Free invite generator

Create Your Perfect Griha Pravesh Invitation

Choose a tone, add muhurat and host names, pick a bilingual layout, then download a print-ready copy or a short WhatsApp message. Guided prompts preserve traditional phrasing and simplify last-minute edits.

Cost

Free to use

No payment required to generate invitation text and basic export formats

Formats

Print & digital

Card copy block, short messages, email body, and social-ready text

Language support

Bilingual-ready

Templates combine Hindi/Sanskrit phrasing with English headings and summaries

Why use this tool

How the generator helps

Craft invitations that respect cultural phrasing, include muhurat and host details, and export for both physical cards and digital shares. The generator provides tone presets, bilingual blocks, and print-friendly formatting so you can finalize invites quickly—even with last-minute changes.

  • Formal, casual, or modern celebration tones with culturally-appropriate invocations
  • Bilingual layouts (Hindi/Sanskrit + English) with marked placement for names, date, time, and address
  • Export options: centered card copy for print, condensed WhatsApp message, full email body, and social post text

Ready-made prompts

Prompt clusters you can use

Use or adapt the prompts below to generate the exact wording you need. Each prompt maps to a recommended output type and short usage notes.

Formal invitation with muhurat

Generates reverent English copy that opens with a Sanskrit mangal mantra, lists muhurat, hosts, address, and RSVP — ideal for elders and community distribution.

  • Prompt example: Create a formal English Griha Pravesh invitation that opens with a Sanskrit mangal mantra, states the muhurat (auspicious time), lists hosts and address, and includes RSVP details; keep tone reverent.
  • Output: Print-ready 5x7 card copy block and email body

Casual family invite (WhatsApp)

Short, warm message for close family and friends with time, simple directions, potluck or dress notes, and RSVP.

  • Prompt example: Write a short, warm WhatsApp message inviting close family to my Griha Pravesh next Saturday evening; include time, simple directions, potluck/dress notes, and an RSVP line.
  • Output: SMS/WhatsApp-ready text (one or two short paragraphs)

Bilingual layout (Hindi + English)

Two-panel copy where the left uses Hindi/Sanskrit invocation and headline, and the right provides an English summary and logistics.

  • Prompt example: Generate a bilingual invite: Hindi invocation and headline, followed by an English event summary; keep lines short for a two-panel card and mark fields for name, date, time, and address.
  • Output: Two-column card copy; mark placeholders for designers and printers

Print-ready copy block

Centered block of copy specifically formatted for a 5x7 card: title, invocation, event details, hosts, RSVP, and short map note.

  • Prompt example: Produce a centered invitation copy block for a 5x7 card: title, invocation, event details, host names, RSVP, and a short map note; avoid decorative markup and keep line breaks explicit.
  • Output: Copy with explicit line breaks and placeholder markers for bleed and fonts

Sanskrit invocation variants

Short invocations and one-line English translations to open formal invites respectfully.

  • Prompt example: Provide three short Sanskrit or Sanskritized opening lines used in housewarming invites, with a one-line English translation for each.
  • Output: Quick insert lines suitable for card headers

RSVP and logistics blurbs

Three RSVP styles—formal (phone/email), WhatsApp-only, and RSVP plus parking/accommodation notes.

  • Prompt example: Create three RSVP phrasings: formal RSVP with phone/email, RSVP for WhatsApp only, and RSVP plus parking/directions note.
  • Output: Selectable lines to paste into card or message

Modern celebration tone

A contemporary invite that balances tradition with a light celebratory voice and optional refreshments note.

  • Prompt example: Write a contemporary invite text for a Griha Pravesh that mixes tradition with a light celebratory tone; include optional after-ceremony refreshments wording.
  • Output: Social post and short email-friendly variant

Where to use the copy

Export formats & source ecosystem

Generate outputs tailored to common distribution channels and print requirements. Each format suggests which fields to include and how to shorten or expand the wording.

  • Printed card / local print shop — centered 5x7 or 4x6 copy; explicit line breaks and placeholder markers for names and address
  • WhatsApp / SMS — short, friendly message optimized for one-screen reading and quick RSVP
  • Email — subject line plus full body copy with ceremony details and RSVP links
  • Instagram / Facebook — social-friendly caption and an optional image caption block
  • PDF download — archived copy with both Hindi and English panels for printing or sharing

Cultural and technical notes

Bilingual and muhurat guidance

Practical tips to make bilingual invites and muhurat formatting read naturally while remaining suitable for elders and community groups.

  • Place the invocation/headline in Hindi or Sanskrit at the top; put the English summary beneath or on the opposite panel so both languages are visible at a glance.
  • Format muhurat as: 'Muhurat: 10:45 AM (Purnima Tithi) / Date: 23 April 2026' — keep a single line for time and a short parenthetical for context.
  • For print, provide both language blocks and mark which side is the front/back of the card; keep line lengths short for better readability.

Sample invite texts

Quick examples you can copy

Short, copyable examples for common use cases. Replace placeholders with your details.

Formal card copy (centered)

Shri Ganeshaya Namah With the blessings of the family elders, We invite you to the Griha Pravesh ceremony of [Host Name] Muhurat: 7:15 AM, Date: [DD/MM/YYYY] Venue: [Full address] RSVP: [Name] — [Phone / Email]

  • Use for printed 5x7 cards; keep line breaks as shown

WhatsApp short message

We’re moving in! Please join us for a small Griha Pravesh on [Date], 6:30 PM at [Address]. Light refreshments to follow. Please confirm on WhatsApp: [Phone].

  • Good for family groups and informal invites

Bilingual two-panel snippet

Left panel (Hindi): गृहप्रवेश Right panel (English): You are warmly invited to the housewarming of [Host Name] on [Date] at [Time]. Venue: [Address]. RSVP: [Phone].

  • Designed for two-panel cards or folded layouts

FAQ

Can I include the muhurat (auspicious time) on the invite and how should it be formatted?

Yes. Place muhurat on the same line as the time to keep it concise: for example, 'Muhurat: 7:15 AM (Abhijit) — Date: 23 April 2026'. If space is limited, use 'Muhurat: 7:15 AM' on one line and add a parenthetical or footnote with astrological details only for formal invites intended for elders or priests.

How do I create a bilingual invite (Hindi + English) that reads naturally in both languages?

Use short lines for each language and avoid literal word-for-word translation. Put the Hindi/Sanskrit invocation or headline at the top or left panel, and an English summary directly below or on the right panel. Mark placeholders (e.g., [Host Name], [Date], [Time]) and keep sentence length under 10–12 words per line for readability on cards.

What file formats and sizes should I use for printing a physical invitation (card dimensions and bleed basics)?

Provide the printer with a copy block and specify the card size (common sizes: 5x7 inches or 4x6 inches). Ask the printer about bleed — typically 0.125 inches — and include safe margins of at least 0.25 inches inside the trim so text isn't cut off. Export text as a PDF for archival and as a plain-text copy block for the designer.

Can I use the generated text as body copy for WhatsApp, email, and a printed card without rewriting?

Yes — but choose the generator output type that matches your channel. Use the 'WhatsApp' variant for short, direct messages; the 'Email' variant for subject + expanded details; and the 'Print-ready' block for cards. Minor edits (shortening or adding map notes) are common when switching formats.

How should I word RSVP and logistics (parking, directions, accommodations) for guests unfamiliar with the area?

Provide one clear RSVP method (phone or WhatsApp) and a concise directions line such as 'Parking available at [Landmark]. For guests from out of town, please contact [Name] at [Phone] for accommodation suggestions.' When space is tight, include a short link or QR code in the printed card pointing to a directions page or map.

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