Sunday, March 13, 2011

Save the Dates!

I am so excited to blog about this, because we finished a large item on our wedding to-do list! John and I will be sending out our save-the dates tomorrow!

The knot.com tells us we're overdue on this, but better late than never! The save the dates are simple; just a colorful, vintage reminder with a link to the wedding website.

Since this is an informal reminder, we chose to send them just to our families. Most of the younger guests are internet-savvy enough that an email (with a pic uploaded of the save-the-date design) will suffice. The important thing is that the date and place are announced and that we can point them to the website, where the rest of the information about the day will be located.

My vision for the paper goods in the wedding was to have something colorful, vintage-inspired, and printed at home. I love well designed invites, but I didn't want to pay a stationer (we don't have limitless money for this wedding!). If I wanted the design to just be simple script font on an ivory paper, then sure, engraved or letterpress would be the way to go. But, knowing I wanted to go with something more colorful, I figured a simple printing on cardstock would be the best way to go; after all, it's not like people are going to hold on to our paper goods forever; I'll put them in a scrapbook and most people will throw them out after the wedding.

So then I saw a beautiful, 1920s inspired wedding whose paper goods had me swooning. I first saw it on Style Me Pretty, then followed the links to the bride's blog, where she posted her inspiration board for the invites.




All images © Amy and Stuart Photography 

I was instantly in love with the bright colors, the vintage fonts and styling...sigh. I read on the bride's blog that she was inspired by vintage French perfume and soap labels, so I began searching on etsy and found a bunch of digital collage sheets for about $1.50 a piece. Definitely within our budget!

From there, I cropped the images out individually, and got to work learning photoshop (actually, Gimp, the freeware version of photoshop) to figure out how to edit out the text and change colors to my liking.

So, the actual save-the-dates started like this:


I loved the font and realized I had most of the letters for the words Save the Date (including at fabulous S  at the beginning of Savon). So, with patience, I constructed the letters I didn't have. Once we decided on  our color palette, I decided to make the background the light mint green.


The D on date isn't perfect, but I think overall the design works really well. The second font I used was Gutenberg MF, which I thought matched well with the more ornate title text. From there, I just had to flip the image and add the relevant text to make side 2. The finished product is a 3" x 6" card that fits in a standard envelope.


After we printed them out, we stuffed them in envelopes and printed out address labels to save time. But I still felt like it was missing something, so I designed a little sticker for the envelope flap (I had sticker paper lying around).

Here's some photos of the end result!





Ta-daaaaa! Now, we have to send the save-the date emails and then I can move on to the invitation design!

Monday, March 7, 2011

The Great Shoe Search

Let's get some shoes. I have a few ideas about wedding shoes. I like heels, but I don't want them to be too tall, and I want them to have something interesting about them.

Oh, and no ivory for me. I want shoes I can wear again, thank you. Possibly a metallic copper/gold/bronze, or something in the wedding colors (I could get a seafoam green or teal and have it be a something blue).

1) BHLDN Clipped Corolla Heels.


2) BHLDN Elopement Pumps.


3) Ballroom Dance Shoes from DanceShoesStore.com S2802 in copper


4) Ballroom Dance Shoes from DanceShoesStore.com 2707 in light brown and light gold

5) Seychelles Pot of Gold Pump on endless.com



I just don't even know what exactly I want in the shoe department. A something blue? A simple, comfortable, well made shoe as a supporting cast member or more of a fashion statement? I hate shoe shopping; anybody who knows me can attest to this.

Well, give me your feedback if you have it. And if you spot the world's most adorable pair of vintage-styled teal heels, send them my way! I would love to see them!

Photographer Love

I've been meaning to post about our brilliant, amazing photographer for a while.

His name is Ken Clunk, and I found him because I was in a wedding he photographed. My friend Emily's wedding, specifically.

Look, that's me!
http://www.aestheticemotions.com/emilyandseamus © 2010 Kenneth Clunk

I was tagged in a photo on facebook, and decided to click through Ken's website. Immediately, I was in love. He has such a gift for angles; I love the perspective of his shots, as well as the saturated colors he gets in many of his shoots.

I also appreciated his background; while flipping through the site, it became clear that he wasn't strictly a wedding photographer. He shoots bands, models, even my alma mater's rock orchestra. I think this gives him a fresh take on weddings. Most wedding photographers are pretty cookie cutter. I like a guy who will tilt the lens every now and then to get a more interesting shot.

http://www.aestheticemotions.com/emilyandseamus © 2010 Kenneth Clunk

I knew Emily couldn't steer me wrong; she's an art institute graduate and I knew an artist wouldn't have an un-artistic photographer for her wedding, and she had nothing but rave reviews of her experience with him. So I emailed Ken.

After some email tag and coordinating of schedules (mine was super hectic), John and I met him for coffee. At this point I was pretty much sold on his work alone, but meeting him made us immediately want to sign on the dotted line. Ken and his wife rock. They are super cool, have a great sense of humor, and seem to really want to get to know us as a couple so that they can better capture us at the wedding.

I am beyond psyched. It feels like everything is coming together, and it's all leading up to a day that is sure to be amazing! I am resisting the urge to put a million of his photos on here. What keeps me from doing it is the knowledge that I don't know any of the people he photographs, so it would be kind of creepy to gawk over all the images (but I do on the website!). See his latest work, and join me in gawking, here.

Wedding Updates: Website

Hello all! Now that my recital is over, I can focus on planning my wedding! Hooray!

I'm actually feeling pretty good about the state of the wedding. Although theknot.com tries to tell me via to-do lists that I am tardy on many things, I feel good. The major players are in place:

-Our ceremony/reception venue is booked.
-The caterer is booked/comes with the venue
-The menu is decided
-Our incredible, awesomesauce photographer, Ken Clunk, is booked
-I bought my dress
-Bridesmaids dresses are all ordered and on their way
-I have a gorgeous vintage cake topper
-We have a string quartet (my string quartet) for the ceremony
-We have our officiant
-Rooms are booked for our immediate families
-I have a fabulous sorority sister who is going to do all the flowers

On the to-do list (lots of minutiae):
-Print and send save-the-dates (I know I'm late on this one, but they're almost good to go) for anybody not computer-savvy
-Start working on a seating chart for the reception (already started)
-Start designing invitations and deciding on wording (hooray for my new photoshop skills, thanks to designing the website)
-Get alterations to the wedding dress (not many, but a few small things)
-Find shoes to wear with wedding dress
-Figure out or design jewelry and headpiece for wedding dress
-Make bridesmaid jewelry/hair pieces
-Order white gold for wedding bands
-Make wedding bands
-Take engagement photos (probably in June?)
-Figure out guys' attire
-Decide on wedding favors, if having them
-Plan the Friday night s'mores party, add details to website
-Figure out the cake/dessert situation
-...other details...I know there's many more, but those are some of the ones that are next up

...What is this website, you ask? Our wedding website! I totally did the whole thing from scratch. I sourced all the vintage graphics, learned Gimp (mac freeware version of photoshop) in order to give them all the same background and even out the textures, and put it all together. The only thing I didn't do was code it, but I've never been a coder. My skills extend about as far as adding html tags to text.


I'm pretty happy with how the website turned out. I know it's such a small part of the wedding process, but I didn't just want to have a pre-made template from one of the many wedding website providers. They seemed boring and not very much like us. I received some great feedback on the site; a few friends said it was the best wedding website they had ever seen! Woo! It's nice that I busted my tail on it and people like it, even though I'm all about doing things for the enjoyment of doing them. That's the real reason I'm such a DIY queen. I enjoy the process. I can't wait to get started on some of my other projects.

Sunday, March 6, 2011

The Wedding Dress Saga, part 2

I am in better spirits from my last post. I received a great deal of commiseration from other engaged friends as well as many kind words and suggestions. I had decided, tentatively, to go the custom route. I started sketching away different styles of bodices and skirts, trying to pin down exactly what I was looking for. I scoured etsy.com, looking at the handmade dresses available on there (there are a lot to choose from on their site, and many have a simple, clean aesthetic that runs counter to the overly-beaded confections in the bridal salons).

Sketches!
More Sketches!
So I had started trying to figure out what I was looking for.

Then I went bridesmaid dress shopping. My friend Kristen is getting married on my birthday this year, and I am considered an extension of the bridal party (I am in the string quartet, so I can't walk down the aisle or anything, but I get to go to the bachelorette party and wear the dress and stuff).

This one is pretty awful. It's one of those where
you can tie it dozens of ways, but I think they're
just super unflattering.
Me doing the LeBron "witness" pose.
I actually liked this dress with the contrasting sash. 
Cute!
Me with the bride-to-be!
So we went to two dress shops in Rocky River. The first was good to try; the saleslady was really patient and walked us through each designer. She really took her time with us. It was awesome!

But the second shop, Leonardo's, had wedding dresses as well. After finding several bridesmaid dresses we really liked, Kristen told me to try on some wedding dresses for kicks. She had never gone dress shopping herself, having gone with an awesome, nontraditional red dress. So we both tried on some pretty insane dresses:

Ummmm...what?
 This dress was so heavy! When I took it off the hanger, it stood up by itself. I spent a few minutes staring, trying to figure out a plan of attack. "Do I step into it and hope my foot finds the floor through seven layers of skirt and crinoline, or do I burrow up from underneath?"

I ended up burrowing, and I don't think I will ever have so much fabric on my body ever again. For those of you who have never really thought about wedding dresses, picture yourself in this one. Now, picture yourself walking forward, trying to bring the skirt along with you gracefully. Not going to happen. The zillions of beads on the bodice don't help. If I wanted a skirt that big, I would want a really simple top part of the dress so the voluminous skirt could get all the attention.

I was lucky enough that this dress was captured at a very flattering angle.
This dress looked amazing on, and many friends on Facebook tried to convince me that I should wear this one. I don't disagree that it looked good, but it isn't the right dress for me.

1) It's strapless. I don't want strapless, no matter how tailored it is to my body. I would still be tugging it up all night, right? I don't want to deal with that!
2) It had a huge train on it. I am getting married outside, on a shuffleboard court. Also, shortening the train wasn't really an option because of how the lace is constructed.

I do like the picture though!

However, amidst the fun time trying on different dresses, I got to talking with one of the bridal consultants about what I was looking for in a dress. She brought several over to me and I tried them all on. Suddenly, one of them just felt right. I stepped out in it, everybody reacted to it and told me it looked like me. I looked in the mirror and said "I am getting married in this."

Case closed. I found my dress when I wasn't even looking for it! It was a sample and they were having a March madness sale at the salon, so I saved a boatload. Plus? The dress I tried on is MY dress. I don't have to worry about waiting several months for the dress to come in. I can go and visit it any time I want, and I plan on doing so to snap some better pictures to help me accessorize (the fun part!!!).

I will not, however, be posting the dress anywhere public. I don't want John to see it before the wedding day! So I will not spill too many details about the dress' design other than to say the lace was unlike anything I had ever seen, it was a beautiful ivory color over a champagne lining, and I just adored it.

So the awful, multi-week search is over. After going to far too many bridal salons, I finally found something simple that fits my style.

Friday Night Festivities...

So I know at least the bridal party, my family, and John and I will be down at our wedding venue Friday night.

We met with our amazing photographer (post on him to follow), and he asked if we had anything planned for the Friday night after the rehearsal dinner since people might be around. I said, sort of off the cuff, "It might be cool to have a campfire in the woods and do a s'mores party."
Ah, that's the ticket. Though I think it looks to neat and perfect.
Why isn't the charred, molten marshmallow oozing out the sides?
The more I think about it, the most obsessed I am with this idea. I mean, come on! We're in the middle of a state park with all sorts of gorgeous forests and campgrounds. Although I am more than happy that our venue has a beautiful lodge to stay in, it would be so fabulous to get out and hang out in nature.

So, I think I'm totally going to plan it. It would be uber casual. Lots of bugspray, s'more makings, and bug juice. Grab some twigs, char them and stick a marshmallow on 'em, girl-scout camping style. Keep it simple, keep it full of childlike wonder, then hike back to the lodge to hit the hay before the big day.

 

Of course, just because we're having s'mores doesn't mean they all have to be Hershey's milk chocolate+ Jet Puff marshmallows...there might be some room for experimentation, by having an interesting chocolate bar as the base and perhaps doing some homemade marshmallows. Some interesting ideas: bacon+milk chocolate, black sea salt with caramel center, espresso+cocoa nibs+chicory, and Rooibos+cherries+vanilla (also, that is just about the prettiest label for a chocolate bar that I've ever seen...

So pretty, right?
Something to think about...though we would have the classics on hand no matter what!

A wedding letter...

I stumbled across this blog entry recently, which contains a letter from a "wedding graduate." She addresses the letter to her own wedding, and it's pretty hilarious (and also great perspective for those planning now).

Some favorite moments:

"Oh, I know your sneaky ways. I didn't even want a wedding. But you're so flashy flashy, and so 'everyone else is doing it' and the next thing we knew, we were sending out invitations. And then there was no turning back, and you just kept luring us deeper and deeper with your promises of happy families and cake. The cake was a clever ploy. Oh, you're good, wedding."


"Sure, maybe the further away you get, the more I like you. Maybe I can't actually find any photos from you where people don't have huge grins. Maybe eating nothing but cake and champagne is pretty rad. Maybe I really like wearing fancy silk dresses. But that's neither here nor there."


This was the type of bride I am going to be; a super-DIY type who wants to make just about everything (although I have no sewing skills, so I couldn't follow her on the whole making-her-own-dress escapade). It's good to remember to take a step back and just enjoy the process without letting it consume you. It's one day, people will enjoy it no matter what, and we'll end up married at the end of it.

Sunday, February 20, 2011

Wedding Dress Woes

I can't sleep. I had a weird day. I think I want to write a little bit and talk about it.

My mother called me this morning and said that we should go wedding dress shopping. I said sure, but inwardly, I had mixed feelings. I was glad to go and to have a chance to check out several places, but I was dreading the experience simultaneously. I know this is not the reaction I am supposed to be having. I should be excited to find my wedding dress. I predicted it long ago; the search for the wedding dress was going to be frustrating, because I hate almost all that I've seen on other brides. Perhaps I set myself up for failure. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy, right? Surely at these bridal salons, they carry a wider range of dresses than just the strapless, beaded-bodice ballgowns or the fit and flare mermaid styles that lace up the back, right? So I set out with a mixture of hope and apprehension.

My dad, who was with us, sensed my unease. He suggested lunch before I had the dress-blitz at the various bridal salons on the west side. So we had lunch at an awesome little tea parlor. A good cup of earl grey helped steel me for the rest of the day.

We headed to a giant bridal store that felt like a warehouse. As soon as we walked in, a lady was incredibly sweet to us. Even though we didn't have an appointment, she insisted it was fine and kept telling me that I was going to be "spoiled" by the attention of a personal bridal consultant. So we were invited to browse while we waited to meet with our consultant. We wandered the store, but I was immediately overwhelmed. The store is huge, and there are many, many rooms full of frothy, beaded, huge confections of gowns. I found myself not wanting to dig. This wasn't like going thrifting; I wasn't excited as I pulled out gown after gown with gaudy, poorly-sewn on beading. Everything seemed like it was strapless, or overdone in some way: pretty, but then they ruined it by adding just a little too much lace or a giant beaded buckle or a huge train.

I decided to have a seat and wait to meet with my consultant, who could perhaps help find things that fit what I did want: vintage-y, off-white, preferably with interesting lace, not beaded, not strapless, floor length but no train that would drag on the ground since I'm getting married outside. As for straps vs. sleeves, I was open. Even the fullness of the skirt was something I was willing to wait and see, though I envisioned something more streamlined.

Our consultant was chipper and petite. I told her what I liked, sort of what I was looking for, and she basically flat out said, "Well, we don't have anything like that." But she pulled several dresses for me anyway. I was grateful to hole up in the bridal room and have things brought to me so I didn't have to dig through the racks.

I tried on lots of dresses. Many of them were pretty in and of themselves, but putting them on, they didn't seem like me. Many of the ones at the first place were super small, though, where I couldn't even zip them, or could barely breathe if I did manage to get them closed. I felt like Bridal Barbie; stiff but covered in pouffy layers of tulle and silk and lace. My mom was frustrated because she felt like she couldn't get a sense of how things looked when I couldn't even get them closed. Her being frustrated made me feel awkward in what was already an awkward situation. It was basically my mom and I and this chipper salesgirl, me in a bra that has actually become too large for me (apparently I have lost weight?) and that would bunch out beneath the too-tight dresses. PS: I am not a large girl. If these were their sample sizes, then their regular clientele is apparently related to Twiggy.

Also, whenever I told anybody my wedding date, they acted like I was so last minute. "Well, these dresses take 5-8 months to get in, so you really should be ordering now." That made me feel bad about myself. Bad bride. You should have been dress shopping in November and December. I'm thinking "I didn't even have a wedding date set until mid-November, and then I was finishing Ph.D applications and worrying about passing my recital qualifying jury."

There were more bad bride moments. Although everybody at the places I went was extremely cheerful and willing to pull lots of different styles for me, nothing really fit my initial specifications, and I started feeling more and more embarrassed: for not liking the typical styles, for having to parade out to those little platforms and stand and be scrutinized, for the salesladies complimenting my figure and telling me all those flattering things about how the dresses looked made for me even off the rack, for not taking more joy in this process. I guess I'm more modest than I realized? Seeing myself in curve hugging mermaid gowns made me uncomfortable. Walking with a huge swath of fabric in my wake made me feel gangly and awkward (aka "gawkward"), like when I got my first pair of combat boots in high school and teetered around on their four-inch platforms, but tried to act like I could walk in them just fine.


The salesladies would hand me a strapless dress and say "Now, we can add a sleeve to this in alterations." They would hand me a dress with a huge train and say, "We can bustle this up so it won't trail when you walk." They would hand me a dress dripping with beading and say, "Look how pretty it sparkles." I said, "I'm hoping to have the bling be in my jewelry and keep the dress less sparkly" and they would say "Well, don't do a lot of jewelry with any of these. These dresses already have a lot going on." I wanted to scream "I know! That's why I wanted something without beading in the first place!" I tried to take their advice to heart and focus on the overall look of the dress. I started having thoughts in my head like "Well, this has about 1,000 sequins on it, but maybe I could sit at home with a seam ripper and remove every last one so that just the lace is left. Would it look ok without all the sparkles?"




Listen, I came to girl world late. I grew up preferring my brother's legos to the insulting pastel "girl legos" my parents bought me. I had Barbies that I only played with when friends came over and wanted to play with dolls. I didn't grow up envisioning my wedding day, picturing myself in a frothy white dress, dancing the waltz for my first dance, with a five-tiered round white cake and Canon in D to take me down the aisle.


I jumped in to bride world in 2009 when I got engaged. I started looking on wedding blogs, and I got excited. I saw that not every bride had that cookie-cutter look; couples were having such amazing celebrations by putting their own stamp on the day. And their dresses were amazing. Some were designer dreams, but many more were simple, vintage, perfection. I started thinking, I can do this. I can get married on my own terms in a dress that doesn't make me feel like a cupcake or a Disney princess. Or, a little like a cupcake, but an authentic, 50s sort of cupcake with swiss dot netting and a sweetheart neckline.

I feel like a bad bride. Every step of the way I've been at odds with myself; I want things laid back and focused on John and I, but I want things to be special and beautiful because this is the only wedding I ever plan on having and I want to be able to look back on it and smile and be happy with my photos of the little details. I want to use my talents and make beautiful things and keep it simple, but I want things to be gorgeous and not look low budget or tacky or plain.

I want to feel beautiful in my dress, and not like a little girl playing dress up. I want to wear something that feels like MY wedding dress. I want to put on that dress and know it's the right one.

Am I buying too much into the wedding complex, here? I wasn't expecting to jump up and down and start crying like many of the girls I saw at the salons today. But shouldn't there be an aha! moment? Just a little one? One where you put a dress on, look in the mirror, and say to yourself, "This is my dress. I'm going to get married in this."

Monday, February 14, 2011

Valentines

Happy Valentine's Day, indeed. Our celebration was simple; John gave me red wine glasses (yay!) and a basil plant and a rosemary plant (which I'm really excited about!). I gave him coupons for silly things: "Good for one night of video games" etc. I didn't have any money this year to really spoil him other than with food, so I thought I'd go all out and bake him a dark chocolate cheesecake.

This one, in fact.

I decided to forego the chocolate curls (I couldn't find them),
but it will be perfect nonetheless.
The ganache and cake are chilling in the fridge right now.

We were going to make one of our favoritest, most classic dishes for Valentine's Dinner: Tomato Bread Pudding. So we started to preheat the oven and I was just about to cube the bread into little chunklets when John noticed smoke billowing out of the oven. Oh no! Apparently butter or something had spilled out of the springform pan when I was baking the cheesecake, settling in an ugly pool on the bottom of the oven. Bingo. We avoided setting off the smoke alarm by shutting the kitchen door, opening the window, and getting the fan going, but we were severely disappointed.

So, it looks like our Valentine's dinner will consist of this:


Happy Valentine's Day, everybody!

Thursday, February 10, 2011

Simple Bouquet

My jaw dropped at this photograph on OnceWed:

!!!!
My heart skipped a beat at the shape of the white lilac and the touch of glam in the sparkly ribbon tie. I would certainly consider adding some white lilac into my bouquet; the smell would be amazing and it looks incredible!

Not to mention, this particular picture has the most amazing backdrop to make the flowers pop!

Winter Inspiration

Whoop Whoop! This inspiration shoot, featured on Ruffled, was not only adorable, it featured vendors from Ohio (Dayton, to be exact)! Woo!

I used to dream of having a winter wedding, but I'm not brave enough to chance the weather. The probability that your day will look pristine like this? Not very high. I wouldn't want all my loved ones traveling in a potential blizzard just so I could wear a long-sleeved gown and a cute coat on my big day. I am, however, really drawn to these weddings. The white snow is such a stark, perfect backdrop for wedding photos.

Love her locket, and her diaphanous layers!

Um, those tights rock!

My favorite shot.
For John and I, the wedding season was dictated by logistics. Our academic calendars were more conducive to a summer wedding, when we both have vacation. Plus, most of my bridesmaids are on academic calendars as well (med school, teaching in Baltimore, law school, etc), so it made more sense to have them come up for a summer wedding. Plus, the weather is less likely to suck and a good time will be had by all.

It might be hot as Hades (it is in August, after all), but we'll deal. The lodge is air-conditioned, so they'll only have to suffer for maybe a half hour for the ceremony.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Valentine's Inspiration

This post today on Ruffled put me in the mood for some pops of bright red. And just in time! This snowstorm coupled with the chilly temperatures had me squarely in the middle of the winter doldrums.

Love the white lace dress with the bright red tights!

Not to mention the giant gold heart necklaces!

I love everything about this picture!

Um, adorable. Vintage toy oven+cupcakes?

Pretty florals: bright red with soft purple.

Meant to be a wedding bouquet, but who doesn't love
getting flowers for Valentine's Day?

Love his jacket and boutonniere!