In Style Weddings BLOG

Top Wedding Trends, Bridal Inspiration and Wedding Planning Advice for an IN STYLE Weddiing

Archive for December, 2007

Dec
21

Our Personalized Wedding and the Honeymoon Registry

Posted by Brenda Lopez, CEO & Founder - AffluentBride.com

Luxury honeymoon

From Author: John Schnatterly

Our wedding cost us a fortune. Not a wealthy person’s fortune, but ours. We wanted it to be perfect and it was. Every detail was considered, every moment an occasion. After all, we had waited ten years to do this. We’re glad we waited too. This is a world with an over-abundance of divorces and unhappiness. I certainly don’t blame the express flight to the alter for this. My great-grandparents had a 60 year long honeymoon after getting engaged on their third date. My parents took a leisurely four months to wed and are the happiest couple I know. Some say the world is a different place now. I think that’s probably true, even though our ten years could have been seven without risk to our wedded glow. So after ten years, you might say we did it up pretty good. We feel that what made the day so special was the personalization. Our guests got to know us even more that day.

Our wedding and reception were held at a beautiful mansion on Long Island. However, most of the personal touches for our wedding were the free or inexpensive details. They were the details that took the most time, but worth every minute. We placed framed photos throughout the five rooms we were using and made sure we included all our guests in the shots. During cocktail hour we passed around wine from our home states of Virginia and New York. In lieu of a carving station we had raclette, a very personal cheese and potato dish many of our friends and family have shared with us. Because it was spring and this was a culinary school, we named our tables after herbs and their corresponding mythical powers. We displayed important personal poetry throughout as well. We are abundantly fortunate to have a very close and spiritual friend that performed our ceremony, who was willing to get the appropriate credentials to make it legal. On the pricier side, we had a quartet play for and before the ceremony and during the cocktail hour. For me, nothing beats Ave Maria by cello. We also spent a dime on a videographer to capture it all. While I love the photos, nothing brings the event to life like seeing and hearing it all over again. After the carefully chosen dinner, with the help of three great friends, I surprised my new wife with an a capella barbershop quartet song that she now claims as her favorite.

We followed up the wedding with a carefully planned honeymoon. We went to Thailand and Malaysia, which were beautiful as well as easy on the dollar. We incorporated time on the beach on the island of Koh Samui, adventure travel in the jungle and mountains of Malaysia and lastly spent time at a luxury hotel in Bangkok. Our honeymoon had the added element of personalization for our guests because we registered for it. After ten years we didn’t need a lot of stuff so we only registered for upgrades of a few items to cherish. The guests who used our honeymoon registry felt wonderfully connected to our unique trip. They gave us a gift of memories.

To personalize your wedding, try some of the following:

Do think outside the box for your reception. Being foodies, we found a culinary school associated with my wife’s college at a beautiful mansion. It ended up cheaper than less attractive alternatives.

Do place photos of your guests all around your cocktail and/or reception area.

Don’t have the photos be of just yourselves.

Do have a personalized menu and cocktail hour tailored to your tastes (unless they’re extreme). Ask about options and alternatives. Serve a cocktail that is meaningful to you in some way (what you were drinking when you first kissed, your first date, the night you got engaged?) Again, think outside the box.

Do play music you love rather than the typical fare. Take time with your DJ wish list. Communicate with the DJ to make sure he knows what you want.

Do think about writing your own vows.

Do register for your honeymoon. It’ll create a buzz about your honeymoon, which will enhance your day as you chat with guests about it during your event.

Do send your guests away with an outside the box favor. Ice cream scoopers and cake servers are over used. We sent our guests home with herbs in a lovely pot. Let your own tastes guide you in this.

We truly wanted a memorable wedding, not a cookie-cutter event. We were ecstatic with our day and wouldn’t change a thing.

John Schnatterly is founder of www.SmartHoneymoon.com the leading honeymoon registry provider.

Dec
18

Pronovias 2008 Couture Bridal

Posted by Brenda Lopez, CEO & Founder - AffluentBride.com

I just simply love the new Pronovias bridal gowns coming out in 2008 and had to share them with you!

Elegantly stylish and beautiful. Pronovias, as always, comes through to make a dramatic entrance for any bride on her wedding day. I’m sure you’ll agree.

ENJOY!

Dec
17

Custom Wedding Postage

Posted by Brenda Lopez, CEO & Founder - AffluentBride.com

Custom Wedding Postage Website Adds Winter Wedding Stamps

Nov 09, 2007 — /prbuzz/ –Adding to its popular year-round wedding stamp line, ArtisticPostage.com has just introduced a winter wedding collection to help brides and wedding planners turn those winter wedding invitations into conversation pieces. TDSwhite’s winter wedding stamps incorporate seasonal icons such as snowflakes, holiday greenery, candlelight, and crystals into the various designs. Color choices reflect nature’s own color scheme at this time of year.

As always, stamps are designed to accommodate personalization by brides who often choose to add their own names and dates turning the stamps into keepsakes for the invitees.

Postage designer TDSwhite says, “Guests should feel that each aspect of the wedding experience was carefully thought out by the happy couple. Couples can rest assured that the custom postage stamps at Artistic Postage were carefully designed to help them get the most out of their invitations.” Admirers agree as evidenced by this feedback on TDSwhite’s stamp collection, “You have the most beautiful stamps. Impossible to choose a favorite,” and this one, “Amazingly creative. I want to get married all over again!”

Different artistic styles reflect the tones different brides want to set for their weddings. For example, a formal black tie reception would be represented well by the stamp with a black background and a single red rosebud in the foreground with the word “love” superimposed in silver script. Another great choice for a formal winter wedding is the stamp with an intricate snowflake design set against a two-shaded background with the names of the bride and groom in a delicate script. For a more lighthearted tone, the smiling snowman stamp would be ideal.

To obtain additional information and to view the many winter wedding stamp options available, visit the Winter Wedding Stamps page at ArtisticPostage.com.

ArtisticPostage.com’s ever-growing line of customizable wedding stamps includes digital photography and computer designs as well as combinations of the two. Stamp options include three size choices and seven denomination choices along with the ability to add words, monograms, and dates.

www.ArtisticPostage.com – A Company To Stick With.

Matthew W. Grant
401-527-8366
Info@ArtisticPostage.com

Dec
13

Dirty Dancing a first wedding dance with a Touch of Class

Posted by Brenda Lopez, CEO & Founder - AffluentBride.com

Don’t you just love this? I know we have all seen the first wedding dance spins on You Tube done to Thriller and the like by Michael Jackson, but this one is in a league all of its own.

In fact it’s perfect, one of the best I have seen in a long long time, for a wedding. Remember Dirty Dancing? Well this couple takes it to a whole new meaning. Certainly fast becoming a BIG trend, these wedding dances, that are far from the ordinary!

DID you or do you plan to surprise your own wedding guests that day?

What will they come up with next? LOL But anyhow this is definitely a wedding dance with a touch of class, if I must say so myself! I guess the first requirement is that you need to know how to dance and do it well! LOL I don’t think most of us would come off this good. LOL