization, an elite group of company presidents under forty, mostly heads of tech firms. They were meeting in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and had hired Herns to plan a shindig. On the night of the soiree, the young presidents were herded into buses and told that they were being taken to a dinner engagement. Meanwhile, Herns had hired the New Mexico National Guard to help him pull off a Roswell-themed bash.

‘Halfway out in the desert,” he explains, “They were stopped by the National Guard. I had Hummers and helicopters. Guys in suits and sunglasses boarded each bus and handed everyone dossiers. When they opened them, there was a letter signed with a presidential seal, which, of course, I'd forged.” The letter was ostensibly from Jimmy Carter, and it said that, unbeknownst to the American public, he'd been negotiating for several months with alien beings who wanted to form a trade agreement with planet Earth. Before they did, though, they wanted to meet the American business elite.

The young presidents bought it. ‘The YPO guys are so totally ego-involved in who they are that they believed it,' he says. ‘They  totally  believed it, because I had the National Guard right outside their windows and helicopters buzzing around. Think about it – if this were to happen, this might be the way it  would  happen.'

The buses proceeded to drive off the freeway and into the desert, an area that's just ‘hundreds of acres of nothing,' says Herns. ‘We set up a beautiful, pristine white tent and surrounded it with what looked like radar and scientific apparatus, just like in the movies.' The young presidents went in and were served dinner. When the meal was done, the Israeli machine, decorated to look like a UFO, flew into the tent and landed on the dance floor, where people in alien costumes climbed out. The bill for the whole charade? ‘Several hundred thousand dollars,' says Herns.”

safari themed birthday invitations

Gentry Magazine Send in the Clowns

And the elves, and the world's tallest cowgirl. You meet the most interesting people at Rick Herns' parties.

Coming up with new ideas is no problem for Rick Herns, a man known for his wild, inventive imagination. In fact, party producer and planner extraordinaire Herns says his biggest problem is executing his clients' fantasies. ‘They constantly come up with ideas that challenge us,' he says.

His latest challenge was someone who asked for a party with a Basque theme. After finding out what that meant – that the Basque region was between Spain and France – Herns went to work. “I had a man who caves anything out of foam make us some Gypsy cellar signs, got posters from the Spanish Tourist Board, did centerpieces that were actually edible using foods from the region.”

If a request for a Basque party was no problem, has anyone ever stumped Herns? “More typical,” he says “is a client who says ‘I want to have a party – what should I do?' and talking to people, finding out who they are, about their style and their budget, is part of the fun. It's my job to educate them to the possibilities and produce a party they couldn't have done on their own.”

His ease with and knowledge of the elements of a good party comes to him naturally. He is from, as he puts it, “a theatrical family” – his grandfather was a pianist who accompanied silent movies, his mother a choreographer and his father a regular actor in community theatre productions. “The tradition in my house,” Herns says, “was not Little League. My parents, brother, sister and I were always in some show.” Herns studied music in high school and college, and then worked as a professional musician for ten years.

His other passion was cooking, and, after starting at the bottom, he worked as a chef at the Flea Street Cafe in Menlo Park for three years. So, with his experience in theatre, music and catering under his belt, he was a natural for the party business. “I didn't know there was such a thing as special events,” Herns says, but he was discovered and recruited by the owner of Crest Productions in Belmont, where he worked for three years. “They specialized in providing entertainment for conventions so, through them, I had experience working with name entertainers and got a lot of behind-the-scenes production experience.”

Eventually, Herns decided to open his own company, Rick Herns Productions, in Redwood City, and to expend beyond providing entertainment to providing food, graphics and stage sets as well. “It's still theater, really,” he says, “theater with no rehearsal.”

How does a Herns-planned party actually take shape? “First,” says Herns, “we set a date and find a site.” Although many Herns parties take place in the host's own home, if the crowd is large, possible sites are limited to convention centers and large hotels. For smaller crowds, however, Herns has planned parties in the lions' den at the San Francisco Zoo, in privately rentable mansions, at the Portola Valley Town Center gym (good, Herns says, for a nostalgic sock hop or prom). A personal favorite is the Fox Theatre in Redwood City, which Herns chose as the setting for his own wedding.

A Herns party really begins when the guests receive their invitations in the mail. For a sports-themed party, the invitation might be in the shape of a basketball or a stadium ticket. An invitation to a party Herns called Beach Blanket Barbara was a full sized beach towel decorated with a bikini-clad caricature of the hostess.

When the guests arrive, they could be greeted by almost anyone. At a Herns barn dance party, guests were greeted by the world's tallest cowgirl and a group of rodeo clowns (there were also pony rides for children and the world's smallest horse in attendance). At Beach Blanket Barbra, guests were greeted and entertained by The Funicellos, a doo-wop girl group of Herns' invention who wore bouffant hair-dos and sang songs specifically written about the hostess and her guests. 1,500 guests at a party for a high tech company at the Santa Clara Convention Center were greeted by robots and alien creatures before they had cocktails at the Cosmos Bar (a close relative, Herns says, to the Star Wars bar) and then ate dinner served from four giant buffet stations situated in an alien landscape with a 16-foot volcano and lighted Martian towers. Talk about (and Herns frequently does) the WOW factor!

Herns says that it is “fun and a challenge to take an idea and have the resources to pull it together with all the senses involved. A lot of people don't have the budget to do it all, but it's my job to give them the option.” Herns adds that he is happy to do a party for a six-year old for “a few hundred dollars” – a party that might include the appearance of a clown bearing half of a mysterious treasure map (the matching half is found under the birthday child's bed; when put together, the map leads to a buried treasure in the backyard).

Herns clearly believes that a party should be like a plan with a plot that has a beginning, a middle and an end. “You don't want to give it all away at the beginning, to have all the food displayed, the band playing and everything going at once when the guests first arrive.” Herns is also a great believer in interactive activities that act as icebreakers for guests. At a corporate Christmas party, a group of elves gave each of the arriving guests a number, and many people spent much of the party trying to find the guest with the matching number so the two of them could claim their prize.

“People go to a party to be transformed out of their everyday live,” says Herns. “They are often delighted to know that within a reasonable budget, we can change their backyard into Club Med or a Grecian palace of a cave or a winter wonderland.”

safari themed birthday invitations

A City of Ziti

Pasta, not Rice-A-Roni, may be the newest San Francisco treat – but in this case, only for the eyes. All roads in this pasta city led to San Francisco, but a rigatoni road only leads to heartburn.

The creator of these spaghetti skyscrapers was Rick Herns of Rick Herns Productions. For Fiesta Italiano, an event produced for the Fisherman's Wharf, Herns was hired by The Anchorage, a shopping center in Fisherman's Wharf, to build Rome from sand.

Instead, Herns chose to use a more Italian material to build what he calls a “caricatured sculpture of San Francisco.”

He and his team experimented with different shapes, colors and sizes of dried pasta. Golden Grain, a local pasta company, donated the pasta and Anchorage provided an empty store-front at the wharf where the group could begin building an al dente San Francisco.

For three days, shoppers and visitors watched the best-known city landmarks rise up from 54 pounds of fettucine and lasagne.

Of course, the 8-by-8-foot sculpture could not be complete without the wharf, Victorian houses, Coit Tower, cable cars, boats and the Golden Gate Bridge, but its crowning glory to past architecture was the 6-foot-high replica of the TransAmerica Pyramid.

safari themed birthday invitations

San Carlos man is top Bay Area event planner who specializes in the usual and theatrical

By Bill Workman Chronicle Staff Writer

Party producer Rick Herns of San Carlos has a reputation for being able to stock a client’s bash with unusual performers, like fire-eaters, belly dancers and acrobats on horseback.

But he admits that he was taken aback when he set out to hire Tim the Torture King, a Seattle entertainer who Herns had heard did bizarre things to his body.

Herns recalls that after tracking down the Torture Kind through “a series of stranger sources, like San Francisco piercing parlors,” he finally got on the phone with him to Seattle.

When Herns was about to give the off-beat performer his phone number, the other man could be heard casually asking someone to hand him a hypodermic needle – so he could scratch Herns’ number on his arm.

“I’m used to people doing illusions and magic, but this guy was the real thing,” said Herns, shaking his head. “He goes into a meditative state and does things like stick a skewer through his cheeks or lies down on shattered martini glasses and has guests walk on his bare back.

”Considered one of the top corporate event planners in the Bay Area, Herns, 45, says what makes a good party is good theater: “You have to have a plot with a beginning, a middle and an end,” building suspense throughout.

That formula was never more in dramatic evidence than at his media event two years ago for an Alameda video game company announcing it has bought CD-ROM rights for “Magic: The Gathering.” The popular fantasy role-playing card game.

Herns and a half-dozen Rick Herns Productions staff built a Renaissance village on a Fort Mason pier and populated it with actors playing costumed beggars, court jesters, knights and peasants who accompanied guests through a drawbridge into a castle-like interior.

There, in a gladiator pit, the fantasy gave was re-created as theatre by Herns, with the help of jugglers who snatched hurled swords out of the air, an illusionist “wizard” who disappeared behind a cloud of smoke, a whip-snapping stunt man from the “Nash Bridges” TV series, a pyrotechnic and a stunt horse trained to ride through the roar of explosives.

Herns said he had to “dig deep into my Rolodex” of uncommon performers and special effects technicians to pull off that one. He was also called on to write a script for the event. “Magic: The Gathering” is a complex game, Herns said. “It can take three to four days to play, but I had to present it in 20 minutes in an exciting way that would appeal to both people who were experts in it and people who knew nothing about it.”Herns got $40,000 for the event. “But I really didn’t charge enough,” he said, smiling.

Herns, whose party-decorated offices are located in an historic downtown Redwood City building that once housed the 19th century Alhambra Theatre, keeps a warehouse out back crammed with props, staging and costumes for theme parties.

Some motifs he offers: Oktoberfests with 10-foot-tall beer steins and giant pretzels; a pirate setting that can include a 4-foot-long pirate ship, Jamaican steel band, mermaid and parrots; or a Western scenario in which cowboy stuntmen hold a shootout (with blanks) at the party.

A San Francisco native, Herns was raised in a theatrical family that included a grandfather who played piano for silent movies, a jeweler father who acted in community theaters and a choreographer mother.

From an early age, he was prompted by his parents to perform with them, along with his brother and sister, in productions up and down the Peninsula. “There was no Little League in our house, only theatre,” Herns said.

As a teenager, he became a serious student of percussion instruments and studied classical music at San Jose State University, although he did not complete his degree work.Herns was already earning a living as a drummer in Bay Area rock bands when he left college after his junior year. “Like Mark Twain said, ‘I never let school get in the way of my education.’”

A professional musician for a decade, Herns eventually realized his prospects for recording industry fame were dim, and he turned to another passion of his, cooking. Starting as a vegetable cutter, he worked his way up to chef at the Flea Street Cafe in Menlo Park.

With his background in theatre, music and catering, Herns was recruited into the event-planning industry in 1986 by a Belmont firm that booked entertainment for the Moscone Center and other large venues. The experience encouraged him three years later to start his own company.

It wasn’t long before Herns had made Ripley’s “Believe It of Not” for an event at which he and a couple of sculptors crafted an 8 foot square model of San Francisco- including a 6-foot-tall Transamerica Pyramid, Coit Tower, Golden Gate Bridge, Fisherman’s Wharf and Victorian houses – made entirely out of pasta, 54 pounds of the stuff.

Herns had been hired by the marketing director of the Anchorage shopping center at the wharf to build Rome out of sand for Fiesta Italiano, a promotional event sponsored by wharf merchants.

Confessing he had little expertise in sand sculpture, Herns said he came up with the pasta idea in desperation after he remembered seeing the remarkable Ferris wheel and carnival created from toothpicks that are on display at San Francisco’s Musee Mechanique.

Herns is already signed up to do a “millennium” party for the city of Los Altos, a big-band extravaganza that will put 2,000 people into a tent the size of a soccer field at the civic center on New Year’s Eve.

But he warns that anyone who is thinking of hosting a large party should get cracking. Entertainers, caterers and other who work the party circuits are getting four and five times their regular rates for the night.

“The truth is, you better reserve your Porta Potties right now,” he advises.

IMAGES

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    Party Animals Wild Safari Pink Girl Birthday Party Invitation. $2.92 Comp. value. i. $1.46 Save 50%. Young Wild and Three Birthday Safari Girl Animals Invitation. $2.92 Comp. value. i. $1.46 Save 50%. Safari Greenery Wild One Boy 1st Birthday Photo Invitation.

  14. 640+ Free Templates for 'Safari birthday invitation'

    640+ Free Templates for 'Safari birthday invitation'. Fast. Affordable. Effective. Design like a pro. Create free safari birthday invitation flyers, posters, social media graphics and videos in minutes. Choose from 640+ eye-catching templates to wow your audience.

  15. Safari Theme Parties and Props

    Exotic Africa is the scene for the Safari Party. Enter the village through a large communal hut and be entertained by African drummers and dancers while you sample foods from Morocco, Tanzania and Zimbabwe. We set up an exhibit of exotic animals where your guests can get an up-close experience with a monkey, lemur, African porcupine, alligator ...

  16. Theme Parties and Props

    Rick Herns Productions 2596 Bay Road, Suite D Redwood City, CA 94063 (650) 324-3200 [email protected] Corporate and Private Event Planners

  17. Happy birthday, Stanford!

    It was 125 years ago - on Oct. 1, 1891 - that Stanford opened its doors, an anniversary that the university is celebrating with events, interpretive signage and festivities on campus and beyond. On that day in 1891, a few hundred people gathered in the newly built Inner Quad as co-founders Jane and Leland Stanford opened their "university ...

  18. Event Planning Press and News

    A Herns party really begins when the guests receive their invitations in the mail. For a sports-themed party, the invitation might be in the shape of a basketball or a stadium ticket. An invitation to a party Herns called Beach Blanket Barbara was a full sized beach towel decorated with a bikini-clad caricature of the hostess.