Showing newest 26 of 38 posts from May 2008. Show older posts
Showing newest 26 of 38 posts from May 2008. Show older posts

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Vendors, Or Creative Wedding Elves?

Since minute one of wedding planning I've always felt a bit weird about the idea of vendors. I was envious of those couples who had "vendor free weddings." That is until David pointed out that I was, after all, a practical person, so he had no idea why I was fantasying about feeding 125 people ourselves.

Lately, I've figured out my issue is really around the word "vendor." I mean, what are we planning? A county fair? Please. I have, however, valued supporting independent artists since I was a little girl. I grew up around a artist community, so I know what it's like to live as a independent artisan (hard), and how it feels to buy something handcrafted and know you supported the artist (great). So! I'm proposing a terminology shift. Out with the vendors, in with the helpful wedding artists (or innovative wedding elves? Wedding creatives?)

I'm lucky to be exposed to some of the cooler wedding artisans around, thanks to both this blog and living in the Bay Area. I'm featuring some awesome artists this week, and invite you to share you recommendations in the comments. On that note, I'd like to share a few things I've learned so far about choosing wedding artists:

  • Don't put money into what makes you crazy. If there is a aspect of the wedding industry that drives you totally mad (for me, wedding gowns and engagement rings), don't put money into it. Find an alternative way to spend your money. The WIC is only as huge as it is because of all the cash in it's pockets.
  • Find vendors (achem, artists) that want to work with couples like you. It's going to make you nuts to have a photographer that really wants the garter shot, if you are not garter tossing kind of girl. Save yourself the headache and find someone who likes you both for who you are. Luckily some vendors are willing to travel for reasonable rates, so if you can't find good people in your area, you have options!
  • Prioritize. You probably can't have all the amazing vendors you want. And you know what? That's ok. That's going to make you appreciate the people you do have working on your wedding that much more. If you really love paper goods, spring for cool invitations. If you love photography, find a great photographer. Don't splurge on things just because it's what you are supposed to spend money on, if it is not what you are into.
  • Don't limit yourself to artists that advertise as doing work for weddings. If you love a photographer, ask them if they would be willing to work on your wedding (and then explain that you are a SANE bride!) And always, always let your friends and families volunteer their skills.
  • And my best tip is this: You know you have found someone you want to work with when you feel like "We can't possibly afford to pay this person what they are worth," or "If I had a extra $1000 to spare I would shove it in their pocket right now, because they are that awesome." If you feeling ripped off by a vendor, that is a red flag. This doesn't mean the vendor is a bad person, but it's your subconscious piping up to say that they are not right for you.
What are your vendor tips internets? Do you have vendors that you love?

Photo via Time.com
(also, check out their article about thrifty weddings).

Monday, June 9, 2008

Georgia & Errol's Vintage Wedding

I know that I get really excited by each new budget savvy practical wedding that I share with you, but I can't help it! They are all so awesome. So naturally today, I'm the most excited about this wedding, sent to me by Australian photographer Hailey Bartholomew of You Can't Be Serious, of her sisters wedding. First all, a word about Hailey. She is actively looking to work with brides doing creative independent weddings. Ahhh! Vendors who want to work with couples like us! You can't beat that. Australian readers, take notice!

There are about a thousand things I love about this wedding. But most amazingly, it was planned in just three weeks with the help of family and friends. Three weeks, people!! Their family and friends pitched in on all the wedding details. They got married in a park, and then had their reception at a restaurant. Simple, and clearly full of joy.
The bride found her vintage wedding dress and her amazing veil at a vintage store for a grand total of $400, including alterations. Can I mention that I am so in love with her veil that I want to steal it out of the picture?
Ok, first of all, how adorable are those flower girls? Ah! This had got to be one of the most fun wedding party pictures I have ever seen. It looks like a party! All of the girls dresses were found at a vintage store. The guys all wore their own suits, and they bought hats to unify the look.
The bride's sister took all the photographs (ohh, to have a super talented photographer for a relation), and her husband made invitations from engagement pictures turned into photo postcards.
These adorable flower girl dresses they bought online to match the vintage style, and then sold them on eBay after the wedding. The flower girls are the brides nieces.
I'm in love with group shots at weddings, since it's such a great document of everyone who celebrated with you, and this may be the ultimate group shot. These pictures make me feel like the wedding was a indie film (Amelie?), and contain such a amazing sense of movement and joy in them. I am, quite officially, in love with this wedding.

Friday, June 6, 2008

Trends I Love: Old Family Pictures

I really love the trend of having a table of old family wedding pictures at your wedding. It's a great way to honor your family on your wedding day, it's beautiful, it's affordable, and you'll definitely use these pictures in your home after the wedding.
Another great thing about these pictures are that they are sure fire entertainment. My cousin had a table like this at his wedding, and we spent a good 15 minutes at the table. We oohhed and ahhheddd over the photos from the 1950's, and giggled at the wedding fashions in the 1970's. I figure this is just fine, because of course our kids will love the 1970's fashions and mock our wedding choices. Miss Manners says that one of the key jobs of a wedding is to provide your kids with something to make fun of for a lifetime, which is a good way to keep it all in perspective.

And on that note, happy weekend! Woo!

Top photo via The Knot, Bottom photo via Snippet and Ink.

Perhaps Vintage, At Heart

It's funny, because I don't tend to think of myself as one of those VINTAGE girls. I have always had my own particular taste, and I just sort of traipse along, knowing what I love and what I don't like so much... and some of what I love is old fashioned, and that is fine. But when it comes to wedding dresses, I'm suddenly finding that I have very old fashioned tastes. Maybe it's just that I don't like what's currently in vogue. Maybe it's that I hate this age of weddings as conspicuous consumption. Tiaras? Not sober. Princess dresses? Uh-uh. Strapless? Ahhh! Aggressive sparkles? Ohpleasejustleavemealoneinthiscornerplease?

But let us look at dresses I do like:

I can't seem to get away from loving the tea length, 1950's dress. My mom is afraid I will regret a short dress (fair) and that it will look dated one of these days. Will it? Possibly. But I'm not sure that this counts has a full blown trend, since it is both delightfully retro, and totally impossible to find in a regular wedding dress salon.
Then, there are the long dresses. Since this picture makes me think Lovely! Long! Bridal! So I'm clearly still loving vintage. I love how this dress is long, but not froofy. I love how it has no train. I love how it is simple yet elegant.

What do you think, dear reader? Will I regret a short dress? Do you like the long and simple look? Can I go wedding dress shopping again without stabbing out my eyes? Stay tuned.

Pictures via Real Simple Weddings and {Furi Kuri} weddings

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Just In Case You Didn't Think The WIC Was Trying To Drive You To Debt

Riiiigggghhht. So that pretty much sums up every problem I have with the wedding industry.

Dangerous Wedding Think

So, I've been admiring shoes lately. Specifically, I've been admiring super expensive to-die-for shoes worn by brides in super high end weddings. Then one day I was looking at a pair of lovely shoes, and I thought to myself, "Hey? Whats another $500 on top of everything a wedding costs? I'm sure I could just pay for these on my own and not put them in the budget. Who cares? It's my wedding day. I'm only planning on doing this once."

Then I took a deep breath. And thought for a moment.

And realized that this exactly the kind of crazy wedding thinking that can get you in a world of trouble really quickly. This is how we get trapped in the downward budget spiral. The dress? Only double what we wanted to spend, but so much less then what most brides are spending, and so pretty too! The catering? Yes, its over budget, but great food is great food. The photobooth? Yes, we didn't have it budgeted in, but we don't want to regret not having it, right? The problem is, this type of thinking is reinforced over and over again by the great world o' weddings, and it's so seductive that we want to believe it.

I'm not going on the record as being totally against expensive wedding shoes, and I'm not saying I'm above wedding day splurges. I'm sure that when it comes down to the wire I'll splurge on something. What I am saying is we need to watch out for this dangerous thinking. We should try to replace it with the fact that getting married is a adult decision, and as adults we know that we don't get everything we want or "deserve." I'd rather look back on my wedding and be proud of the responsible spending choices I made, then know that I got everything I wanted.

And I know that's not what the WIC is looking for in a girl.

Picture via Peonies and Polaroids

Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Michelle & Noah's Picnic Wedding

Stop the presses! I have a new favorite budget wedding! This one is via Real Simple Weddings, and it's a picnic wedding. A picnic wedding just wasn't practical for us, but I love them. The very best part of this wedding? The couple was aiming to keep the cost under $10,000 for their 100 person wedding, and (drum roll please) they came in UNDER budget!
The bride and her sister sewed these stylish picnic blankets out of calico fabric they found on sale. I also love this simple bouquet of tulips wrapped in fabric that would be super easy to make on your own.
They had their caterer pack these brown bag lunches for the guests, and put a sticker on each one with the menu. Just because they were having a picnic wedding didn't mean they skipped dancing! The music was played on a ipod, and they had their first dance to Iron and Wine's "Love and Some Verses."
The bought wooden table ware on ebay, and the brides sister made the delicious looking whole-wheat cake with butttercream frosting. I love this wedding so much, I just want to eat it up!

Has anyone been to a picnic wedding? Planning a picnic wedding? I want to hear all about it!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

New URL, And Much Excitement

Things are moving and shaking over here at Chez Practical, and I'm pleased to announce that I now have a new and very official sounding URL. We are now www.apracticalwedding.com. Woo! If you could redirect your browsers and links, I would very much appreciate it. Also, please note my shiny new email address.

Here is to much more creative, thrifty, and sane!

Lauren & Joe's Illustrated Invites

I'm so excited to share with you guys one of my favorite invitation sets of all time. I didn't find these invites online, nope, I found them in my mail box. These are the invitations and Save The Dates from our friends Lauren and Joe, who had a small stylish wedding in Oxford two years ago. I'm sure you will agree, after looking at these invites, that we have cool friends.
Lauren's sister Joanne illustrated the whole set. Everything was printed on a thick textured cream paper. Note! You can DIY (excuse me DIT) your invites and still get them printed by someone else. Hurrah!
For the Save The Dates, Lauren asked her sister to draw the garden bench in Oxford where they first met and later married, and to 'think Edward Gorey.' The background is the Oxford skyline, and the lanterns in the trees tell us to Save the Date.
They used a mix tape illustration for their invitation because they "joined their tracks in matrimony." In particular, I love the invitation wording. If you look closely it says "We will exchange vows of love and partnership." I've never seen this wording before or since and I love it. I'd go so far as to say I'm suddenly considering stealing it.
Then, my very favorite thing. The back of the invitation? Haiku's explaining the day. Worth a close look, because that Lauren, she can write.
And finally, favors I actually love! The favors were soy travel candles (perfect for their destination wedding) made by Lily Queen on Etsy.

**Note, if you want to contact Joanna, who illustrated these invites, drop me a line, and I'll send you her email. She has reasonable prices, and clearly, prodigious talent!

Monday, June 2, 2008

You Are Not A Bridal Island

So, I've been thinking about "DIY Weddings," and I think that "Do It Yourself" can be a bit of a misnomer. The idea of a bride sitting at home doing everything on her wedding by herself makes me a little sad. Weddings can be one of the greatest excuses in our lives to get our communities together. Its a great time to get our kick *ss friends and our crafty family members together and helping out.

The traditional wedding idea perpetually floated by the bridal media is that your wedding is a great day, because it's the day that you get to be a bridal dictator of your own bridal island. Ick! Who wants that? So lets collectively just skip the bridal dictatorship idea, and move on to something a little more healthy. How about instead of Do It Yourself weddings, we have Do It Together weddings? And since weddings are all about weird acronyms, we can call it DIT.

When David and I made it clear that we were all up for having people help out on our wedding, we were surprised at the talents people came forward with. My sister revealed she could letterpress (who knew?) and offered to make my veil. Our friend Beck revealed she had some serious flower decorating skills and was willing to head up that project. David's oldest friend Kory is taking our engagement pictures. I can't even imagine how stressed out and crazy we would have been if we tried to do all those things ourselves.

And finally, somehow the world of weddings had turned into the worlds most competitive and guilt ridden place. If we are doing "DIY" we feel bad admitting that we didn't DIY to the Nth degree. And you don't have to! Simplify! Some people are up for hand screen printing all of their invites. Me? Heck no! But I do know how to print in color on my home computer, or find a print shop in my area. I'll still save a bundle of money, and get the invites I wanted, and that is, after all, the point.

Picture of the screen printing of some awesome invites from Saricat.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

Anda & Peter's Last Minute Wedding

Have you SEEN this wedding? Because for serious, you need to check it out. Before I show you the pictures, let me count the ways I love it.
  1. Pregnant bride. Yeah, we all have been to weddings where someone got a little enthusiastic about the engagement, but how cool is it that she rocked a white dress, showing and everything?
  2. They procrastinated planning the wedding till the month before. (Who doesn't feel them on that?)
  3. $80 handmade wedding dress.
  4. Reception at a bike lot decorated with paper airplanes.
  5. Grooms motto was "If you can't skateboard at your wedding, when can you skateboard?"
That would be the bride. That's adorable pregnant fairy princess bride to you.
They put their last minute vows in a vintage copy of Treasure Island.
Note: if you get married in nature, you don't really need decorations (thats our plan too!)
Behold, the reception site. I'm pretty sure they weren't locked into any catering contracts. Or contracts period.
I'm sensing the guests enjoyed themselves.
A paper airplane and glitter send off!

Thanks to East Side Bride and her excellent blog for the heads up on this wedding!

Friday, May 30, 2008

Crafty Pint Sized Goodness

You know how some people have "Adults Only Affairs" for their weddings? Well, were more in the "Kid Friendly Affair" camp. What's a wedding unless you have some little girls spinning until they fall over on the lawn, and some little boys on a sugar high from the six slices of cake they managed to eat when no one was looking? The sad thing for us is, there just are not many little kids in our families a the moment. We're both from a bit of a in between generation, so that's just how it worked out. We won't even have a super tiny flower girl, more like a medium sized junior bridesmaid.

But, I'm not quite sure I'm willing to give up my dream of a craft table for the, um "kids." Because I'd like to play with some glitter on my wedding day (and you bet it will get in my hair). And who doesn't get a little tipsy and then think to themselves, "you know what I'd really like to do? Build a Lego car."

Have a happy weekend, all!

Picture via Perez Photography.

What Is A Practical Wedding?

Someone asked me recently "What defines a budget wedding? What's the price range?" And I thought that was a question worth answering. In my mind, a couple on a budget is a couple who's working to get the most from their money. If you have a $50K wedding for 800 people, thats a budget! A $10K wedding for 3 people? Personally, that wouldn't pass my budget test, but to each their own.

That said, I could not agree with Ariel of Offbeat Bride more. The last thing brides and grooms need is more pressure. No one is 'in' or 'out' of the budget club. We're all doing our best to have the wedding that is the right cost for us and our partner. That's it, and that's enough. If you are spending no more then the cost of your marriage license on your wedding, you deserve to feel supported. And if you are spending quite a bit more then that, that's fine too. (we are!) I talk about making savvy spending decisions a lot here, but the site isn't "A Budget Wedding" it's "A Practical Wedding," and it's about supporting practical and sane wedding choices in a world that's pushing you towards doing some nutty things. I want to help couples (and us) feel good about their weddings, and their choices. The WIC spends a fortune making you feel like you are not doing enough, and you are. If your wedding is right for the two of you: That. Is. Enough.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

DIY Guilt

When Aimee sent me the Save The Date cards that she and her fiance had come up with, she sent them with a little apology, a apology I think all DIY couples are way too familiar with. She said "We went the uber-casual/simple/inexpensive route with a postcard we made from a photo, here are our silly Save The Dates." And then I opened this awesomeness:Not only do they look cool, but they took the picture at the cafe table where they met, and they photoshopped their kitty into the card, and it fits their personalities since they love both books and coffee shops (us too!). These are some of the coolest and most personal Save The Dates I've seen.

I think couples going the DIY route tend to have some guilt going on. We're under so much pressure to spend SO much money on so many different things, that when we do things on our own, we are afraid they are not going to be good enough. I hear a lot of people saying "We hope it's not tacky" and "We hope it doesn't look homemade." So I just want to say this. You can spend a small fortune to pay someone to hand design save the dates and invitations for you that reflect who you are as a couple, but they may never be as cool or as personal as a Save The Date like this one, made by the couple.

So lets reclaim our own weddings! Forget saying we are having a DIY wedding. When people ask, you can just say that you are not having a professional wedding. Because really, when you think about it, there is nothing more old fashioned and traditional then doing your wedding yourself.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Moroccan Wedding Inspiration

So I know I haven't mentioned it here, but we are serving Middle Eastern food at our reception. It's the first wedding decision that we made, in that we made it about two years before we got engaged. It's our favoriet kind of food, its great for vegetarians (David is one, I am not), it's not super expensive to make, and its great to serve en mass. Add to that the fact that we are having a Jewish wedding (already influenced by the Middle East), I worked at a Turkish Coffee house for years, and I used to bellydance... and well, this is a perfect food choice for us.
It only recently occurred to me that since I have a love of jewel tones and Middle Eastern decor, we could use that as a jumping off point for our color palette. These Images from My Marrakesh are inspiring me so much my toes are tickling. This is what I want! Not some paint by numbers wedding...
I saved the best for last... this bowl of flowers is fantastic DIY centerpeice inspiration. Bowls of low of roses like this would be beautiful interspersed between taller simple floral arrangements on a long table.
All images via My Marrakesh.

Things The WIC Doesn't Want You To Know

So, the WIC complex emailed me this morning, and said I absolutely positively, under no circumstances was allowed to share this article with you. And they must have been stressed out, because right after I got the email they called me and told me that they TOTALLY were not kidding, and they were going to ban me from the marriage club if I so much as whispered about it on this blog. But, knowing what being in the marriage club means to those people, I thought I'd pay my money and take my chances. Ehhh.
Key things the WIC doesn't want you to know:
  • Apparently the economy isn't doing so well. When I heard the news, I did a quick google search, and apparently we're having some problems because people were living beyond their means on credit? Hum. Anyway, apparently, YOU the engaged are not supposed to know about this.
  • Some brides are starting to feel ripped off by the price of all things wedding related. They know it's THEIR BIG DAY and also THE BEST DAY OF THEIR LIFE but somehow they still don't want to spend 2K on flowers. Why? No one is sure. It's apparently some glitch in the marketing system, and everyone is sure it will work itself out.
  • Apparently DIY centerpieces and brunch weddings are in! (Note: we are focused on bringing you the up to the minute trends here at A Practical Wedding)
  • The average wedding is going to cost a whole $28 less this year. This is not a joke. The new average cost of a wedding is going to be just $28,704, down from $28,732. The wedding industrial complex is a little distracted right now, since they are crouched under their desk whispering "Failure! You're a failure!" to themselves over and over. So while they are otherwise occupied, run out to your nearest bridal salon. Maybe without proper over site they put something on sale!
Just remember, if anyone asked you where you found out about all this, you didn't hear it from me.

Kick *ass picture via the excellent Indexed.
(Thanks to Jacob for the article, and Kathryn for the heads up on the picture.)

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Funny Bride Faces

If I had to sum up how I'd like (well, some) of my bridal portraits to look, I think I'd sum it up with these awesome pictures from One Love Photo. David would say this is because when you scratch the surface, I'm really four. I'd say it's just because I want to be my silly self on my wedding day, not some bridal dress up doll self.

Ok, to be totally honest, I'm going to be making these faces no matter what. It's a question of whether I have a photographer who's snapping 'em.
In general, I love me some photos of brides making faces. And there are not enough of them!
Photos via: Academy Bedlam's Knottie page, Style Me Pretty, and Offbeatbride.

Friday, May 23, 2008

The Original Independent Bride

I can hear your thinking now. What a cool 1930's bride, you are thinking to yourself. Tell me more about her wedding. Where was it held, and what are those funny shoes they are all wearing?

Well, I will tell you, because it is Friday, and you deserve something nice. This wedding is at a ROLLER RINK. And those funny shoes? Roller skates. That's right. You're Welcome.

Make your wedding what you want it to be, not just what it's supposed to be. And have some fun. It's not like a roller rink is the worlds most expensive place to rent. And I betcha people STILL tell stories about that wedding.

Thursday, May 22, 2008

All Star Budget Brides!

Building on my last post, I decided it was time to start 'The Practical All Star List of Classy Budget Brides.' Lets get inspired by people who wanted a wedding and a down payment! Get jazzed by brides that knew the value of a dollar! If you learn anything from these weddings, its that you can have a budget wedding in a million different ways. Based on this list, I'd argue you can have a budget wedding in more ways then you can have a extravagant event of a wedding. Lets give ourselves weddings that are worthy of looking (and living) up to. Feel free to nominate more weddings in the comments.

Merry & Mark's
at home wedding
Avalon's Tilden Park Wedding
Jesse & Jamez New Orleans style wedding
Ashley & Dusty's modern ice cream wedding
Kallie & Mike's mid-century modern at-home wedding
Amaleah's floral Irish pub wedding
Amanda & Matt's vintage wedding

I can't thank the wedding bloggers who wrote these weddings up and the couples who shared these weddings with the world enough. From me to you: MWAH! And dear readers, if you had a classy budget wedding and want to share it, email me!

Wedding Industry Rage. Rage, I Tell You.

I've been feeling some rage recently with the Wedding Industry. Actual rage. Like, step away from the computer, step away from the wedding magazines, this isn't healthy, rage. You know why? I think we are all being set up. I think the whole game is rigged. If you play by the wedding industry rules, it is a no win situation.

Here is the thing. How many times do you see pictures or read a article about a really beautiful wedding, and get sucked in? "Gosh," you say to yourself, "This really is a beautiful wedding. I want a wedding like this! How did they do it?" And then you start breaking down the details: The venue $20K, food $50K, bar tab $20K, dress $10K, second dress $8K, photographer $12K, invites $3K, flowers $6K, cake $3K, event planner - best in the business. And then you say to yourself. "Well, cr*p, no wonder they had a nice effing wedding." And you slam the wedding magazine or your computer shut.

Now, none of this is totally fair. Everyone deserves to have a nice wedding, and people that have more money to spend on their event deserve a nice wedding as much as anyone. Plus, money doesn't mean taste. You can spend half a million on a wedding and have it be a tasteless train wreck. So, we should totally applaud the tasteful high end wedding, and draw inspiration from it. Right?

Right. To a extent. The problem comes in the fact that no one ever tells brides what these weddings they are admiring cost. You look at the beautiful dress a bride is wearing, and you think to yourself, "Oh goodness, why isn't my dress that nice? Maybe I should get a nicer dress." And in that way, we are all set up for failure, or mountains of debt. And either way, we lose.

You know who we should be admiring? Classy budget brides. Couples who eloped, had a lovely and meaningful wedding, and didn't spend a penny. We can all keep admiring those high end weddings, but every time we should mentally put a price tag on it. Nice wedding. $150K. Is one day worth that to me?

What do you think? Ever have days like this? GARRRR!

Photo by Kamp Photography, via Trash The Dress (Thanks Peonies!)

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Short & Lace

I always say I want a long lace dress or a short 50's style dress, and David always asks me "Why not short and lace?" I thought it would look weird. I was wrong. It looks awesome.
Pictures and dress via Stephanie James Couture.

Wedding Budget Wendsday: Use What You Love

This blackberry gin fizz recipe from Martha Stewart Weddings was what first gave me the idea to incorporate blackberries into our wedding. Basically my thinking went like this. "Blackberries... yummmmm. Mint... yummmm. You know where you can get the best blackberries and mint? August in the Bay Area. Hey! That's handy!" Now we are probably not going to serve this drink, because no one needs gin in the morning (not for any good reason). But we will incorporate blackberries and mint in other ways.

I've been thinking lately that the best way to make a wedding budget friendly, and ecologically friendly to boot, is to have your wedding in a place that you love. Whether your venue is a park, a cathedral, or someones home, you shouldn't have to do a ton of decorating, since you don't want to cover up why you like it in the first place. (Much like your partner, right? But that's another post.) We really love the Bay Area, so we are working to incorporate in-season fruits, vegetables, and flowers into the wedding. There is no real point in having lilies shipped across the world, when we can use pink jasmine, and then every summer, when the jasmine blooms, it will remind us of our wedding day.

I know this is a bit easier for us, since we are having our wedding in California in the summer. What isn't in season? But I think you can apply this rule in very different situations. My parents got married in a Cathedral in San Francisco in the middle of the winter. They didn't decorate the Cathedral much, since it was stunning on its own, and my Mom had holly and ivy in her bouquet, in-season winter plants.

How are you going to use your weddings location to inspire the decor (and save you money)?

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

What Matters

If you haven't already, you must read Ariel's Offbeat Bride post about a wedding that came down to what really mattered. We need to remember in the midst of monogrammed madness that we can count ourselves as blessed if we able to have our loved ones with us as we say our vows. All the rest is extra.

Simple Styling: The Buffet Table

First I tell you some crazy talk about how your wedding is not about details it's about, um, your love or whatever, and then I talk to you about a detail. Mwahahahaha. You can't pin me down.

Achem. As I was saying. I mentioned a while back that a simple and free way to class up your wedding is styling. Take elements you are already planning to have, and display them in a way that looks beautiful. Like many budget savvy brides, I'm thinking of the buffet option. Clearly, I will not be paying for each guest to have their own waiter. However, I live in fear of the giant aluminum buffet warmer. They are infinitely practical, I know, but they will bother me because I think they are ugly. So I've decided to bother my caterer (this is why I'm paying a caterer, I don't want to be insufferably bossy to a friend) to set up a lovely buffet table sans aluminum buffet warmers. This table is really classy option of a Mediterranean style buffet spread. And all it takes is food, linens, and plates. All things we are already paying for.

Picture: Martha Stewart Weddings

Monday, May 19, 2008

Tagged!

So, In This Instance tagged me ages ago, and I'm just getting to it now. I actually got tagged on a weird survey that asked me if I was single, and then later asked me when my wedding date was, which made me think they had been drinking while writing the questions. So, to heck with that, I'm going to play the game where I tell you 4 things you didn't know about me. Lets commence!

1) I read The Economist. In bed. Not a punch line, totally true. I'm that kind of a political junky. I like my New York Times in the morning, and my Economist at night.
2) You know how I write sort of, um, sassy posts? Yeah. I'm like that in real life.
3) If I had a superhero power, it would be networking. Like, I would change into a cocktail dress in a phone booth pull a wine glass from my purse and *Work That Room*
4) David and I knew each other in High School. While we were definitely friends, we didn't get along terribly well. So don't worry, it's not that kind of a romantic story.

Now I'm tagging a few women I'd like to know random facts about. Tagged are: Peonies and Polaroids, Prom To Altar, One Love Photo, and Jessamyn Harris.

Merry & Mark

I think this is my new all time favorite wedding, photographed by my new photography crush, Our Labor Of Love, in Atlanta. I really hope that at the end of all this planning, we are able to pull together a wedding this personal, stylish, and authentic. And yes, affordable.
Let me count the ways I love this wedding:
The bride made her super stylish dress (this dress makes me want to shelve all my lace ideas and do something like this).
Classic cars! Classic cars! Why would you ever use a limo when you could use a cool car like this?
Did I mention I love the dress? And the photography?
I. Love. These. Flowers. Jewel tones? Simple? Hip? Yes please.
They had their wedding at home, and it looked beautiful. I really think we underestimate how fantastic and personal a wedding at home can be. And no I don't mean a tented wedding in the backyard of your family estate.
This sweet personal picture makes me want to dash all of our plans and get married at my parents house, which actually looks a lot like this house. For those of you still figuring out what kind of wedding you want, you should consider doing a at home wedding. It's so affordable that you can afford things like stylish flowers and a kick *ss photography team.
It's official, I'm obsessed with Our Labor Of Love. They take pictures of such wonderful creative weddings, and their photographs are stunning while being really unpretentious. Love! Love! Love! Go check them out, and see more pictures of this awesome wedding here.