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wedding table centerpiece ideas diy

wedding table centerpiece ideas diy - win

Flower Budget? Why are they so expensive!

I’m having my wedding in a warehouse in philly. I’m doing some farmhouse tables and other round tables with tablecloths.
The florists are all coming in with 10-12k quotes. Is this normal? How much were your wedding flowers?! Philly florist suggestions are highly welcomed!
submitted by thatcleangirl to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Budget and Recap! 10/10/2020 West Point, NY downsized but glad we still had a celebration!

First of all Weddit thanks for all the input and help and ideas. It was great to have a place of sanity to go while we were planning this day for the last 2.5 years! Our wedding was incredible and while it wasn't the day we had originally wanted, it was perfect. I am so grateful that we were able to have our closest friends and closest family there. As we navigated our options with postponing we realized that it wasn't really an option for us. Due to my husband's job if we didn't have our celebration in October, it wasn't going to happen until at least fall 2022. We'd already been engaged for 2 years and we were both ready to move on. While postponing is the right option for some couples, we realized that there are a million reasons to celebrate so we wanted to do something this year and we can throw a huge party with everyone we love for an anniversary, birthday, big life celebration, or just because we want to.
I know that having a wedding at all right now is a controversial topic. I really don't want to have the conversation with anyone about the precautions we took. Among other things, every single person that attended had to have a negative test within 24 hrs. We did not invite friends/family that would have to travel and the one bridesmaid (bff) that did travel came in with us 3 weeks early so that we could all quarantine and test multiple times. We also had ample mask wearing, sanitizer, distancing of all seating, and everything was outside. Post wedding everyone tested again and everyone was negative. I do not want to engage with anyone on if it was the right thing to do.
THE BASICS
Date: October 10, 2020
Guests: originally planning for 225, ended up with about 50 once we cut the list down. There were a lot of family and friends that weren't invited to our smaller celebration.
Venue: The Historic Thayer Hotel at West Point
Pictures: https://imgur.com/a/DpcLVeX
What went not so right:
What went right:
BUDGET BREAKDOWN
I am doing my best to break down the budget as detailed as possible. We got married in a HCOL area and our original budget reflects the plan for a more traditional Jewish wedding, where parents were allowed to invite friends. It was important to us that everyone was there with us, our whole proverbial community and we knew there would be a premium paid for that. Once we downsized and added streaming I know there were ways to do it for less, but the quality of the virtual experience was important to us. I don't regret for one second what we spent on things, and we could've easily spent more.
I am putting this budget breakdown in because the two in my budget range that I saw when I was planning made me feel more sane. I really do not appreciate the budget shaming that often happens on this sub. It was hard planning in such a HCOL area where the national averages are not representative, so I do hope this can help anyone who is looking for what things really cost for a wedding of this size in and around NYC
One thing to note is that we got engaged in June 2018 and while we spent a lot of money, a lot of it was spread out over nearly 2.5 years. Day to day, the amount spent on the wedding didn't impact our budget and we did not go into any debt.
My parents contributed a set amount to the wedding and my fiancé's parents covered the rehearsal dinner. I am not including my engagement ring or the honeymoon in this because I have a rough idea of how much my husband spent on my ring, but I've never asked for sure and our honeymoon is not going to happen until the world opens up. We are planning on taking 2 big trips to double celebrate our honeymoon (and because since we're waiting, why not?) to Japan and then to South Africa and Namibia.
totals:
all totals include gratuities
initial budget: 80k
planned budget pre-covid: 100k
Total spent (including things that were not really in the budget) ~50k
Breakdown:
****Ceremony and Reception: ****

****Appearances ****

****Gifts and things people kept****

****Misc****

****Not counted in this budget ****
Dance Lessons: ~$600 This money would've been super well spent if I hadn't hurt myself. we still did dance a bit but it wasn't what we planned. One day we can use those skills. I actually had a great time at the dance lessons and I'd 100% do it again.
Pre Marital Counseling: ~$500 very much money well spent. We did 4 sessions with a counselor online in the weeks before the wedding. We both felt like we got some great tools and it was a fantastic outlet for conversations we needed to have. I liked that it was virtual which made it accessible and I feel like we could go back to that counselor if we ever needed it.
Ketubah: ~400, this was a Hanukkah gift in 2019
Smashing Glasses: ~200 this was a gift from my aunt who officiated the wedding.
Engagement Ring
Honeymoon
Post-Wedding Brunch - My parents paid for this, it was casual
Wedding Shoes: ~$400, I bought these incredible something bleu shoes Navy kitten heels and then glitter keds for the party. I ended up in a boot and a sneaker so womp. But luckily both pairs of these shoes aren't very "bridal" and i'm definitely planning on wearing the glitter keds to the next tech conference I go to. I don't consider these "wedding budget" things because I'll wear them other times as well.
Rehearsal dinner - MIL paid for this
I'm glad I can post this and happy to talk to any other brides/grooms who are in the midst of planning!
submitted by westpointwedding to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Help from DIY-ers? How can I make these hoop centerpieces happen?

(cross posted to DIY weddings) So I am NOT a crafty person at all (and have very limited space in my apartment for either crafting or storage, no outdoor space or garage at all, no car). My original plan was to rent fake flowers for centerpieces...everyone hated the idea lol.
My FMIL is craftier and thinks she can make the centerpieces herself as a gift (I would purchase, she would do the labor). She thinks we can do these centerpieces for under 30 per table, but I'm just lost on how we could possibly do it. Would love ANY tips or experience if anyone's done them!
The centerpieces I like look this:
Example 1
Example 2
Example 3
I've found a relatively affordable hoop on amazon here...I'm not sure if it's possible to find cheaper but would love resources if anyone has them? I am also really unsure HOW we would actually attack these to a base securely without having to nail them in or something complicated....And then for flowers I've been looking at ling's moment, a box costs between 24 - 30 dollars but it looks like we'd need a box per centerpiece...so already the budget is kind of blown....
A lot of tutorials seem to use hula hoops but I'm a little wary...first, I can't find cheap hula hoops (like 5 or under per hoop?) anywhere online. Secondly I'm concerned it's too labor intensive for FMIL (stripping them, repainting, etc). And thirdly I'm concerned they are too light and will topple over...
So basically I'm just lost. Would love to hear from some expert DIYers on this whole idea.
submitted by flirtandflutter to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Destination Wedding Advice on Centerpieces

Planning a big destination wedding in Hawaii (Honolulu, 200ppl) -- would really want to DIY centerpieces but need advice if it is worth it to ship over there versus just hiring a florist which i would imagine would cost a lot for 20 tables. FYI -- i have a friend that lives there that i could possibly ship to in advance.
Also as far as ideas i'm thinking of bud vases with a single flower or single leaves (minimal) mixed with some geometric shapes and candles. Do you think that vision is minimal enough to bring the cost down?
Please help!!
submitted by middayexplorer to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Transferring photographs to glass vases

Has anyone ever transfered a photograph onto glass using a packing tape method? So long story short FH and I met working for Disney and our wedding theme is going to be Disneyland. Our tables are going to each be dedicated to a Disney ride using glass centerpieces. The idea is to print the picture on the glass but I can't seem to find very many companies that do that and those that do charge like $30-40 each so uhh no. So DIY with packing tape is my only option. Any suggestions or info from those who have done it or know anything? Thanks in advance!
submitted by belleandbeast1 to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Ideas Needed for a Picnic Wedding!

Oops, I’m a covid bride...
A picnic wedding reception wasn’t my original ~vision~ but I’m rolling with the punches. Postponing our wedding has made us realize how expensive our original plan was, so we’re rethinking everything as we try to find a celebration that will fit our budget.
Side note: We‘re not planning to do this until the pandemic has calmed down. My inner bridezilla hates all the waiting but I’m not willing to risk anyone’s health.
THE VIBE
I’m going for “garden party” as opposed to “rustic farmhouse chic,” but I also want things to feel laid-back and easy
THE LOCATION
A public park in the middle of my city
THE TIME
11:00 am following the 10:00 am ceremony at our church
THE DETAILS
• The menu consists of brunch-y finger foods like fruit skewers and bagels, mimosas, and cupcakes for dessert
• To save on a DJ, we’ll replace music/dancing with lawn games and other activities (croquet, hula hoops, a wedding cake piñata, a photo scavenger hunt with prizes)
• Seating will consist of picnic blankets, with chairs/tables provided for those who are physically unable to sit comfortably on the ground
• Flip-flop sandals as party favors will give people the option to change out of their heels
• A Selfie Spot instead of a photo booth will save so much money it’s actually OBSCENE
WHERE I NEED HELP
• A timeline. Will guests eat and immediately leave if there’s no dancing? I‘m hoping that if we schedule the scavenger hunt prizes and the piñata for an hour or so after brunch is served, there will be something keeping everyone here.
• Seating logistics. For the original wedding, I created a seating chart (which is suuuuper necessary for this group) that had 8 people per table—which, in this case, means 8 people per picnic blanket. How big should each blanket be to comfortably accommodate 8 guests? I’m also providing a pillow for each guest to sit on...anybody know where to get like 60 pillows for real cheap? My mom is sewing pillowcases to help everything match.
• Decorations. I’m keeping these to a minimum: a couple of signs with directions, props and a backdrop for the Selfie Spot, and centerpieces. I’m planning to buy small wooden boxes I can put in the middle of each picnic blanket to hold table numbers and centerpieces; any ideas on where to get boxes like that? Suggestions for decorations I haven’t thought of?
• Set-up logistics. Someone needs to go set everything up the morning of the event and babysit everything while the ceremony is going on—it’s a public park, and while we’re allowed to reserve it for the wedding, the park doesn’t provide security to keep people away from our stuff. Has anyone done this before? I can’t ask my MOH because whoever is in charge of this will have to miss the wedding itself.
Sorry this post got so long. I love love love this stage of the planning process and now that I’m over the initial disappointment of postponing, I’m excited to start it all over again. Let me know if you have ideas/critiques/suggestions—I’m super open to brainstorming, I love to DIY, and my Pinterest app is OPEN!
submitted by bridezilla5320 to Weddingsunder10k [link] [comments]

Food for Thought to all COVID Brides.

Hey guys, I know I've posted on a number of posts, but I wanted to hopefully help give you some ideas.
1) When will it be safe to have a wedding? Both Moderna and Oxford trials conclude this month, with their release of their findings to be announced in September. That means next month, we could very well have a date as to when the vaccines will be released to the general public around the world. If I were you, use this as a time to assess the situation and decide what to do from there. If earlier statements of a December vaccine release date are correct, and the vaccines take 1-2 months to build antibodies and T-cells in the body, you're looking at around a February or March for this to start lifting. But Disclaimer: I ain't a doctor, please read credible news sources and be informed of your own volition.
2) How can I prepare if I need to move the date again? Build your Plan B, C, D or X if need be. Communicate to your vendors. Be flexible, and be safe. But you don't need to "start all over": first ask the venue for the next date that works, as well as the rest of your vendors. Same wedding, different date - just don't print your date all over the place and you'll be fine. If anyone gives you crap, start putting everything in writing with delivery confirmation (or email). No more verbal communication - just in case you need to lawyer up.
3) I really want to try on wedding dresses, but, pandemic? There's SEVERAL try-on dress shops that ship to your home. Even better? There's a lot of out-of-work seamstresses, tailors, and costume designers right now. Ever wanted a dress that's ACTUALLY custom made? No, I mean for real, and ACTUAL custom dress? Well, here's your chance. Contact your local tailors and seamstresses. Contact your local film commission branch to see if they have any recommendations. If you're in NYC or LA pretty sure calling the Garment/Fashion district stores will lead you to some wonderful recommendations. As always, make sure you see a portfolio of your designer's work, you communicate your budget clearly, and ask them what a whip stitch is. If they don't know, hire someone else. Even a costume design graduate can do a "thrift flip" aka, take a dress base and tweak it to your style at a much lower cost with some great results.
4) This is horrible! I have more time to wait I don't know what to do with myself! Yah, I feel you. I live in Florida, and I wanted it to be cold (aka, not feeling the makeup melt off my face). The date we had in mind was important to us but, oh well that's how the cookie crumbles and it turns out our new date will be even cuter, so it all worked out. My December wedding is now a March wedding* (pending COVID), so now I have extra time to... oh god..
PLAN MORE SHINY THINGS! :D
-I decided to learn how to use epoxy resin to make badass escort cards for really cheap.
-I decided to put more energy and effort into the table settings, which I wouldn't have done before.
-I decided I'll DIY my signs using a new technique for fun, which I wouldn't have been able to do.
-The fiance and I are taking more time to plan our honeymoon for whenever we can do it.
-We're making all of our centerpieces with silk flowers. Then it doesn't really matter what time of the year it is, silk flowers don't die and don't have "seasons". You don't even have to water them! :D

So I encourage you to embrace the weird. Embrace the crazy that is these times. Think outside of the box. Throw away the "normal" and just go with the times. Don't settle for your dream wedding: push beyond it to surpass your expectations by stepping beyond the comfort zone of normlacy coz this ain't normal. At the end of the day it's going to be ok. Take advantage of this extra time to exchange ideas to make our weddings even more badassical and fabulous, everyone. Use the extra time to make your wedding even more incredible while you protect the lives of those you love.

As a final note, to those who absolutely have to get married now for reasons (immigration, army, etc hopefully you get what I mean): My heart goes out to you and I'm sending you ALL the virtual hugs. I really hope some of my suggestions might help some of y'all. Be safe, and hang in there. <3 Let me know what you think, or if you ave any tips as well for those navigating these times!
submitted by NotUnidan to wedding [link] [comments]

5 Tips for Photobooth Posing!

We all know the potential fun to be had in a photobooth, whether traditional or the new, open-air style. A group of people get together, in front of a camera, with some random props...how could you NOT have fun? But do a quick Google search on photobooth pictures over the years and what you start to realize is that a large majority of them look the same. And that's understandable because, for the most part, when you get in a photobooth, everyone expects to make a few faces, wear a few random articles of clothing, and pose!
Now we're not doubting that people have plenty of fun doing that, or that the resulting pictures are fun to look at. But what if you could have an experience that was not only fun and produced decent pictures, but were unique and creative?! So that even people who don't personally recognize the people in the picture respond with, "wow, that's such a great idea!" or "wow, the timing there is perfect!"?
The following are a list of 5 simple tips that we've compiled after many, many events of running a photobooth, aiming each time to come out with images that would go beyond the traditional photobooth pictures and have the extra "wow" factor. If you're going to be running a DIY photobooth, hopefully this helps you get the most out of your guests as you man the booth. If you're just reading this in case you happen to pop into a photobooth yourself sometime soon, hopefully this gets your creative juices going too! Here goes:
1. PAY ATTENTION TO DETAILS
When running a photobooth for an event, say a wedding, with several hundred guests and a limited number of props, its only a matter of time before guests run out of things to do with the props available. You'll get your fair share of fun pictures with those and the typical poses (and that's fine!) but to take it to another level, keep your eyes peeled for details in your surroundings. This includes on people (clothing, accessories, etc) as well as at your venue/location (centerpieces, table settings, utensils, etc)
For example, in a group of people, do they have something in common? Maybe a color scheme? a similar or consistent article of clothing? all guys, wearing ties? all ladies, with fancy shoes? does everyone have their cellphone on them? or even something as simple as a wallet? take advantage of that! Try to use them in non-standard ways for great pictures. Use them to tell a story! (more on that in #4)
If you're at a wedding or birthday party, are there items that the host has placed in the decorations that can be used as props in interesting ways? This is often a great way to, not only use these "props" creatively, but also to add personalized details to the pictures that will remind the hosts of details - such as decorations & party favors - that they spent so many hours preparing for.
When you keep your eyes peeled for details like this, everything and everyone becomes a potential prop and idea for a great capture!
2. RUN WITH THEIR PERSONALITY
When you direct people in a photobooth, its important to take into consideration the personality of the people you're working with. Are you younger or older? outgoing or a little more shy? are they athletic (enough, say, to jump or even throw people)?
Some people are just bundles of creative energy and you're able to just kind of sit back and watch the great ideas flow! Others need a little bit more input (or even prodding) to open up with some crazier ideas. Start by letting them try and idea/pose or two on their own and get a feel for what kinds of things they produce.
Try offering little suggestions to what they've got (more intense facial expressions, more believable actions, more interaction, less pose-y, etc). If they seem open to direction, break out some of your crazier ideas! For this purpose, we're constantly brainstorming ideas for new poses, stories, and ideas, so that when we come across the right kind of group in a photobooth, we're ready to go!
Remember that great, crazy picture ideas are somewhat relative. If you can get normally reserved grandparents to open up and get just a little goofy, success! By taking the personalities that come and helping them to kick it up a notch (even if it is literally only one, little notch!), chances are you've got yourself a shot that will be remembered! Who knows, they may even come back for more!
3. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF NUMBERS
With the new photobooth designs these days (especially with open-air photobooths), its not uncommon to be able to squeeze in anywhere from 1 to even 15 people in a single photobooth shot! The question now is how to most effectively use those numbers for great shots! A few suggestions:
Smaller groups and couples (2-5 people) offer a lot of potential for simple, clear, fun interaction between people. Its easy to direct them saying, "I want you to do this to her!" or "Everyone jump on the count of 3!"
Medium sized groups (6-10 people) starts to get a little trickier. Action shots, such as everyone jumping, are more out of the question due to the potential of injury or an unwanted kick to the leg! Rather, shots that direct your attention to a specific person, such as "Everyone cheer for the bride and groom while they kiss!" or "Carry this person and act like he's incredibly heavy!" are what makes the picture "WOW" worthy.
Large sized groups (11-15 people) are definitely a challenge, but well worth it when everyone in the group is willing to get a little crazy and all participate in on the fun. This is where expressive faces and everyone doing the same thing come in handy. "Everyone stick out your hands and say 'ROAR!'" or "Stick out your tongue and try to touch your noses," all make for hilarious shots that make the group want to do more!
4. DON'T POSE, DIRECT
Another way to put it is, "don't just take a picture, tell a story!" While random action can be lots of fun, often the best photobooth pictures are the ones where your eye is drawn into some action or flow of thought and leads you through the picture as you follow the "storyline".
Imagine yourself the director of a very simple movie. Rather then tell each person exactly what gesture to make, what facial expression to have, with the exact timing, try giving them a "story" or "concept" that they can take and run with. Then, all you need to do is capture at the right time! (here's where digital technology helps!)
A couple simple examples, "You three kids are really mad at your parents, so mad in fact that things are about to get out of hand. And you parents are helpless, scared, cowering! Ready? Go!"
"Ok guys, I want you to pretend like you're on a rollercoaster, about to go down a steep drop! Ready, go!"
"Alright, I want you to let out your years of frustration by slapping her, while you are just shocked that this is happening before your eyes!"
5. SHOW ME THE ACTION!
Just because a picture captures a single moment in time doesn't mean that picture itself needs to be of a static pose! You can never go wrong with injecting a bit of action into a shot! Whether its faking a move out of a video game, tossing a poor guy high up in the air, or even the tried-and-true, coordinated jump, getting people moving around with some fun action always brings up the energy and fun, and leaves you with some great captures!
submitted by Clever_Television_ to speechaas [link] [comments]

[RECAP] SoCal | 250 Guests | $33k | Feb 08, 2020

Hello! I hope other brides find this helpful!
But first... PICTURES!
Location: San Gabriel, Pasadena & Westminister, CA
Guests: 250
Budgeted: $35,000
Spent: $32,959
Our wedding was a Chinese/Vietnamese-American Catholic wedding. My husband and I paid for the wedding out of our own pockets. It took us about 2 years to plan and save for the wedding. There were a lot of DIYs to cut costs and help from family and friends setting everything up.
Now onto the details!
Florals: $294
Ceremony (Catholic Church): $700
Tea Ceremony: $479
Reception: $18,253
Photography + Videography: $9,161
Attire: $2,228
Makeup + Hair: $1,235
Misc: $609

Thank you if you've made it this far! Feel free to ask questions, if any :)
submitted by tinaul to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

How To Make Candles 101 > Sand Candles by Candle Sand

How To Make Candles 101 > Sand Candles by Candle Sand
Sand Candle - Woodland Garden Candle by Candle Sand

How to make candles 101

There are creative candle making ideas in all of us if we are willing to think outside the candle jar.
Sure, when you think of how to make candles, you’re probably thinking of the traditional glass jar candle or the long-tapered candles for a formal table. But we are in a new era and we no longer must conform to the jar! Go crazy with DIY candles that are easy and do not require an electric wax warmer or special candle making equipment
Making sand candles is a great way to repurpose items that you already have around the house. No need to spend money on expensive name brand candles. Even if you find those candles on sale, they end up in the trash because, they are unable to be recycled. With Candle Sand, you can make a personalized candle in 3 easy steps!
So, you’re thinking of making your own candles. Maybe you want to make them to sell or give as gifts or even just make them for yourself, GREAT! You have 2 options to make candles, the traditional way, or the modern way. Let us explore the differences.

https://preview.redd.it/ajmm3xxwxhv51.jpg?width=2880&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=f8cae5094729ebfec8b073ddeec43cfc909736b4

How to make candles 101

Modern Candle Making Supplies Needed Traditional Candle Making Supplies Needed
· Container – Repurposed and heat-resistant item from around the house · Wax – Soy, Coconut, Paraffin, Mineral, Beeswax, Rapeseed, Palm, gel
· Candle Sand – Pick your color · Dye – blocks or liquid
· Insert wick - Wicks included · Containers – wax molds, taper candle molds
· Wicks – Too many to list here
· Scale
· Electric Wax Warmer – double boiler
· Pouring Pitcher – for the hot molted wax
· Thermometer – measure the hot wax temperature
· Rubbing Alcohol
· Latex Gloves

The traditional DIY Candles can get expensive and time consuming. Something simple like choosing the right wax for candles can be a process. But making sand candles with Candle Sand is a whole new experience. The one thing you need is creative candle making ideas and your imagination.

Add Candle Sand to a heat-resistant container or surface
HOW TO MAKE CANDLES
3 EASY STEPS
Making sand candles are incredibly easy, no experience necessary!
Looking to make gifts for friends, family or even to sell in your shop? Create your own sand candle making kits.
Need a wedding centerpiece with floating candles? Candle Sand floats!
Baby shower ideas – put out a candle bar for guests to create their own sand candle to take home.
The holidays are upon us, think outside the candle jar and give a Candle Making Kit and add some holiday candle scents to create a festive mood and to change the texture of the candle.

Red Craft Candle Sand Wax for Candles
It's Time To Think Outside The Candle Jar!

See more Creative Candle Making Ideas at:

Facebook – www.facebook.com/candlesandUSA
Instagram – www.instagram.com/candlesandusa
Pinterest – www.pinterest.com/candlesandusa/
How to Pour Candle Sand - https://youtu.be/ZU_Cly0iGSA
Google - https://g.page/candlesand?share
Twitter – www.twitter.com/candlesandusa
submitted by CandleSandUSA to u/CandleSandUSA [link] [comments]

Wedding Recap: 18k Afternoon Wedding in Albuquerque for 65 guests

First, Pictures!
This is a wedding I planned for my wife. She was the stereotypical bride that always dreamed of a big fancy wedding, but she had no interest in planning it. I was the stereotypical bride that did 99% of the planning, because I had no interest in a wedding for myself but I loved researching and planning and I wanted my wife to be happy. I know a lot of hetero couples have issues with this labor imbalance, but for us it worked perfectly.

Summary

Costs

Venue: $500

Our venue was a historic hotel downtown. We had the welcome evening, the ceremony and the reception here. A lot of our guests stayed at the hotel and commented on how convenient it was for them.
Ceremony Fee: $500 for the ceremony space. We picked the venue specifically for this ceremony space which isn’t available in the evenings, which forced us to have an afternoon ceremony. Worth it.
Reception Venue: fee was waived because we met the minimum spend!

Food & Drinks: $10.5k

$70 per adult, which included a buffet, beewine/soft drinks, and passed appetizers for 1 hour (this price doesn’t include taxes etc). The total for the food including taxes was $6,288.
We hosted a full bar for the whole night in addition to this package, which came out to $3,468.
Dessert: We brought in gelato from Frost for $810. Their standard package feeds 200 people, so at the end of the night there was a TON of leftovers. They packed it up into pint containers for us and held it at their local store for us to pick up the next day. We hosted a lovely post-wedding ice cream social and gave it all away to local friends.

Attire: $1.5k

My attire: $77 I wasn’t too particular about my dress, so I just kind of bought the first dress that I liked (Lulus Awaken My Love in Grey). After I bought it I got a little obsessed and made this pinterest board featuring this dress as a wedding dress.
My alterations: $80 I got it taken in to tea length and fixed the sleeves to fit better.
My accessories: $180 This includes a veil, barefoot sandals, hair vine, and gaffers tape I used as a bra. I also wore a gold locket that my mother gave me when I was a teenager.
Wife’s attire: $259 She ordered a dress from RenzRags which was kind of a hot mess. The bodice was too small and the skirt looked cheap so she ordered a tulle skirt to go over it and a shaper to squeeze her torso. It was a little stressful, but in the end it all worked out.
Wife’s alterations: $60 To alter the dress mentioned above.
Wife’s accessories: $180 She bought nice jewelry for all her body piercings and a crystal flower crown.
Rings: $612 Her ring is a dainty 14k white gold ring with a pink moissanite which I bought on etsy. My ring is a plain 14k gold band that I found while digging in the garden a few years back. They match our personalities pretty well.

Decor: $1.6k

Florals: $877 We went full DIY on the florals. This is a combination of plastic flowers from Michaels, foam roses from Amazon, Sola wood flowers, artificial boutonnieres and flower crowns from Etsy, and 200 feet of real green garlands from Sam’s Club. The garlands were $400 and well worth it; there was enough for all the tables in the reception and to decorate the chairs for the ceremony.
Non-florals at ceremony: $417 Most of this is from the $278 wagon we bought for our young son to ride down the aisle. We also bought bubbles and a round arch.
Non-florals at cocktail hour: $54 The hotel was pretty enough, we just put up a schedule sign so people would know what’s going on. We labeled it “The Gay Agenda” and everyone loved it.
Non-florals at reception: $279 We went with long farmhouse tables so the centerpieces had to be simple. I found some cheap geometric candle holders on amazon, put some flickering LED candles in them, and arranged them around the garlands on the table. There were also a lot of leftover sola wood flowers so we arranged them in the garlands too.

Stationery: $400

Save-the-dates/Programs./Menus: $0 we skipped all of these: save-the-dates because of our short engagement (we just sent out our invitations reallllly early), programs because we had a super short ceremony, and menus because we had a buffet. I don’t think anyone missed them.
Invitations + postage: $245 We just bought something off of Minted. We ended up with like 50 extra invitations somehow, so we probably could have spent a lot less here.
Thank you cards + postage: $100 Again, just something cute from Minted.
Escort cards: $82 Another DIY. We went with named tables, so I bought some nice tree illustrations from Etsy for table cards, made a seating chart spreadsheet that generated the escort cards for me, and printed out the escort cards on some nice cardstock. This seemed like a good idea until I was cutting out the escort cards at 1 AM two days before the wedding. I don’t recommend this unless you have a way to cut paper in bulk.

Other Vendors: 3.8k

Coordinator: $0 The venue includes a venue coordinator and I think that was all we needed. I wasn’t super stoked about the whole wedding thing, but I love planning things. I think if we had an event coordinator I would’ve enjoyed the day less.
Music: $1371 We hired a string duo for the ceremony and a DJ for the reception. I’m really glad we got the string musicians.
Photographer: $1882 This includes 7 hours of shooting, with a second shooter for about 5 of those hours.
Hair Stylist: $8 We didn’t want anything super fancy, so my sister-in-law did both of our hair. The only thing I had to buy was some hair wax (which I will probably never use again). She did a great job!
Make-up Artist (+ trial): 250 This includes two trials and one day-of face. My wife found a local mua who came out and did a trial for us both. I ended up hating it even though she did a great job, so I did my own makeup day-of along with our brides’ maids.
Officiant: $0 Our lovely friend of 10+ years did the ceremony for us as a wedding gift.
Tips: $300 I took out this much for tips and I’m sure it all went to that, but I couldn’t tell you who got what.

Gifts: $150

Wedding party gifts: $150 for bridesmaids boxes. Everyone also got sweet thank-you cards.

Additional Events: 3.7k

Rehearsal Lunch: $1000? I got a reservation at a cafe down the street from the venue and we just all walked over after the rehearsal. I wanted to pay for this, but my dad got to the check before me so I have no idea how much we spent.
Welcome Party: 2.7k Since everyone was coming from out of town, we had a little cocktail party at the venue the night before.

Additional Info

Timeline

We fell in love with this ceremony space but it was only available before 2 PM, and my wife really wanted to have the standard dinner & dancing reception, so our timeline was a little non-traditional:
1:30 Ceremony (we put 1 on the invitations and one of her cousins still missed it, lol)
1:45 Receiving line into cocktail hour+
2-ish to 3:30 Cocktail Hour+
3:45 First dance and parent dances
4:00 Prayer and dinner (we had a buffet)
4:45 Speeches/Toasts, dance floor open
6:00 Dessert, more dancing
10:00 Late night Loteria to finish the night

What Went Well

Pretty much everything. I originally didn’t want a wedding, but in the end I’m glad my wife convinced me into it. I was worried about so much stuff not working out (like our last-minute welcome evening, wonky timeline, super-short ceremony, non-traditional dresses, the seating chart, the dance floor) but all of it turned out perfectly fine. I’m also really glad we played Loteria (mexican bingo) at the end of the night once the crowd had thinned out and everyone was very drunk. Her family plays it a lot at family gatherings so it was a nice way to bring the two sides of our family together!

Things I Would Have Changed

I definitely wouldn’t have DIY’ed the escort cards, it was so much work at the very last minute. We did have some trouble getting people to RSVP, but I think this was mainly cultural, so probably unavoidable (her family’s weddings are usually much more casual and folks just kind of show up).
submitted by weddingrecap02082020 to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Budget/Breakdown: $30k MN July wedding, 100 guests, Long engagement

First of all, PHOTOS!
Background info
We live in Minnesota, were high school sweethearts, and are in our mid-20s. Of the 10 years we’ve dated, we’ve lived together for 5 years and were engaged for 2.5 years. I planned everything myself, and we paid for the wedding ourselves.
Pros of a long (2+ years) engagement:
Cons of a long engagement:
Budget and Gifts
Initial budget: $20k
Final cost: $29k
Our parents/grandparents gave us $17k in total, and gifts from guests totaled $3k.
Guest List
If I had to plan a wedding again, I might elope, only to avoid the guest-list drama.
My guest list: 80
Parents’ guest list: 200+
Guests invited: 125
Guests RSVP’d yes: 101
Guests invited late due to parents begging: 7
Guests who actually attended: 98 (2 of whom RSVD’d no)
Theme
My vague theme was "royal wedding in the park." My inspiration words were, "Colorful, elegant, simple, and classic."
Final Costs
Day-of Coordinator: $1175
If I could only give one piece of advice, it would be to hire a coordinator. Nothing major went wrong, thanks to our coordinator. Neither me nor my family had to lift a finger to set up or tear down. It was an entirely relaxing, wonderful day.
Attire: $4430
In my experience, buying my dress two years before the wedding was great. I recommend waiting to buy your accessories, though. I thought I needed this $500 belt, but by the wedding day, I liked my dress better without it. I only wore it for the reception.
3 bridesmaids skirts (DIY): $230
My dress: $1200
Accessories: $700
Alterations (hem, take in the bust, bustle, add straps): $550
Groom tux and attire (rented from The Black Tux): $200
My ring (excluding engagement ring): $900
His ring: $650
Hair and Makeup: $1200
I let everyone choose whether they got hair and makeup done and how they wanted to look. Everyone but my mom opted in. I disliked the hair stylist I was assigned. Even after after a second trial, my updo was frizzy, sloppy, and coming out before the ceremony. Bridesmaids hair also came out before the ceremony.
My hair and makeup (including a trial): $400
2nd hair trial: $65
3 Bridesmaids and MOG haimake up: $600
Tip: $150
Stationary: $328
I designed and printed our invitation suites myself, which was stupid. The paper I bought wasn’t made for printer ink, so although they looked beautiful at first, most of the ink rubbed off in the mail. In hindsight, I should have had them professionally printed on good paper. I spent hours on those invites--even doing calligraphy for every name and address--just to have them smudge.
STDs from Minted: $118
Invites (DIY): $100
Thank You Cards: $25
Postage: $85
Venue: $3480
Both the ceremony and reception were at a local park with a lovely indoor space.
Counseling: $160
In hindsight, we should have skipped pre-marital counseling. We have a fantastic relationship, but I thought we should try it. We did Prepare-Enrich, which reported we had no weaknesses, and had an hour of therapy. Afterward, the therapist said we could continue but didn’t think we needed to.
Dance Lessons: $80
This covered four dance classes. It was a group class designed for engaged couples practicing for their first dance. We had so much fun! The weekly lessons were like date nights. We had no prior dance experience and learned a ton.
Officiant and License: $515
Food for the drama llamas: Shortly after we got engaged, I asked my distant cousin (a pastor) to marry us and he agreed. Two years went by. I struggled to get him on the phone or talk about logistics. When we did finally talk, he wouldn’t let us get a word in and talked for two hours about how we needed more pre-marital counseling. Two months before the wedding, he said he didn’t feel comfortable marrying us because we live together and aren’t religious. I was annoyed but relieved, and we hired an officiant.
Officiant: $400
Marriage license: $115
Photo and Video: $4575
For videography, I wanted raw footage because I dislike modern wedding videos. Before hiring him, I told our videographer I didn’t want to see things the photographer was already capturing. I wanted him to film stuff I would miss. Candid moments. Family arriving, groomsmen goofing off, my sister carrying my train, my little cousins playing. But instead, he stuck to the traditonal script and filmed bridal party posing for pictures, the ceremony, speeches, and the dance floor. In hindsight, I should have just “hired” a friend to be the videographer. On the other end of the spectrum, our photographer was incredible!
Photography: $3800
Videography: $775
Food and drink: $5815
Many people doubted my decision to have tacos for dinner and donuts for dessert (no cake). (At least DH was super excited about the food I picked!) I defended my decisions, and it turned out great.
Appetizers and buffet dinner: $4155
Donuts: $220
Open bar (beer and wine only): $1440
DJ/entertainment: $1125
In addition to a DJ, we had ping pong and a retro arcade cabinet (both borrowed from DH’s uncle), which people enjoyed. I’m sad DH and I never got a chance to play.
Decor: $1370
I won’t go into the saga that was finding cylinder vases and pillar candles for a reasonable price. The lesson is to do all DIY as early as possible. Just do it now because it will not go as planned and you’ll have to resort to plan B (or C or D.)
Chair rental cost surprised me. We needed 100 basic chairs for 20 minutes, and most vendors quoted me $1k. My friend’s dad rents chairs for graduation parties but was willing to do weddings too, so I got a deal. If you’re looking for basic chairs, try searching for grad party rentals instead of wedding rentals.
Vases and candles: $50 and my sanity
Blue goblets from eBay: $540
Ring box: $40
Ceremony arch (DIY): $45
Place cards (DIY): $20
Paper cranes (DIY): $5
Fake greenery for headtable: $100
Chair rental for ceremony: $570
Floral: $2440
Flowers on ceremony arch: $400
Floral centerpieces: $100 each
Greenery centerpieces: $50 each
My bouquet: $300
Bridesmaids bouquets: $150 each
Boutonnieres: $15 each
Corsages for moms: $30 each
We had some random buds scattered on other tables too, which were $50 per table. The rest is taxes and delivery fee.
Gifts: $75
I gave my bridesmaids silk butterfly clips from Etsy to wear in their hair. DH gave his dad and groomsmen custom flasks. To each of the parents, I wrote heartfelt notes.
Bridesmaids gifts: $25
Groomsmen gifts: $50
Parent gifts: $0
Honeymoon: $2300
Four days in Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. We’ve been there several times before, which meant we didn’t have to plan or research anything. DH grandparents offered the use of their timeshare, so hotel was free. We waited too long to book flights, so they got expensive.
Hotel: $0
Flights: $1800
Food/activities: ~$500
What Went Well
When we started planning, DH and I had a conversation about expectations. I asked, “What makes it a wedding to you?” His answer surprised me, and it helped me prioritize things while planning.
Hiring a day-of coordinator was the best money spent.
I was worried about being sick with anxiety all day. My mom told me if I expected myself to be anxious, I would be. I took her advice and actively corrected my thinking. I pictured myself calm and happy as often as possible. In moments of stress, I focused on things I was excited about. In the weeks leading up, I told myself over and over I would be at ease and carefree. And it was so! I couldn’t believe it!
If it’s going to be hot and you’re doing photos outside, bring cooling towels. Our bridal party loved them in between pictures.
If you don’t want to do something, then don’t. No one will miss it. We skipped a lot of “traditions” and no one noticed. We had no guestbook, cake cutting, father-daughter dance, bouquet toss, garter toss, grand entrance, or grand exit.
We did a receiving line, and it was the best. It got the hugs and congrats done right away and ensured we greeted every guest. It only took about twenty minutes. Then, at the reception, we were free to mingle with whomever we wanted to talk to more. No one pulled us aside or interrupted us during the reception.
Instead of a father-daughter dance, my dad played accordion and guests participated in a group folk dance. It meant a lot of my dad. It was also a sneaky way to get a lot of people on the dance floor for when the DJ started.
I was surprised by how much power the bride has. I realized this when people on the dance floor mimicked my moves and responded to everything I did. If I clapped my hands to the beat, so did they. If I left the floor, they stopped dancing. If I pointed at someone across the floor, they pointed back and we sang lyrics together. As a shy person, I’ve never experienced anything like this. Once I realized my power, I used it for good. I made a point to dance with people who had no date or knew no one. I thanked and complimented people profusely. I visited more tables than I normally would have.
What Went Wrong
The list below is nitpicking for the sake of this post. I mean it when I say the day was absolutely perfect and nothing on the list below affected our happiness.
Finally, I just want to say thank you to this wonderful community. I got a lot of ideas and support from this fantastic group. This place is unique among subreddits and online communities. Please never change, Weddit!
submitted by mr-pockets to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Wedding Recap: October 12, 2019, Ventura, CA—Vintage Chicano theme

It’s been 6 months since my husband and I got married! I always loved reading through wedding recaps because it helped me establish budgets and I found so many cool items/ideas I was able to incorporate into my own wedding! I know this is a difficult time for those that have had to reschedule their wedding or are thinking about having to do that, but I hope it gives you more time to create the wedding you and your partner wants.
Here are some photos:
Blog from my wedding photographer Rodney Ty
My personal favorites: Us and the Details
Overview: My husband and I knew that we wanted to have a wedding that reflected our style as couple. Our goal was to have our guests think, “this is definitely Kat and Angel’s wedding!” We have a lot of friends who are talented artists or own their business so we asked for their help (if they were able to) instead of purchasing a gift for us. I put an * to signify items that these were made/created/discounted by friends and family because some of the prices may seem unrealistic.
Our theme: Us aka Vintage Chicano
Colors: Hunter green, orange, and yellow
Top 3 most important things for us:
Food—We love Mexican food and we’re Latinx. I’m vegan and he wanted to have the taco truck that he grew up eating.
Alcohol—Our family and friends love to party and we love to throw parties! We wanted to make sure we had most liquors available so we purchased a wide variety. We had craft beer and our friends brewed a beer in our honor—PS I love craft beer and weirdly my husband has never had a drink in his life!
Music—A common theme throughout our decor was music (records and boomboxes). We also needed a really good DJ because we love to dance and knew we wanted to spend most of the night doing that. We got that and spent the night having and awesome time!
(Photography was pretty high as well. We love taking photos together and have had some great ones over the years--wanted to add some to our collection.)
Favorite/Memorable Things
Support of Our Friends and Family: People were so excited for us to get married! Leading up the wedding people offered their physical labor, time, energy, or craft. This allowed us to have a high guest count, but not spend a ton of money. I’m forever grateful to these people and have the privilege of having special memories from our wedding.
Our Own Beer “Love on the Radio”: Strawberry Hazy IPA brewed by our best friends. I love hazy IPAs and he is from Oxnard (strawberry city) and loves boomboxes, which is how they came up with the concept. They created a label and made glasses for our family and close friends. They did a pouring at our rehearsal dinner since our wedding party would most likely not be able to try it during cocktail hour.
Signature drinks and Pouring Shots: We had fun creating these with our friends and personal tastes in mind. “La Ramona” is our cat who is a lil nutty. At one point towards the end of the night, the bartender allowed me to get behind the bar and pour shots for all my guests who wanted to participate. It was epic!
Dedication hour: We love Art Laboe and listen to his dedication show on the radio. We wanted to incorporate this into our wedding somehow. During cocktail hour, we had our friends and family write “dedications” that were read throughout the night. It was super fun to randomly hear our friends tell us how much they love us!
BUDGET BREAKDOWN
Initial Budget: $20,000
Total Spent: ~$30,000 (a little less, but I assumed we are missing some items)
Attendees: 196 guests
Venue/Rentals/Catering/Beverage: $12, 996
Photography: $2800 (including tip)
Rodney Ty Photography: He was my friend’s wedding photographer. I love his pictures and the mood he is able to set. He is great at candid shots and uses film and digital photography.
Florist*: ~$680
DJ/MC/Photobooth* ($2,300):
DecoMisc (~$2,941):
This is where we went a little crazy, but we wanted to ensure that the idea of Us came through. We wanted our family and friends to come to our wedding and recognize that it represented us to our core. Here are all the details we are super proud of!
Desserts ($853.50):
Bride’s Attire ($1,566, including alteration):
Groom’s Attire (~$655.00):
Wedding Bands ($2,500): • Vendor: Sueno Jewelry Studio
Miscellaneous Attire ($360):
3 flower girl dresses from Bhldn for our three nieces (one didn’t make it down the aisle because she was too nervous).
Makeup/Hair ($100/2 $50 gift certificates for my friends):
Paper Costs: Save the Dates, Invites, and Postage ($883)
Bridal Party Gifts (~$450)
Rehearsal Dinner ($634.28)
Please feel free to reach out if you want any further details on anything I purchased or general questions!
submitted by chingona_nerdo to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Ahead on Wedding Planning: Any ideas for things I can work on for the next 13 months?

We were on the ball with our wedding planning before COVID hit--like, I've never been this organized in my LIFE--and now we've postponed nearly a year. I'm itching to work on something wedding-related, probably to stave off the persistent bummed-out feeling hovering over me. I'm doing my best to just enjoy being engaged, but I find myself fiddling with details that are already planned whenever I have down time. So, weddit, what I can I do?

This is where we're at right now:
-Booked and finalized new date with: venue, caterer, decor rental company, photographer, videographer, day-of coordinator, DJ/sound equipment, flowers, haimakeup, weekend transportation, hotel room block.
-Decor elements selected. I didn't plan to DIY anything, so the decor will all be rented. It will be super simple to allow the beauty of our venue to shine--just flowers and candles in clear vases/containers as centerpieces + an arch for the ceremony. So there really isn't a need for other elements that I can think of?
-Dress purchased; shoes purchased; women's dresses selected; flower girl dress selected, need to choose her basket; general idea of what we want for guys' outfits; women's getting-ready outfits selected; both our rings received (haven't decided yet if I want a wedding band); still brainstorming gifts for my parents and wedding party; need to schedule haimakeup trial when it's safe to do so
-Change-the-dates sent; invite, ceremony program, thank-you notes, and escort cards drafted; website set up and pages with subject-to-change details drafted.
-Guest list finalized; table arrangement drafted; favors/gift bags selected; dinner menu tentatively selected
-Ceremony drafted; schedule for day drafted; still talking about who we want to officiate; need to apply for marriage license in the spring.
-I have lists of: photos we want; reserved seats for the ceremony; extra tables we'll need for altar, etc. (our venue provides chair and table setup for the ceremony and reception); number of boutonnieres, bouquets, etc. needed; photos for the photo/card table; signs we'll need; coloring pages and crayons for the kids; first dances, do- and don't play songs for DJ; Our Zola registry is set up but not published yet.
-My MOH and mom had a bridal shower planned for last weekend :( which will happen sometime next year instead. I'm hoping to have a bachelorette with my wedding party the same weekend, but I can't plan those details till we have a date. My in-laws are planning the groom's dinner the night before.

I think that's everything, according to my spreadsheet. Because it's all organized in a spreadsheet, I theoretically won't forget things I can't do till next year. There's a lot I need to confirm with our parents and vendors, but it doesn't make sense to bug them with it right now. If it's relevant, we're getting married in our current city in Minnesota, USA.
So what am I forgetting? Is anyone else in the same situation? If anyone in the early planning stages would find my perspective on getting this far helpful (all the big things were pretty much done by the end of last year), please let me know! I'm happy to send or post a clean copy of my spreadsheet.
submitted by blondfriend12 to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

Taking advantage of extra time?

A couple of weeks ago we decided to postpone our wedding from 9/19/20 to 9/25/21. I feel tempted to put aside thinking about all wedding stuff until next year, but would rather attempt to take advantage of this "gift of time" to tackle some DIY projects that I never considered when we we initially got engaged.
Our wedding is outdoors and has a laid-back Northwest vibe to it (think forest-themed invites and big emphasis on craft beer). We had already planned to use a cricut to make personalized growlers for our centerpieces and dying cheesecloth as runners for our farm tables. I've thought about finally taking that hand lettering course for signs and the small cards we're giving to guests upon arrival. We're also thinking about making hot sauce as a favor for guests, even though I had previously written off favors as something no one would miss.
Any other ideas? Is there anything that you would have made if you'd had an extra year to prepare for your wedding? Bonus points if the project SAVED you money on your wedding :) Thanks!
submitted by HoldingOutf4SunPDX to weddingplanning [link] [comments]

In-depth wedding recap - 15k Ottawa, ON

Background

My DH and I are both Canadian and living in Ontario. He is originally from BC and I am originally from Newfoundland, this plays a little bit in some of the traditions that I will tell you about in this recap.
My DH and I met about 6 years ago on an online dating site (OKcupid). He was inactive on his profile but I messaged him anyways and when he noticed me he said he just had to message me back. We started dating pretty quickly - it was a true whirlwind romance. Less than 3 months after our first date we were closing on the purchase of our first home together. The next 5 years life was full of ups and downs for us, but our relationship always continued to grow stronger. I quit the job I hated, went back to school, and started my career after graduating. Last year on Canada Day, after getting home from the fireworks, he couldn’t wait any longer and proposed to me in our living room. I said yes! Finally! At this point I couldn’t even imagine how labour intensive the wedding planning was going to be for me and just how much I was going to love every moment of it. I know a lot of people hate planning and wedding planning especially but not me. Except for some friend drama (surprise!) everything went pretty smoothly. DH and I wanted something unique for the wedding and I’ll be damned if that's not what we created.

Budget Breakdown

Invitation Suites: $150
Save The Dates: $50
Invitations: $100 (Vistaprint + cardstock)
Ceremony $891
Venue: $171
Officiant: $400
Chair Rentals: $200
Marriage License: $120
Reception $5811
Venue: $600
Catering (including linen and dinnerware rentals): $5071
Mobile Bar Rental: $80
Cake: $600
Music $600
DJ: $600
Photographer: $2500
10 hours of coverage
2 photographers (they brought a third!)
Full online photo album
Attire $1840
Grooms Suit: $250
Grooms Tie & Pocket Square: $100
Cufflinks: $10
Brides Dress: $800
Veil: $100
Jewelry: $200 (not including necklace gifted by mom)
Shoes: $80
Hair: $150
Makeup: $150
Decor $1500
Misc DIY: $1000
Signing Table and Antique Chairs: $100
Marquee Letters: $160
Flowers: $250
Misc $414
Event Insurance: $324
Liquor License: $90
Total: $13,706

The Invite List

Invited: 129
Accepted: 99
Attended: 98
Out of town guests: 22

The Bridal Party

Man of Honour
Maid of Honour
3 Bridesmaids
Best Man
4 Groomsmen

Gifts

Bridesmaids
· Kate Spade Keds Rose Gold
· Custom tote (DIY’d)
· Custom hanger (DIY’d)
· Hair comb (DIY’d) or glitter bow tie
· Custom handkerchief (DIY’d)
· Initial necklace
· Fossil watch (Man of honour)
Groomsmen
· Boutonniere (DIY’d)
· Custom flask (DIY’d)
· Custom hanger (DIY’d)
· Geode cufflinks
· Gift box
· Rose gold tie clip
· Custom engraved hatchet
Mother of the Bride
· Custom necklace
Father of the Bride
· Custom cufflinks
Mother of the Groom
· Necklace
· Music Box
Father of the Groom
· Engraved pocket watch

The Vision

Our vision for the wedding was ethereal with a touch of nerdiness, if that makes sense haha. The Ceremony was going to be filled with nature and the natural beauty of the park we were getting married in. We also knew that we wanted to pay respect to the heritage of our families by having a handfasting as part of our ceremony.
At our reception, however, we wanted to showcase our personalities. I’m an active participant in the tattoos/piercings/body modification community and love being ‘alternative’ while DH is a computer geek, loves playing D&D, and video games.

Vendors

Venue: Town of Perth
Photographer: Mark Cooper Photography
Officiant: Earth School
Catering: Dial-A-Chef
Rentals: Rental Village
Edelweiss Party Rentals
DJ: Eric’s DJ Services
Suits: Moores
Wedding Dress: David’s Bridal
Hair: Richardson Hair Design
Makeup: 2BU Artistry
Flowers: Costco
Tattoos: @steadyxhands

Attire

The Gents

For the Groom and groomsmen we went with a simple navy suit, navy vest, white shirt, navy pants and black shoes. The Groom had a custom made rose gold tie and pocket square, while the groomsmen wore burgundy. Each of the guys got their own crystal boutonniere, geode cufflinks, and rose gold tie bars.
The ring bearer wore, navy blue pants, a white shirt, suspenders and black shoes as well. He also wore a matching rose gold bow tie to match the groom.

The Ladies (and one gentleman)

I wore a sweetheart lace gown from David’s Bridal. It was actually a ballgown, however, one thing I specifically didn’t want in my wedding dress was poof. Luckily during alterations I was able to remove all of the crinoline from the dress which gave it a more soft, flowier feel. My accessories consisted of my crystal crown, ivory cathedral veil with gold stars , vine necklace gifted to me by my mother, vine ring, gold vine belt from David’s Bridal , a quartz bangle , vine bracelet and burgundy Kate Spade glitter keds.
The Man of Honour for the Bride wore a Burgundy suit from ASOS , a white shirt, a crystal boutonniere, rose gold tie and tie clip, glitter pocket square, and gold/rose gold glitter loafers . The Maid of honour and two bridesmaids were given freedom to pick whatever dress they liked so long as they were burgundy and floor length. My Maid of Honour found her dress on Amazon. Two bridesmaids found their dresses at David’s Bridal (dress1 dress2) ). My fourth bridesmaid had the option to wear a suit instead of a dress, so she ordered the same suit as the Man of Honour and wore a glitter bow tie.
The girls all wore rose gold Kate Spade glitter keds gifted to them by the Bride, as well as custom initial necklaces and handmade crystal hair pins. Finally the flower girl wore a rose gold and tulle dress, rose gold shoes and a pair of custom made fairy wings.

Morning Of

The morning of, my FH and I woke up around 7am. He promptly showered and I got dressed in my onesie for the morning (having showered the night before). I opened the drapes to our hotel suite to be greeted with a grey, overcast sky. My bridesmaids showed up bright and early around 8am along with our hair and makeup team and got to work right away once I banished my future husband to his best man’s room. It was early but with lots of coffee and muffins we were good to go. There was only 4 of us getting our hair and makeup done, so with two makeup artists and two hair stylists were were actually done around 9:30-10:00. I honestly was super surprised that we were done our hair and makeup so early, especially since the ceremony wasn’t until 4:30 in the afternoon, but I’m really glad that we didn’t have to rush. Once we were done, we all just hung around in the room dressed in our animal onesies, and just had a good time. Our photographer showed up around 11:00 to do some photos. When I signed the contract with this photographer our package included two photographers for the whole day. However, when he showed up, he had brought a third photographer! I think this third photographer was training, but I didn’t mind. Another perspective was definitely going to be awesome. Since our hair and makeup was done so early, I unfortunately didn’t get any photos of that process. The (main) photographer was so inspired by our onesies that after taking some fun shots in the room he decided we needed to go run around in the streets for some fun photos. We held up traffic running in the streets, hid in the bushes and just acted like idiots. It was a blast.
This is where things took a bit of an unfortunate shift. I had asked my dad and his friend to pick up the chairs for the ceremony from our rental company - fine. However, my dad ended up calling and telling my brother to get ready and go help them do this. My brother, my man of honour, left.
I had hoped that they wouldn’t be long as we went back to the hotel room to start getting dressed.

The First Look

Once we all got dressed, the girls all went to take some photos outside. It was still raining but we managed to get into a few places where we could still get some good shots without getting soaked. That being said, my brother (my man of honour) still wasn’t back. I was frustrated, and worried. Our ceremony was supposed to be outside but it was raining and I didn’t know when it would stop. I hadn’t heard from my day of coordinator at all so I didn’t know what was happening. Were we moving the ceremony indoors? Was it still going to be outside? Where the hell was my brother!? This is where I got anxious.
After some coordination with the photographers, and wandering around the hotel to find a nice place to do our first look, we settled on this beautiful dining hall with a fireplace and twinkle lights. My bridesmaids and I tucked in the corner while they created a barrier around me so that my FH couldn’t see me as he and his groomsmen came in to get in position for the first look. That’s when it hit, the panic, the anxiety, everything. I was shaking, it was all coming to a head in this one moment. Was my FH going to like my dress? Was he going to be disappointed that it’s not some extravagant, out there dress that I know everyone expected me to have? What is happening with the ceremony? Why won't someone tell me? And where the hell is my brother?!
The photographer lined up the groomsmen facing me, with my FH facing the other direction so not to see me. I had my bridesmaids behind me and then he turned around. Suddenly everything just drifted away. All my worries faded, and I knew everything would work out alright.
After all the emotion, we took some photos inside and then FINALLY my brother shows up. I had wanted to do a first look with him, but at that point it was too late. I’m a little disappointed but, oh well. We then ventured outside to endure the rain that was starting to lift a bit and get some photos of the wedding party all together. We walked around the park for a while, and then, just half an hour before we were to head over to the ceremony, the sun came out. Holy shit. I was so relieved, and I prayed that it would stay that way at least until the reception started.
We walked around the little town and made our way to the bridge where we would be making our entrance to the ceremony, and surprisingly, we were on time.

Ceremony

The pre-ceremony music was a playlist I made of instrumental covers of popular songs. The ceremony space was held in Stewart Park beneath a large willow tree along the river. The aisle was adorned with flower arrangments I made a few days before with white roses, babies breath, daisies, and eucalyptus. On each of the chairs we had a wedding program and a wand with bells and ribbons for each of the guests.
The start of the ceremony began with the song Can’t Take It In by Imogen Heap (music only version) with the Father of the Groom accompanying the Mother of the Bride. Then the groomsmen made their way down the aisle, followed by the Best Man and then the Groom arm in arm with his mother. After the guys followed the ladies, with the man of honour being the last one up the aisle before the flower girl and ring bearer. When the flower girl and ring bearer went down the aisle the music changed to Moonlight Denstetsu by Harpsona. Then it was my turn, and I was accompanied down the aisle by her father.
The ceremony itself was everything I had dreamed it would be. We began with a cleansing using a floral and sage mix. It was beautiful albeit a little difficult to keep lit with the wind. Our officiant then performed the reading “These Hands” which worked beautifully with our handfasting. We then exchanged the rings and performed our handfasting ceremony. The vows and handfasting were everything we wanted - it was so beautiful.The only hiccup specifically with the ceremony was that the signing table and chair I had rented were missing. Apparently no one got them out of the best man’s room to bring to the ceremony location. NBD. Because of this we actually skipped the signing and legal stuff during the actual ceremony which my husband and I actually preferred. We felt that the ceremony flowed much better without that awkward time where we sit and sign paperwork. We then finished with a blessing before we were finally pronounced husband and wife. Finally it was the moment we were all waiting for - the kiss! We walked hand in hand back down the aisle while our friends and family waved their wands and celebrated with us. It was such an overwhelmingly special moment.
Once the ceremony was over and before we began to take family photos, we stood within the crowd of our friends and family and signed our marriage licence with our bridal party. It was perfect.
If anyone is interested in seeing the whole ceremony script I’d be happy to post that as well.

Cocktail hour

While my husband and me were taking photos with our families during the cocktail hour, the rest of our guests headed over to the reception area.There we had a table of assorted cheese, crackers, and fruit as well as the open bar for them to enjoy.
**Disclaimer: This is pretty common in my area, and even those who had never done or heard of our plans for the bar, loved the idea. I understand that in some areas that this may not be the social norm, but everyone seemed to really enjoy this.**
We were very fortunate that we were able to provide an open bar for our guests through the generosity of our friends and family. When we got engaged, we decided to throw a “Stock the Bar” engagement party if someone wanted to gift us something, where in lieu of other gifts, if someone wanted to gift us something we asked that they bring a bottle of alcohol for us to use at the bar at the wedding. This went over very well, and before we knew it we had more than enough hard liquor to provide for our evening. For wine, our husband’s mother gifted us 30+ bottles of her homemade red and white wine which we put out on the tables as well as at the bar. And last but certainly not least- it was my favourite part- was the 6 kegs of homemade beer and cider that two of my co-workers gifted us. We had two types of cider (regular and dark) as well as an ESB (Extra Special Bitter) beer and a Rye-PA. This went over amazingly. Everyone loved the beer and wine and by the end of the night we had almost drank the kegs dry.

Reception Grand Entrance

The gents
Song - Imperial March
The ladies
Song - The Best Damn Thing - Avril Lavigne
The Newlyweds
Song - Sherlock Medley on Violin - Taryn Harbridge

Critical Kiss

Instead of clinking glasses or singing love songs, guests had to come up and roll the D20 die if they wanted us to kiss.
Make a critical roll of 16-20 and the couple will kiss.
Roll 11-15 and the couple will have a quick peck.
Roll 6-10 and there’s no kiss.
But beware, roll a critical failure of 1-5 and you must kiss another guest who you did not come with!
This was particularly fun because it got guests up and interacting with each other. My husband ended up getting kissed a lot by his friends which was so fun to the rest of us.

Dinner

Menu:
Salads
Field tomatoes with red onions, basil, balsamic vinegar and fresh mozzarella.
Mix green with a vinaigrette
Mixed beans, corn, cilantro and avocado, with a salsa vinaigrette
Meats
Roast beef, carved at the buffet table, with le "au jus" sauce, and horseradish
Braised chicken with roasted peppers and caramelized onions.
Sides
New mini roasted potatoes
Medley of eggplant, zucchini, onions, peppers in a tomato sauce, also known as a ratatouille.
Dessert
Apple crêpes topped with apple syrup.
The food was absolutely fantastic. I was so blown away by how good everything was, though I honestly wasn’t very surprised. I had attended a friend’s wedding last year that used this caterer and the food there was fantastic as well. It’s what made me decide to use them for our day as well.
It’s a food was as good as it was because our caterer’s customer service and attitude were horrible. More on that further down.
During the dinner my uncle emceed for us. He’s a performer, has been all his life, so he was the perfect one for me to ask to do this for us.
The speeches that my family gave, and the stories that were told very much reflected that. If you’re not familiar with Newfoundland, you might not know that one of the most popular towns in the province is Dildo. During one of my uncles speeches, he brought my husband and I up and presented us each with Dildo t-shirts for us to wear the next day. Everyone had a great laugh over it and it’s one of my favorite parts of the night.

Cake

When people say wedding cakes are overpriced, I might be inclined to agree. However, I can honestly say that our cake was pretty well worth the price tag. Our cake was a stunning two tier barrel red velvet geode cake with cream cheese frosting. Navy blue with white marbling, and gold fakes.
We did the cake cutting, and fed each other a piece and OMG it was so freaking good. I just wanted to keep eating it. Unfortunately, I never thought to organize someone to cut the cake and actually serve it. Once we cut our piece and did our thing, we kind of just left the cake for people to help themselves to. Definitely not how I would have wanted to do it but, again, oh well. People did eventually help themselves to some of it thankfully but there was quite a bit left over. More for me though!

The Drama

Okay, the part you’ve all been waiting for. Not really, but you know. What’s a wedding without some DRAMA?
After the cake cutting, we were doing some mingling. At one point our cater came up to me to ask how my night was going. They were starting to pack up all of their stuff for the night, because they were finishing at around 9pm. A few minutes later he came up to me again, asking where my coordinator was because he wanted to get the check. Queue more panic, I forgot to bring the check. Now, before you @ me, the caterer didn’t send me the final invoice for the food and linen rentals until the night before. The night before the wedding we were at our rehearsal dinner and then in our hotel room and I wasn’t exactly checking my emails. I know, my own fault for not paying attention or bringing my checkbook with me but that’s no excuse for what happened next.
The caterer then proceeded to follow me around for the next half an hour, berating me to get paid and to call whoever I needed to. He was rude and aggressive even though I offered to deliver the check the next morning myself, but he wouldn’t accept that. He wanted to get paid. Now. I didn’t exactly bring my wallet with me to my wedding, nor did anyone have a checkbook with them to help us out. Eventually I managed to get a hold of a phone to do an email money transfer to him. Well, partially. The account would only let us send half of the amount so I spent a good 10 minutes trying to find one of our parents to send the other half from their account for us (and we would pay them back). I was panicking, stressed, and just super anxious because this guy wouldn’t leave me alone.
Look, I know. I get it. You provided a service and you want to get paid. I TOTALLY UNDERSTAND. He probably has dealt with people not paying in the past, and wants to avoid that. THAT BEING SAID! It was a Saturday night, even if I had the check with me, he wouldn’t have been able to cash it until Monday anyways. Why couldn’t I drop it off to him early the next morning? Why couldn’t he have sent the invoice a few days earlier so I could have paid him before the wedding? Most of all, why couldn’t he go to someone else other than the bride about this?
I had so many people stop me and ask what’s wrong, that I looked panicked and frazzled. It was super obvious that something was going on apparently.
Eventually he kind of disappeared, I sent the money and it was done. I was still feeling super anxious to the point I was having stomach pains. Finally, I left and went to the washroom and ripped off my spanx and had a breather.

Dances

Finally after all the drama, we were able to get to our dances. It was much later than I wanted, but we moved on.
We started with my husbands and my first dance: How Long Will I Love You - Ellie Goulding
Father daughter dance
The father daughter dance followed with Sweet Child O’ Mine by Jasmine Thompson which then faded into Thunderstruck by AC/DC. AC/DC was a surprise for my dad - It’s his favorite song. As Thunderstruck began to fade in my dad thought his cell phone was going off!
Mother Son dance
After the father daughter dance, DH and his mother danced to Humble and Kind - Tim McGraw where we also surprised his mother by fading into Convoy. A song and that the two of them have a special connection to as well.
Brother Sister dance
Brother - Kodaline
There were tears. So. May. Tears.

Tattoos

Yep. You read that right. Tattoos. I have been getting tattoos for well over a decade, worked in tattoo shops, and have many friends who are artists. So, after talking to a few of my friends, I found an artist who wanted to come and tattoo at my wedding reception. We decided on a few tattoo designs, about 10, for our guests to choose from. The guests would have to pay for their tattoos if they decided to get one, so we set the price at $60-$80 depending on the design. We did inform our guests a few days before the wedding that we were planning on doing this so that they could come prepared with cash if they so choose to.
We also set some conditions for those who wanted to get one:
· Cash only
· Must not be intoxicated
· Must sign a waiver
· Must be 18+ years old
Holy. Shit. I honestly am still so surprised by how well this actually went off. The artists thought that they might get 6 or 7 tattoos, however, by the end of the night they were turning people away. They were tattooing people from the beginning of the reception until the end of the night around 11:30. It was incredible! My husband and I each got a tattoo, to commemorate the day, and we were the last two of the night.
This was my favorite part of the night by far. Not only was it an awesome and unique experience that I was able to share with my guests, it also gave them something from this day that they could carry with them forever. Yes they had favours (little crystals I made) as well as the wands that they got to take home, but these tattoos were something they’d always have. And I think that’s pretty great.

DIY

Our venue was completely DIY. There was nothing provided to us other than the tables and chairs that we used for the reception. It was a beautiful blank canvas, however, it took a lot of work to get it to look even as good as it did. Shortly after getting engaged, I got started DIYing - There was a lot of work to be done.
Here is a list of things that I made:
Save the date magnets
Gated invitations
Welcome sign
Direction Signs
Reserved signs
Wedding wands
Bridal and bridesmaid lanterns
Crystal hair combs
Crystal boutonnieres
Crystal lapel pin
Crystal bobby pins
Centerpiece terrariums
Here comes the bride sign
Wind chime sign
Bridesmaid tote bags
Groomsmen boxes
Personalized hangers
Personalized flasks
Quote handkerchiefs
Crystal favours
Tattoo aftercare
Seating Chart
Bar Menu
Wine labels

The Good

When they say not to sweat the small stuff because you’re marrying the love of your life - it’s true. I was surrounded by my closest family and friends, the most important people to me as I stood up in front of them all and married my best friend.
I got to spend my morning hanging out with my best friends, getting glammed up and feeling confident. I got to spend quality time with my mom as I got ready and experience those great moments that I will carry with me the rest of my life.
I got to see the look of shock and awe the moment my SO turned around and saw me for the first time that day.
I got to have the wedding ceremony of my dreams, under a willow tree in the fall, with the Celtic handfasting I always wanted - to the man of my dreams.
My guests had a blast at the wedding, the homemade beer and wine went over SO WELL ( a little too well in some peoples cases I think).
The tattoos went over, phenomenally! Seriously, I can’t believe how many people got tattooed and the number of comments I got from people afterwards about how awesome they thought it was!

The Bad

My man of honour went AWOL for a few hours and we never got to do the first look I had planned with him. We also didn’t get any photos of just him and me.
The signing table and chairs I rented never made it out of the best mans room and never got used. It sucks, but honestly no one noticed but me.
It rained ALL morning and dresses were soaked by the time the ceremony happened, but the sun came out half an hour before the ceremony and we were able to keep the ceremony outside like we had wanted.
Our caterer was a dick. He followed me around for 30 mins demanding his money during the reception, but he got paid and went on his way.

Photographer Photos

I know this is what you’re all here for!
Photos!

Final Thoughts

I’ll keep this short and simple for you…
Everyone always says that your wedding is supposed to be the best day of your life. Was it? I don’t know, but it had some of the greatest moments of my life.
It was honestly an amazing, wonderful, and magical day that I’ll never forget.
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RECAP: New Hampshire June 22, 2019 brewery wedding - 70 guests, $16.8k wedding cost, $19.5k including rings and honeymoon (LONG)

RECAP: New Hampshire June 22, 2019 brewery wedding - 70 guests, $16.8k wedding cost, $19.5k including rings and honeymoon (LONG)
Hi Weddit! This community has been so lovely and such a great place to hang out during my two year engagement and wedding planning process. I finally have photos back, so it is time for my recap! I am type A and kept really detailed notes during this planning process, so this post will be LONG. Like, really long.
But first, as always, PHOTOS.

General Info
Engaged: August 19, 2017
Wedding: June 22, 2019
Engagement: 22 months - I was finishing my Ph.D. when we got engaged so we took extra time to save money, so I could focus on my dissertation, and to make long-distance planning a little easier. I graduated 6 weeks before our wedding. We have been together 10 years.
Location: Lakes Region, New Hampshire - we live in the Midwest but grew up together in New Hampshire, so getting married there was a no-brainer. Long distance planning has its own unique challenges, but overall we found it manageable. Happy to give out vendor information for anyone who might be interested!

RSVPs and Guest Count
I previously posted an in-depth summary of our RSVPs and my guest count predictions. Here are our RSVP numbers and final numbers.Invited: 108 Accepted: 79 (73.15%) Declined: 26 (24.07%) Late response: 4 (3.7%)
Actually attended: 70 No-Shows: 9
Of the no-shows, 4 gave notice ahead of time (two of them had a family emergency) and 5 said nothing. One of these five had childcare fall through (and ended up showing up in the parking lot after the ceremony to say hello to my husband, but for some reason didn't attend the ceremony?), one is known for not showing up to family events, two were plus ones, and one may have had health issues. Honestly, I didn't even notice the missing people on the day of, and our venue packed up the extra food for our families to take home.

Budget
Initial "Sweet Summer Child" Budget: $10k total
Adjusted "We're Gonna Need a Bigger Boat" Budget: $15k total
Actual "Bran the Three Eyed Raven Probably Saw This Coming" Budget: $19.5k total
Our original budget was $10k, which I ended up adjusting once I learned more about wedding pricing and our families pledged support. We ended up with a working budget of $15k, and eventually went over that. However, we both had side-gigs from which we saved all the money, and our long engagement meant that we had tons of time to save and paid off vendors over a pretty long period of time. I am proud of us for staying below $20k, and I actually think we got a screaming good deal for what we paid. The wedding total, not including rings, minimoon, and our European honeymoon, was $16,780.95, which wasn't far off our $15k budget. Including our rings and honeymoon(s), we paid $19,503.55. Here is a stupidly detailed breakdown.
Category Spent Details
Ceremony $747 Marriage license ($50), chair rental fee ($297), Officiant fee ($400)
Reception venue fee $1,382.50 Venue is a brewery that charges per person rather than a set price. June is actually priced as "off-season" because fall is so popular in NH (leaf colors!) so we decided to do June to save money and to work around my school schedule. We paid $17.50/person rather than the $20/person for July/Aug/Sept/Oct
Food, service, and tax $4,791.06 We did ala carte rather than a package because the pricing was better. This included: Appetizers - cheese and crackers, smoked salmon crostini station, beef teriyaki skewers, vegetable spring rolls. Starters and sides - fresh gazpacho soup, herb roasted potatoes, crispy Brussels sprouts. Entrees - choice of chicken cordon bleu, broiled glazed salmon, or vegetable wellington.
Beverages/Bartenders $2,000 My in-laws put down a set amount on an open consumption bar (well drinks, not top-shelf!) and then the bar would become a cash bar once the money ran out. We actually ended up using $1,940 of the set amount and drank the entire brewery out of two types of beer AND all the Chardonnay they had. We offered 6 types of beer, 3 red wines, 2 whites, 1 blush, 1 sparkling, and all the usual liquor.
Cupcakes $404.84 120 cupcakes in four flavors - maple bacon frosting with chocolate cake, salted caramel frosting with chocolate chip cake, lavender frosting with lemon cake, and vanilla frosting with carrot cake. Price included delivery and setup and a rented cupcake stand. We picked cupcakes solely to avoid the cake cutting fee at our venue. This was the best food of the night, easily.
Reception Extras $51.72 Card box (hand-me-down), chalkboard easels and markers, bug spray for ceremony
Attire $1,587.15 Includes my dress ($318.43 from DB), alterations ($425), headpiece and DIY floral veil ($61.68), undergarments ($72.24), wedge sandals and floral sneakers ($108.93), aquamarine earrings ($138.65), rehearsal/shower dress ($29.90), hair trial and day of ($170), makeup trial and day of ($143.34), groom's suit ($119 off the rack).
Flowers/Centerpieces $196.95 This was a place where I wanted to save money. Flowers were NOT a priority for me. We cut peonies from my mom and grandma's gardens and arranged my bouquet ourselves. It turned out great and was honestly easy. Centerpieces consisted of video game postcards, postcard holders, and string lights. We got bottles from the dump for free, spray painted them, and put flowers in them. My husband ordered dried hops online and made his own boutonnieres.
Music $925 DJ company with great reviews, 6 hours of coverage, one DJ and one MC. They killed it.
Photography $2,500 Another steal. We signed a contract with them in January 2018 after their second season of photography. I just looked up their pricing two years later and we saved $1300 by booking them so early. This was for 6 hours of coverage, 2 shooters, engagement shoot, USB, and printing rights
Stationery $339.37 Paper is important to me, so I was ok spending more on this category. We ordered save-the-dates and return labels from Vistaprint, invites and details cards from Zazzle, and fancy envelopes, seals, and labels from Amazon. I got twine at Target and bought awesome dragon stamps from USPS. We used online-only RSVPs and I got cheap thank you cards from Amazon and TJ Maxx.
Wedding Rings $914.60 My moissanite engagement ring and wedding band came as a set from Etsy ($860). I bought my husband a tungsten engagement ring from Amazon for $19.95, and his wedding ring was a New Hampshire state coin ring from etsy which cost $34.65
Transportation and Lodging $288 This was just our hotel room for Friday and Saturday night. We did not end up booking any sort of transportation shuttle or limo. My husband drove our car from the Midwest to New Hampshire the month before the wedding and we drove it home after the wedding, so we just used our own car.
Gifts and favors $387.36 Favors ($161.16) were originally a fuck-it-bucket item but my mom insisted on them and I ended up doing three (THREE!) different types of favors. I got really into it and people LOVED them. We did mini maple syrup bottles, pet treat boxes for our guests' pets, and cupcake to-go boxes. For my man of honor and his best man we got them weekender bags and dopp kits, and for my friend who acted as our day of coordinator we got her a yoga bag and yoga club membership. We will buy photo albums for our parents and grandparents as Christmas gifts.
Rehearsal Dinner $1,000 I am estimating this - my in-laws paid for it. There were 17 of us.
Vendor tips $180 We tipped $20-$50 to our vendors. The wait staff and bartenders had gratuity built in. Although these were not huge tips, everyone was appreciative. We included a hand written card with each tip.
Honeymoon and travel $1,808 This includes catsitting for the week we were gone ($120), the surprise bachelor trip to Alaska I planned for my fiance ($485), our two night minimoon to a nearby bed and breakfast ($467 including champagne and massage package), and $736 for our 2020 honeymoon to Spain and Portugal (flights and insurance).
Here is a pie chart breaking down our budget by category.

Budget Breakdown
Priorities
A meaningful ceremony. Outdoor ceremony/indoor reception. Great photography. Hiring LGBTQ inclusive vendors. Great food and vegetarian options. Wine and Beer. Dancing. String lights. Destination feel. Easy logistics/low stress. Not going into debt.

Fuck It Bucket
Wedding planneprofessional DOC. Professional florist. Videographer. Shuttle/limo/transportation plan. Bridesmaids. Programs. Sexist/homophobic bullshit. Bouquet toss/garter toss. Matching suits for the men. Signature cocktails. Rhyming/cutesy signs. Wedding colors. A hash tag. The Wedding Font. Wedding party proposals. Guest book. Photo booth. Writing our own vows. Live band. Cutting cake. Mason jars/burlap. Children.

DIY Projects
Arbor - my husband found dead trees in the best man's family's backyard and threw it together an hour before our rehearsal and draped some tulle from Amazon on it. I am shocked at how good it turned out.
Birch escort card display - my dad and uncle found dead birch trees in their backyards and used some sort of drill to cut slits in them for the cards. I asked them to cut the slits on an angle so you could read the card while standing above the table, and they turned out great. They also put nails on the bottom of each log so they wouldn't roll around. I will probably try to sell these.
Flowers - we cut peonies and coral bells, as well as greenery, from my mom's and grandma's gardens on the Thursday before our Saturday wedding. I put together my own bouquet in about 45 minutes. It kept great and was super easy. Very glad I didn't bother paying anyone to do it for me, or bother buying flowers when there were such pretty ones for free all around me.
Centerpieces - my dad collected cool bottles from the dump and my mom spray painted them. We just put loose flowers in the bottles the day before the wedding and they looked amazing. Keeping the plan simple helped immensely. My mom passed these along to a coworker who has a child getting married soon.
Cake toppers - my husband made these out of grocery bags, masking tape, and paint from his work. He is very artistic.
Veil - I bought embroidered floral tulle on Etsy, cut it into a veil shape, and hand-sewed it to a metal hair comb. Took about an hour and cost me all of $18. I'm considering trying to make some more to sell, it was a fun project!
Signage - I just got chalkboards and chalk markers at Michael's and hand wrote the few signs we had. I can't stand The Wedding Font or lots of (IMO) pointless wedding signs, so I only did what was necessary.
Table numbers - I busted out my fourth grade cursive using some colored pencils and hand wrote these in an afternoon. We really wanted to save money.
Family wedding photos - I hunted down old family photos in albums and had my grandpa dig out some really old ones. I printed them at Walgreens and got frames at Goodwill for $1-$2 each. I did the same with cat photos for our pet treat favor display.
Maple syrup tags - I used my mom's Cricut to make tags for the maple syrup flavors. I came up with 8 different puns and used paper scraps she already had to print them on. I used leftover twine from the invites to hang them on the bottles. Way cheaper than getting a custom label on the bottles themselves!

Old/New/Borrowed/Blue
Old - my great grandmother's ruby ring
New - my dress
Borrowed - my parent's vows
Blue - aquamarine earrings (my husband's birthstone)

What did guests notice/compliment us on?
Our sweet/emotional/funny ceremony. We didn't write our own vows and honestly, I am really happy with that decision. We were both stressed at the thought of the pressure of it, so I borrowed my parent's vows instead and surprised them with that at the ceremony. They were our something borrowed ;)
Favors - people LOVED them! Maple syrups were a hit, people were fighting over the pet treats, and all the cupcake boxes were taken.
Our invitations - they were perfect, I love them so much and they look just like the area where we got married. I put a lot of effort into dressing them up with twine and the dark green envelopes while staying to a budget, and I love how they turned out. I am obsessed with paper products, so it made sense for me to be super picky about these and not care one iota about, say, flowers.
My dress - super glad I didn't spend tons of money on it. It was perfect and comfortable and good for one day. I may try to sell this or just donate it to someone in need.
Flowers - my mom and grandma were very pleased to have so many compliments on the beautiful flowers they grew themselves.
Venue - it was beautiful and things ran very smoothly. The ceremony location was GORGEOUS.
Cupcakes - best food of the night, hands down.
My veil - LOOK AT IT!!

Stuff that went wrong
Honestly, very little.
  • My hair and makeup went over what I had budgeted for time, so I arrived back at my hotel right after the photographers arrived and I had to scarf lunch while helping them take the first detail shots.
  • There were a TON of ticks - summer in NH is tick season. We probably picked 10 ticks out of my dress, and were careful to do a tick check at the end of the night!
  • The venue served mixed veggies instead of the fancy Brussels sprouts that we paid extra for - they refunded us.
  • The DJ forgot to say my brother's "fun fact" when he was introduced - this did not matter at all.
  • I told my husband he had to make sure there were two rows reserved for our families in the processional, when in reality my side needed two rows and his side only needed one row. He ended up making his aunts and uncles move to the back of the ceremony seating and the second row of chairs was empty during the ceremony. I didn't notice it at all, and in retrospect I'm fine with it because one of his aunts wore a white lace dress...so the back was a good place for her ;)
  • Our venue coordinator was a NIGHTMARE during the planning process, but she quit about a month before the wedding and the GM (who was awesome) took over. So that was lucky timing, but the shitty coordinator did add quite a bit of stress to my plate over the year+ that I had to deal with her.
  • My mom was a handful during the planning process, but fine on the day of. More on her antics below.
  • My one regret was a miscommunication with my grandpa about his camera - he loves taking photos, and I was looking forward to his photos on the day of, but the photographers suggested we ask him not to bring his flash. He got confused about it and left his entire camera at the hotel. Apparently he was upset when he realized he WAS allowed to bring his camera, but he refused to let my dad send someone back to the hotel to get it for him. I noticed about halfway through the wedding, and am honestly pretty sad about it. I felt incredibly guilty that we said anything to him about the camera, because I know how much he was looking forward to taking photos. That being said, my parents and husband have told me to stop beating myself up about it, and that he was being difficult when he refused to let someone get his camera. It still makes me sad though. Our lovely photographers noticed and also felt bad, so they asked him to take some photos with one of their cameras.
Honestly, all of this (except for the mix-up with my grandpa and the frustrating venue coordinator) was very minor.

Advice (LONG)
  • Due to our budget and long distance planning and the fact that we couldn't afford a planneDOC, we kept a lot of stuff for our wedding simple. No bridesmaids, no complicated decorations, no choreographed dancing, no matching suits for the men, nothing that would require a lot of work or oversight from us in the week before the wedding. In retrospect, I am SO GLAD we kept things simple. I wasn't stressed about decorating, and honestly, it ended up looking really woodsy-elegant. For the centerpieces, we literally just spray painted bottles from the dump and stuck some flowers in them - they turned out great and the DIY was super easy because we kept it simple. It helped that we picked a venue that was already beautiful and didn't need any sprucing up (they keep the string lights up all the time). So I recommend keeping your plans simple, especially if you are planning to do a lot of DIY or are planning a long distance wedding (or both!)
  • Pick your battles with your parents. My mom was difficult at times during the wedding planning process. Our relationship is normally great, but I think we had different expectations of how the planning process would go, and that was challenging. I found it was important for me to pick my battles - some things I didn't want (like favors) I let slide because she wanted them, and was glad that we did it. Other things (seating my queer cousin with a homophobic great-uncle) I stood my ground on. It can be difficult to set boundaries, but try to be understanding and compassionate (as long as your parent is not a raging narcissist) while also setting up expectations for how they should treat you and your new spouse. This sets the tone for the rest of your lives, IMO.
  • It is possible to pay for your wedding without going into debt. I was honestly surprised how quickly we set aside money, even on a grad student's salary, once we started saving all the money from our side gigs. It is pretty satisfying watching the number in the account tick up. We are now putting all the money towards a future house fund. Honestly, I think wedding planning is great training for the rest of your marriage - reading contracts, making difficult choices, dealing with family, working together towards a financial goal.
  • You can plan a wedding while in school. When we got engaged I was a month out from defending my dissertation proposal, and I finished my Ph.D. 6 weeks before our wedding. Honestly, grad school is not a terrible time to be wedding planning. Sure, we have less money, but it was a nice distraction when I needed a break from writing, and it gave me a good goal to work towards - I had to graduate so I could be Dr. Cusekyi at our wedding :)
  • It's ok if one of you plans more than the other. Oftentimes, I see people talking about how they are splitting the planning load 50/50. While that is awesome, it just didn't work for us. I am (as is probably apparent from this post) a driven Type A planner, and my husband is...not. While he had ideas (mostly related to design/decor) and input throughout, the reality was that I did the majority of the heavy lifting when it came to contacting vendors, making timelines and lists, reading contracts, and navigating family minefields. While my feminist beliefs sometimes made it hard for me to be ok with us falling into such expected gender norms, the reality is that I'm just better at planning and logistics than he is, and that's ok. When I really needed a break or needed him to take something off my plate, he did. He cooked every meal for a solid month prior to the wedding. Play to your strengths as a couple!
  • Trust your gut when it comes to vendors. I had a really good feeling about our photographers, and they killed it. We interviewed a DJ who struck me as not quite right, and even though he was good on paper, I told my husband we would NOT be hiring him. Sure enough, two days later, the DJ called me to tell me he had forgotten he was already booked for our date. I was so relieved I wasn't planning on hiring him, but can't imagine what a nightmare it would have been if I hadn't listened to my gut feeling, and if the DJ hadn't realized until closer to our wedding.
  • Hotel blocks are NOT always easy or simple. I see on here a lot that hotel blocks are really easy, and everyone should do them. In rural areas, businesses often can get away with being kind of a shitshow, and nothing made that more apparent to me than dealing with hotels. Getting a room block was like pulling teeth, and honestly, barely anyone used it. The people who really mattered booked their rooms early, and the procrastinators either stayed at a campground, rented an AirBNB, or drove home. Everyone was fine, and they figured it out. You don't have to put people's accommodation and travel arrangements on your plate too, it's too much to worry about.
  • BOOK STUFF EARLY! We saved $1300 just on our photographers by booking them 18 months in advance. We got the pick of vendors and dates, and we had tons of time to save and plan. It was honestly a huge relief to have so much time, since we had to fly to NH any time we needed to do something in person. Don't let anyone tell you that you are planning things too early. There is no such thing as too early with weddings these days. It's ok to break rules like "don't buy your dress too early." I know myself and I am a decisive person. I never regretted buying my dress 18 months ahead of time.
  • Try not to stress about the weather. I started obsessively looking at the weather about a month out, and while I wasn't panicked about it, I definitely was really REALLY hoping we didn't have to use our rain plan. The day before the wedding, the forecast called for thunderstorms at 4 pm - right during our ceremony. But I decided to just ignore it and keep going, and the weather was perfect. Partly cloudy, breezy (which kept the bugs away!), 69 degrees. It was a gorgeous day.
  • Let things slide. My husband didn't buy a suit until one month before our wedding. My brother (man of honor) didn't buy his clothes until two weeks before, and our Best Man bought his suit at Goodwill THE DAY BEFORE the wedding. Four guests cancelled just a couple days out. My husband decided (against my better judgment) to drive our 13-year-old car 1200 miles across the country for his brother-in-law to do some sorely needed maintenance on it. The car was literally at the mechanic's until 1 hour before the rehearsal was supposed to start, and we had no backup plan (husband had me cancel the rental car I had booked). And you know what? It all worked out. The men looked great in their suits. The car got fixed in time (barely!) and we had it for our minimoon, and could drive all our wedding gifts back in it.
  • Let your people be themselves - they matter so much more than anything else. My brotheMan of Honor didn't want to wear a suit, and that was fine. What mattered was him standing up with me. Our Best Man is our oldest mutual friend, he is a free spirit and does things his own way. He even said himself that he was a "risky choice" for best man. And you know what? He flew from Thailand to New Hampshire to support us. He helped me plan (and execute!) an incredible surprise trip to Alaska with my husband and two of their friends the weekend before the wedding. He showed up for our rehearsal and our wedding in his $10 Goodwill suit. And he gave the most incredible speech about how, while he thinks marriage is stupid for 99.99% of people, we are the exception to his rule. My point is, don't pick your wedding party based on who will "perform" best as maid of honor, or expect them to become people that they aren't. Pick people who matter the most to you and let them be themselves. The fact that our best man flew all that way and put on a suit, even if it was from Goodwill, showed us how much he loves us, and I wouldn't trade that for anything.
  • Take a moment throughout the day. One of my favorite moments from our wedding was, after exchanging rings, looking up at the trees over us swaying in the wind while our officiant talked. I felt present and alive and grounded and so, so grateful.
  • Try to be present for those around you too. My best friend, who was a godsend all day as our day of coordinator, lost her father a few months before our wedding. During my father daughter dance, I looked over at her and she was sobbing. When my dance with my dad was over, I beelined it for her and held her and we both just bawled. That moment meant a lot to both of us.
  • Hire people you trust. Our vendors hit it out of the park on the day of, and went along with all our little requests. From the venue reserving a keg of special sour beer for us because I told them I love Berliners, to our baker setting aside 6 cupcakes for us to take back to our hotel room, to the weird and eclectic music I requested that the DJs played. All the vendors worked seamlessly together and honestly, it was really nice to hand the reins off and let the wedding unfold in front of us.
  • Have two DJs if possible. The music and order of events ran so smoothly because one guy covered music while the other was acting as MC.
  • We gave small tips - our wait staff, bartenders, and hairdresser all got 20%, but our tips for the other vendors were just $20-$50 plus a nice card. I see a lot of people on here worrying about how much to tip and honestly, all the vendors were really appreciative and said it wasn't necessary and they didn't expect a tip at all. YMMV.
  • We strategically under-bought apps to save money and not waste food - for an estimated 80 guests we ordered cheese and crackers for 50 people, 3 pounds of smoked salmon, 5 dozen veggie spring rolls, and 7 dozen beef teriyaki skewers. It was fine, and everyone still had room for dinner!
  • Do what you want and tell your vendors what you want. Both of us had both our parents walk us down the aisle, our vows included stuff about individuality, we had the DJ announce us as Dr and Mr, we asked our officiant not to say anything about "giving" me away, we used my parent's vows instead of writing our own, I asked the DJs to avoid gendered language, I asked my cake baker to set aside extra cupcakes for us to eat afterwards. Don't be afraid to tell people what you want (or surprise them - I didn't show anyone my veil ahead of time, and my parents didn't know we were going to use their vows).
  • Don't be shy to tell people you are getting married. I mentioned it on a Southwest Airlines Facebook post when I was flying home for our wedding and they sent us a $100 voucher and free t-shirts! On our minimoon, the bed and breakfast we stayed at after gave us each a free cocktail. It was a nice little bonus and made it feel more special :)
  • Favors are SO WORTH IT. I didn't want favors and my mom did and so I decided to do edible favors. I ended up going hard with the favors and did three - mini maple syrup bottles at each seat, cat and dog treats in little boxes, and cupcake to-go boxes. They got CLEARED OUT. All 80 maple syrups, 20 animal treats, and 48 cupcake boxes were gone at the end of the night. People LOVED them. One guest was raving about the maple syrup and drunkenly gathered up the leftovers to take home (his arms were packed), and people were practically fighting over the animal treats. If you want favors, do it. We had so many compliments and don't have any leftovers.
  • Don't drink too much. I had two drinks during the whole wedding (not planned, it just sort of happened) and had zero alcohol while getting ready. I like drinking, but honestly being sober was great. I was super present all night. I was able to have real conversations with guests, remember to ask family/friends to grab stuff that was important to me at the end of the night, and express my appreciation to our vendors. I didn't plan on not drinking much, but I am really glad I was sober.
  • Wear comfortable shoes. I bought Sofft brand comfort low wedge sandals and honestly, they were incredible. I felt like me, I didn't think about my shoes all night, and although I had also purchased super cute floral keds that matched my veil, I didn't need to change into sneakers. I am not a heel person, so I bought what I could handle.
  • Do something after your wedding. My aunt and her husband had rented an AirBNB and made an impromptu campfire, and we went over to drink beers and roast marshmallows and hang out. It was the BEST way to end the night. Friends trickled by to visit, we got to talk about how awesome it was, we enjoyed the beautiful weather and woods more, and I got to drink a bunch of beers :) It was a spur of the moment thing and I am so glad we did it.
  • Speaking of spur of the moment, you can make changes last minute. In the hairdresser's chair, I asked her to rebraid my hair in a fishtail instead of a regular braid. 10 minutes before our first look, I changed our location to a random barn I saw on the way back to the hotel because our original first look location was packed with tourists. These changes were SO worth it.
  • Photo op during the ceremony - While I see the appeal of unplugged ceremonies, I personally dislike the "put your phone away" signs. My unpopular opinion is that you can't control other people's phone usage, and the big signs/statements on wedding websites won't do anything to stop it. People will just ignore a sign if they want to take a picture, so it doesn't matter how in your face or large of a sign you put up. We decided to have a photo opportunity at the very start of our ceremony. Our officiant explained to our guests before the ceremony started that she would give them 10 seconds to take photos, and then they would be asked to put their cameras/phones down. People loved it, everyone went crazy taking photos (including jumping into the aisle). But you know what? After 10 seconds, they all sat down and put their devices away. Our photographers probably got some funny shots of everyone taking photos, but also WE have photos of ourselves at our ceremony from multiple angles because the guests shared them with us. That helped a lot while we waited 11 weeks for our professional photos to come in. I highly recommend this gentler, less bossy approach to unplugged ceremonies.
  • It's ok to not have a vision for certain things. I posted about this a while ago. I didn't have a vision of my dress, or flowers, or a cake. So I chose to save money in those areas. I found a dress I liked, and was flattering on me, and on the day I loved it. I didn't care what flowers we used, so we picked a few hundred peonies and coral bells the Thursday before my wedding from my grandma's and mom's gardens. I made my own bouquet with no practice or experience. This was not stressful at all because I didn't have a vision, so anything was better than nothing. Same with cake - I had no vision for what my "dream" cake looked like, I just cared about the flavor. Cupcakes were the same price as a basic cake but we would save a $2/person cutting fee, so we did cupcakes instead. My husband built the arbor the day before our wedding and I wasn't stressed because I didn't care what it looked like. The men's suits didn't matter to me, so I didn't mind that they waited until the very last minute to purchase them. It's ok to not care about everything.

Thank you all for sticking with me through this ridiculously long recap. Planning our wedding was honestly a joyful experience for me, and it was an incredible day. Happy to answer any questions! I think I'll be sticking around Weddit for the foreseeable future, this community is too lovely for me to leave just yet.
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wedding table centerpiece ideas diy video

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25 DIY Wedding Centerpieces (That Don't Look Homemade) Do-it-yourself has taken the wedding world by storm, and when you consider the cost savings, it's no wonder. The trick is fashioning something so posh, no one would dare suggest you, in fact, did it yourself. After all, that is the mark of a really good DIY! By: Mallory Recor Aug 14, 2018 - Create the wedding of your dreams with these DIY centerpieces for reception tables. Pretty simple to create, and able to add your own touch!. See more ideas about wedding centerpieces, centerpieces, wedding. DIY weddings are all the rage. With inspiration at your fingertips from Pinterest and blogs such as ours, creating your own bouquet, invitations and centrepieces has never been easier. The Confetti shop is home to hundreds of DIY products specifically designed to help you create your dream wedding, and today we’re going to show you 50 stunning DIY wedding centrepieces. Cheap DIY Wedding Centerpiece Ideas 8. Cake Stand Wedding Centerpieces. superweddings. Display gorgeous greenery in your wedding table by repurposing an old wine bottle into a succulent planter. These Wine Bottle Succulent Planters are one such DIY and they look wonderful and elegant too. Here are 15 of the best cheap DIY wedding centerpiece ideas that are just as easy to make, as they are affordable: 1. A succulent centerpiece for nature-lovers. DIY Network offers unique ideas for creating floral and non-floral centerpieces for a wedding reception. These are super wedding table centerpieces for summer weddings! We trust that this collection of 40 DIY wedding centerpiece ideas has inspired you to find your perfect table centerpiece. Make sure your wedding centerpieces complement the rest of your wedding decor, so they won’t look out of place. Sparkling Woodcut Decor DIY Centerpiece . Thinking about DIY wedding centerpieces without flowers? This is one of those DIY wedding ideas that works well with just about any wedding theme. While the tutorial is technically for coasters (which would make an awesome rustic wedding favor), we’ve decided to apply it to some table decor. How neat Feb 7, 2019 - Looking for wedding reception centerpiece ideas for your reception tables? Consider personalized glass flower vases custom printed with your names or monogram letters and wedding date. Decorate the center of each table with an engraved glass vase or glass vases with custom printed vinyl clings that can be removed and reused. See more ideas about wedding table, wedding, wedding The perfect DIY project for a crowd, choose a vessel you’d look forward to reusing after the wedding, and plant flowers or herbs for an eco-friendly, cash-saving centerpiece. 34 Affordable

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Easy Wedding Table Decorations Ideas - YouTube

Hello Everyone This beautiful, yet inexpensive, centerpiece was created with items from the Dollar Tree and Dollarama. This will make your wedding table l... Links to follow me!!!Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/DIYnThings/526536514061289Instagram http://instagram.com/diynthingsDisclaimer: This video is no... This is another video on how to create your own wedding, bridal shower centrepieces. In this tutorial like my previous video I have used a champagne glass... Join Our Elegant Creators Academy TODAY for FREE ️ http://bit.ly/ecacademy Join Our Free Facebook Group ️ http://bit.ly/elegantcreatorsfbgroup Become a Spo... 0:10 Wedding Centerpieces2:09 Wedding Party Favours3:10 Wedding Welcome Sign4:27 Wedding Non-Traditional Guest BookWedding Stationary: https://paperrose.caHU... More wedding DIY's! This time we're tackling what Becky's table layout is going to look like. Specifically working on a gorgeous floral centrepiece. Thanks t... Easy Wedding Table Decorations IdeasSubscribe now to get more videos : https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCJtt5HMq33POXe3-RVfjqfw?sub_confirmation=1 Follow me on Instagram:http://www.instagram.com/bargainbethanyDOLLAR TREE HOME DECOR PIECE MENTIONED IN VIDEO (UPLOADED JANUARY 14,2019): https://www.youtube... Come along with us as we but materials from the dollar store and create a gorgeous wedding table display! Join Our Elegant Creators Academy TODAY for FREE ️ http://bit.ly/ecacademyJoin Our Free Facebook Group ️ http://bit.ly/elegantcreatorsfbgroupTO ENTER CRICU...

wedding table centerpiece ideas diy

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