Category Archives: wedding

Date Cake

Today is our six-month anniversary! I think because so much has changed in the last six months, Read and I agreed that it seems like the wedding was longer ago. It was fun to look back at some pictures…

My "borrowed and blue"

My "borrowed and blue" for the wedding was this ring from Grandma. My mom wore it on her wedding day too.

Cutting peaches for pie

Cutting peaches with mom for the reception pies

first dance

first dance

We celebrated today by sleeping in, taking the bus to Harvard Square for a movie, and making dinner at home. I tried a date cake recipe from one of my favorite cookbooks – Cook Something by Mitchell Davis. I told Read it was “date nut bread,” but with two sticks of butter I think it’s more accurately classified as cake.

Date Cake

Date Cake

When I panned out to get a different angle, I noticed a certain little black dog. His expression is too much.

Date Cake

Sam wants a date with the cake

How to not stress over your wedding

This post marks my return to the blog after a six-week hiatus. I tell you, it’s been a wild ride. Driving cross-country. Interrupting the drive for a flight to a job interview. Getting married. Changing my name. Starting a new job. When thinking of what to say about all of this, I came up with a few strategies that got me/us through the month of August.

If you don’t want to stress much over your wedding, always keep it in perspective. People thought we were nuts for getting married in the same month that we moved, changed jobs, and started up in a new city. But it kept me from making the wedding a gigantic vortex of time, worry, and energy because there was always something else in front of us that needed immediate attention. Some people end up balancing a wedding planning with other things out of chance, not choice, and that’s extra hard because you didn’t see it coming (i.e. my good friend suddenly got laid off a couple months before her wedding). I don’t wish that kind of blind-siding on anyone, but one benefit of either scenario is that it puts the wedding into perspective, and you don’t feel compelled to fuss over all the little details. A wedding is an incredible, life-changing, and powerful event…but none of that hinges on the table centerpieces or the groomsmens’ shoes or what kind of dressing is served with the salad.

Day 3

Nowheresville with Sam at the helm

As you keep the wedding in perspective, try to also generalize your expectations. If you’re like me, you tend to create very specific expectations in the planning of an event, but in doing so you run the risk of getting hung up on changes that have no real effect on your  core intentions. It rained all morning on the day of our wedding and showed no signs of letting up. When my dad told us they’d decided to move the outdoor ceremony to the reception barn, I was genuinely sad. I talked myself out of it with reminders that there was no reason our heartfelt, simple wedding ceremony couldn’t play out exactly the same way indoors. I was merely mourning the loss of my detailed expectation for how the ceremony would look: sunshine, puffy baby clouds, a little breeze. Let go of these details to make room for all the unexpected things that actually do happen. Right after saying our vows, the sunshine broke through the rainclouds and came through the barn windows in bright beams. Pretty cool. And definitely something I hadn’t imagined.

When trying to generalize your expectations, remember that guests will not miss something they never knew existed. For example, I wanted people to have copious amounts of good beer to drink at the wedding, so I envisioned some friends from Cleveland bringing kegs of a local microbrew. But with less than three days till the wedding, it just wasn’t working out. My uncle offered to call his friend-the-beer-distributor who could bring like a giant kegorator with taps right on the outside, but he didn’t have any microbrews available. I started to get hung up on the equation “good=microbrew” until Read pointed out that a”any beer was better than no beer and we’d better just go with it.” Thank goodness I married him. The kegorator was a huge hit, and I watched guests drink copious amounts of Blue Moon and Killians without ever hearing a wish for microbrew.

Take a few moments for just the two of you after the ceremony

Finally (and I think I read this on APW somewhere), at some point just cut loose and enjoy your party. We had a receiving line and we stood up at the start of the reception to welcome everyone, generally introduce the groups of people present, and publicly thank friends and family who donated their time and talents. I highly recommend  both. Some of my parents’ friends approached us after dinner and said they loved the fact that we introduced who was at the wedding and thanked everyone for coming…it made the event feel very personalized. Since we’d front-loaded our connecting with guests, we felt comfortable spending a lot of time on the dance floor. There were some soul trains, Read’s dad did the splits, and we ended it all with a big, swaying, group hug to “Piano Man.” Read and I agreed that while we knew the wedding would be fun, we had no idea it would be THAT MUCH fun.

Do you have any suggestions for how to keep wedding planning in perspective, not lose your cool, enjoy the day, etc.? Later this week I want to post a little on the “nuts and bolts” of putting together our event, but I also have some new knitting and apartment projects to share.

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fitting

Yesterday my friends and I drove to Portland so I could get my dress fitted. I chose Tatyana’s Wedding Alterations after a quick google search. Wedding services tend to bring out the extreme emotions in folks – for most vendors there are reviews that gush and reviews that hate – but everyone loved this woman. After standing in front of a big mirror in her house for 30 minutes while she worked the straight pins, I’m a fan too. I could see the dress’s new outlines start to emerge like magic.

Tatyana wasn’t much interested in small talk (I got told multiple times to “stand STILL and face FORWARD”) but we did learn that she grew up in Russia and the Ukraine. Her mom pushed hard for her to pursue piano, but since childhood she wanted to be a seamstress. After attending a special school for sewing she got into the alterations business, where she’s been perfecting her craft for almost 30 years.

My friend Becca took that pic with her iphone and a $1.99 app called Hipstamatic. We both read the blog Dooce, which is where we first saw this app in action. It *is* pretty cool! Just look what it does with a sidewalk, my tired pink shoes, and some old petals…WHOAAaa. Makes me want an iphone.

hipstamatic iphone app in action

Our six cent Save-the-Dates

Save-the-Dates are a great place to venture out into DIY. Invitations have to contain a lot of information, but Save-the-Dates just require a date, your names, and a friendly message. Making your own can save a lot of money too. Forget $1 color copies at Kinkos. We saved the file in a 4×6″ jpeg format and printed it at Walgreens just like it was a photo. Glossy paper, bright clear colors, all for 6 cents apiece. SIX CENTS! Including stamps, we printed and sent 200 Save the Dates for about $80 total.

You don’t even need to own an image editing program because Adobe offers their design suite as a free 30-day download. With that said, here are my step-by-step instructions for how to do this yourself:

1. Take a photo of the two of you together. Make it fun.

2. Open a new file in InDesign (or your program of choice). Set the resolution at 400-600 pixels per inch, and set the size at 6 inches wide and 4 inches tall.

3. Experiment with fonts & backgrounds. I’m a big fan of www.1001freefonts.com…anything to break out of the default font rut. And look for backgrounds with a little texture and depth. I had fun searching online free scrapbooking databases, which have lots of interesting backgrounds.

4. Save the file on a jump drive. Save it as a jpeg and print as a 4×6 photo at a drug store or any photo-printing kiosk. If you want to email the file, save it as a pdf as well.

Here’s our Save-the-Date:

I got the idea to write the wedding date on a chalkboard and then take our picture with it in Italy. We took SO MANY pictures…Read was very kind to entertain me on this. The shot we chose was taken in an alley in Venice with my camera’s automatic timer (we set it on a windowsill). I’m wearing a hat in all the pictures because my hairdryer made ominous electrical noises when plugged into an adapter and then an Italian outlet. The background I found by typing “green fabric” into Google images, and then sorting the results so that I could view only the “large” files. I played with the fabric’s brightness and contrast in Photoshop.

Here’s another example that I just did last week for my coworker:

Terrie and Jill used the photobooth at the mall, which automatically added the “old-film” edging (cute!). We originally put the whole photo strip in the design, but after playing around with the layout Terrie decided she preferred just this one. I like how the couple seems to be looking up at the text. I found this background on a scrapbooking website. Terrie and Jill emailed this as a pdf attachment to all of their guests.

What are some fun Save-the-Dates that you’ve seen around the web? What tips and tricks do you recommend for anyone wanting to design their own? Any website or font recommendations?

Invitation sneak peek

Here’s a sneak peek at the wedding invitations that our friend Dave is working on for us. My favorite part is the house that he digitally illustrated using a photo of our wedding site. Look! How cool is that?

The wedding site

the invitation

Can-struction & not just any new shoes

Last week I posted a picture of the hat I made for an inter-departmental silent auction (all proceeds going to a local food bank). Within our own office, we split into teams and each tried to build the best sculpture out of non-perishables. Have any of you done this for a food drive? It’s deceptively difficult…many scenes/items do not translate well when you imagine making them out of cans. In the 11th hour Read jokingly suggested we build a GIANT CAN out of cans. It was simple & humorous – we were in. No word yet on the winner. 

It's Oregon - have to incorporate the Ducks where possible

I also wanted to show you what came in the mail a couple weeks ago – my wedding shoes! Since the wedding is outdoors I figured I would need wedge heels. Wait…lemme back up…I know I could wear flat shoes, but I really do like heels. I just wouldn’t feel dressed up without some height. So after stalking zappos for a few evenings I found these beauties from one of my favorite shoe brands. What do you think?

Off-white fabric, stacked wood heel, gold insides (!)

Seychelles makes very pretty, but substantial, heels

 

I'm going to be so tall!