Posts Tagged ‘weddings’

What Does a Wedding Planner Do?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A planner refers to a person that plans each and every aspect of your wedding and corporate event. The success of an event whether wedding or any corporate meeting or seminar depends upon the competency of the planner. No doubt, marriages are made in heaven but a professional wedding planner recreate the aura of heavenly experience on earth and fascinate your guest with their exceptional service.

They manage the overall wedding event and ensure that everything goes exactly as planned right from the initial stage to the closing stage. They will not only assist you in making right selection and choose the perfect wedding vendors and venue but also maintain a balance in what is happening, when it is happening, who is doing it while keeping a strict watch that everything goes within budget.

But you don’t need to worry as both the wedding and corporate event planner is supposed to work under your supervision. Effective communication between you and the planner is quite essential to make the event successful. Just tell him plainly your taste, preferences and desires and it is his responsibility to make arrangements accordingly. Make sure to follow their work and always remember that you are the one who will pay the cash therefore, your decision will always be final and binding.

A wedding is certainly once in a lifetime affair while corporate events strengthen your business and motivate your employees! Therefore you must choose a reliable planner.

The planner should be competent and skilled enough to implement your ideas and understand your needs and objectives. Discuss the plan with him and analyze the aspects of the event will they cover and how much say so are you going to have in the planning?

You should feel comfortable with them as you will be spending considerable amount of time with them. Planning an event whether corporate or wedding can be a great deal of fun, but there are often several hectic times as well. A professional planner can go a long way in making your event memorable and mesmerizing.

Authored by Alice Shown from Samaya Events

Samaya Events is a full service special events company capable of managing events across the US of any shape and size.

Collect Your Wedding Cards Without Sacrificing Style

Friday, March 6th, 2009

What is a Card box?

Weddings have always been an occasion at which guests like give the happy a couple a gift to help them start their new lives together. In the past, these gifts would include registry items, cash, checks, bonds etc. Today, many registry items have already been gifted at bridal showers and engagement parties. So, a relatively new tradition has sprung up in the wedding world! Guests now give cards and money to the couple and it can sometimes result in an awkward situation.

Why? Guests can sometimes feel uncomfortable having to search out the bride, groom, or close relative in order to hand them a monetary gift. However, a wedding guest also does not want to hand their generous gift off to just anyone.

Solution! The wedding card box is displayed on the gift table or a table near the bride and groom; all dressed up in the theme and matching the colors and décor of the wedding! Viola! A new tradition!

Security

With all of this generosity from your guests, you don’t want to leave anything to chance. It is unfortunate but there have been cases in the past where envelopes have gone missing from a wedding reception; some of which can be lost forever. To solve this problem, use a secure card holder that is not only attractive and elegant, but will also alleviate the issue of security. Give yourselves, and your friends and family at the wedding, peace of mind.

Styles

Wedding card boxes can really be anything you can imagine. Some of the more common styles include plain white birdcages and paper boxes. But, why get something common to hold your gifts? Your wedding isn’t an everyday occasion! It is an extraordinary day that you have put your whole heart into planning. The details like your wedding card box can be just as extraordinary and special!

Today’s wedding card box is hand painted in your colors and reflects your theme! Having an elegant beach wedding? How about a card box featuring real seashells in the design. Is your groom a die-hard sports fan? Instead of a groom’s cake, purchase a card box in his favorite team’s colors with the team logo emblazoned on it! Do you love crystals and “bling”? Why not “bling-out” your custom card box? Or, if your tastes are more simple and elegant, how about your wedding colors reflected in your box(es) and trimmed with a beautiful satin ribbon and bow?

In love with your wedding cake design? Have a custom wedding cake replica card box made as a valued keepsake. After the real cake has been enjoyed by all, you will have a lovely reminder of your special day that serves as a holder for all of your wonderful mementos and cards for years to come.

What about after the wedding?

Your wedding day was a day of joy and love. It was one you will remember for the rest of lives and you will have many lovely mementos and cards from your guests to help you keep the memories alive. Your wedding card box is a wonderful way to keep those lovely cards and mementos all together in your home.

Authored by Marni Gold from Creative Custom Cardboxes

Marni Gold is a designer of fabulous hand-crafted and hand-painted card boxes for weddings and special events. She, and her mother Linda Protovin, own and operate Creative Custom Cardboxes (www.CreativeCustomCardboxes.com). They will work with you one-on-one to design a card box that is perfect for your special day.

6 New Wedding Rules (Guest Post)

Friday, January 9th, 2009

Things have changed a lot since your parents got hitched! Check out the new and improved ways modern couples are creating unique, thoroughly personal events.

Ready to start planning your dream day? Your first step: Toss out those notions you may have about how things “should” be done—you know, the traditional rules handed down from generations past that require you to invite all of your parents’ friends and serve a fancy sit-down dinner in a hotel ballroom or at a banquet hall. While it’s true that a wedding with those elements will never go out of style, it’s okay to change the rules a little, or even a lot, to suit your style as a twenty-first-century couple. Check out the new set of guidelines brides and grooms are following today.

Rule #1 Express yourselves. 
The old way: Doing things the way Mom and Dad would like. 
The new way: Designing a wedding that’s uniquely yours.

When a couple pays for their own wedding, they’re less likely to allow their parents’ vision of the big day to eclipse their own. So, when Mom begins to push for a formal affair for 200 at the country club, hold onto your own idea of your dream wedding and remember that you hold the power of the purse. Do you and your future hubby share a love of all things Italian? Have your party at your favorite Italian restaurant (maybe the one where you had your first date). Hire an accordion player to entertain guests as they eat. And ask your baker to design a cake that looks like the Leaning Tower of Pisa. Think the classic white limousine is the only “wedding worthy” vehicle to squire you two around? Nah! Make a Porsche, a golf cart or even a helicopter your mode of transportation; or, rent a trolley or stretch SUV limousine and bring your entire wedding party along for the ride. “For a wedding I planned recently, the groom left the reception on his motorcycle, with his new bride—ballgown and all—in the sidecar,” says Susan Southerland, owner of Just Marry!, a wedding-planning company with locations in Orlando and St. Augustine, Florida , and Savannah.

Another very personal idea: Incorporate elements of your cultural heritage into the big day. For instance, Southerland helped plan the wedding of a bride with Vietnamese roots to a groom whose family originally hailed from Ireland. At their ceremony, the flower girl scattered clovers instead of rose petals. The reception menu included classic Irish dishes like potato-leek soup and beef Wellington, as well as traditional Vietnamese selections like lemongrass-infused pork kabobs (prepared by the bride’s mother) and spring rolls.

Rule #2 Make the day about the people who matter to you. 
The old way: Not recognizing many of the faces at your fête. 
The new way: Tailoring your guest list to reflect the true VIPs in your life, whether that’s 20 people or 200.

Gone are the days of feeling obligated to invite everyone you—and your parents—know. “Couples want to celebrate with the people they really care about, those who will still be in their lives 15 years from now,” says Jeanette Stancato, a wedding planner with Marriott Hotels. In decades past, when the bride’s mother and father were picking up the tab, it was their prerogative to include more of their friends, relatives and business associates. “But when the couple is paying, they aren’t obligated to invite Dad’s partner’s brother or Mom’s cousins whom they haven’t seen since their First Communion,” says Stancato. If you just can’t say “no” to Mom and Dad’s desire for a big do, consider having an intimate wedding with your family and closest friends, followed by a big reception that’ll please the folks when you return from your honeymoon.

Rule #3 Get guests mingling. 
The old way: Sit-down dinners with guests in assigned seats. 
The new way: Encouraging friends and family to move around freely.

Dread fussing over a seating chart? Good news: Open seating, where guests choose where and with whom to sit, is making a comeback, say experts. “It’s a great way for guests to meet and get to know others,” says Raquel Shutt, the CEO of Wedding Savvy in Annapolis, Maryland. Just be sure to place “reserved” signs on tables where you and your groom, the bridal party and both sets of parents will sit. That way, the major players are guaranteed a special spot.

If open seating isn’t for you, you can still foster a friendly feel by creating a club-like atmosphere in your reception room. Keep the lighting low. Instead of using standard round tables all of the same size, opt for a variety of shapes and sizes—perhaps several tall tables with or without bar stools, some small round tables for four and a few large square or rectangular tables that can seat more guests. You can even bring in couches, comfy chairs and cocktail tables to create a lounge area. Another option if your wedding isn’t too big: Go with “royal banquet seating,” where everyone sits at one long table. Finally, consider forgoing a sit-down dinner in favor of multiple food stations, where guests can pick and choose among various types of cuisine. This is a great way to encourage interaction.

Rule #4 Have a ball at your own party! 
The old way: Being “on duty” and spending the entire reception greeting guests and posing for pictures. 
The new way: Enjoying every minute of your once-in-a-lifetime celebration.

Of course, graciousness will never go out of style, which means you absolutely must greet each guest personally and thank him or her for coming to your wedding. But there are clever ways to handle your hosting responsibilities so the whole day doesn’t pass in a blur—and leave you without a moment to enjoy even a bite of your carefully chosen wedding meal. First, take as many of your “posed” photos as possible before the ceremony, so that you can attend the cocktail party along with everyone else. Yes, that means you’ll have to see your groom before you walk down the aisle. But think of it this way, suggests Southerland: “Many couples find it thrilling to spend a private moment together before the ceremony,” she says. “It’s their chance to bond for a few minutes and say, ‘Wow, today’s the day!’ ” Also, consider forgoing a receiving line. “Many parents still think it’s necessary, but mingling with guests at the cocktail hour is much better,” says Shutt. “This way, you can have more casual conversations with your guests instead of just a quick hello as they move down the line.”

Even if you do plan to have your photographs taken during the cocktail hour (so that you can be “presented” at the reception as husband and wife), there are a few timesaving moves you can make to enjoy your party fully. Visit guest tables between courses so you can eat along with everyone else. Sneak in a few twirls on the dance floor—guests will surely understand your breaking away from a conversation for this. If you have a large wedding, it’s okay for you and your husband to “divide and conquer”—each of you can visit with guests from your “sides.” This way, you’ll slash your meet-and-greet time in half.

Rule #5 Get creative with your décor. 
The old way: Settling for old wedding standbys like pink or white tablecloths and floral centerpieces.
The new way: Dazzling partygoers with sophisticated, even surprising, details.

It used to be that embellishing a ceremony or reception space meant simply choosing a color scheme for centerpieces and picking among the white, pink or maroon linens the banquet hall had on hand. Not anymore. People’s tastes are more sophisticated than ever before—thanks, in part, to all those wedding-themed reality shows that have upped the creative ante.

When you’re planning the color scheme, think beyond basic pastel pink or blue and try one of these chic combos: chocolate brown, beige and sky blue; grass green and white or cream; or apple green and hot pink. For your centerpieces, instead of having bunches of flowers arranged in glass vases, consider placing one or two solid-colored blooms in three small, geometric-shaped, colorful containers on each table—the look is sleek and sophisticated. Or, forgo flowers altogether. Ask your florist to fill bowls with exotic fruit, or arrange to have pillar candles of varying heights placed at the center of each table; you can scatter confetti or jelly beans around those groupings.

“Brides and grooms are also doing a lot more with lighting, which makes a huge impact,” says Southerland. Ask your planner about using a gobo light (a simple apparatus on which a stencil is placed over a bulb) to project your initials onto the dance floor, or highlighting the centerpieces with “pin” lights hung from the ceiling. Spotlights placed underneath tables covered in filmy, light-colored cloths will make the tables appear as if they’re floating.

Lastly, delight and entertain your guests with some unusual, special elements. For instance, ask your planner to arrange for an ice “luge” at the bar—guests will enjoy watching the bartender pour a drink down this ice “slide” in order to chill it. Or, hire living “statues”—that is, performance artists garbed in period costumes or dressed to suit a particular theme, like hula girls for a tropical wedding. Imagine guests’ surprise when these statues come to life!

Rule #6 Take your show on the road. 
The old way: Believing the bride’s hometown is the “only” place to tie the knot. 
The new way: Having a destination wedding in an exotic location.

A hometown wedding can be beautiful and have a lot of sentimental appeal. But with girl-marrying-boy-next-door and high-school-sweetheart romances growing less common in this “global” society, more and more couples are choosing to wed away from home. “Less than half of my clients were born and raised in Annapolis,” notes the Maryland-based Shutt.

So what entices couples to a particular destination? “Brides and grooms are picking places that have personal significance to them,” she says. It might be the spot where they met or got engaged, or a place they’ve always dreamed of visiting together (Aspen! or Venice!). Other couples dream of exchanging “I dos” barefoot in the sand—on a Hawaiian or Caribbean island, for example. Whatever destination you choose, think about what the locale has to offer your guests: Are there gorgeous beaches, lots of sightseeing options or plenty of nightspots to keep them entertained? Be sure to factor in how easy it will be for the majority of your guests to travel there, whether by car or airplane.

 

Authored By Kristen Finello of Bridal Guide Magazine

Get tips and advice on wedding planning, choosing a dress, wedding traditions, invitations, etiquette and more at bridalguide.com.

Wedding Decorations: Aisle Runner Trends (Guest Post)

Wednesday, December 3rd, 2008

Gone are the days when our streets were made of dirt, and aisle runners were used to protect the bride’s path down the aisle from the dirt and mud her guests would track down the aisle before she arrived. The use of a white aisle runner was symbolic to walking on holy ground.

Today, brides and grooms want the accents of their wedding to stand out and be as unique as they are. Elegance and style are of utmost importance. Today’s trends are to embellish on “the symbolic and the traditional”.

The first time a groom sees his bride in her beautiful dress and veil, walking down the aisle, is still considered one of the most important moments of the wedding day. So, now brides choose runners that suit this momentous occasion!! Modern weddings are using hand-painted runners that can set the mood and create a look of complete elegance. They complete a theme, and create quite a photo opportunity as well.

Brides are choosing colored and hand painted runners. Painted monograms, quotes, and poems are being used to personalize their weddings, along with famous quotes or poems meaningful to the couple. Runners now have crystals added to them to add glitz and silk flowers that give a 3D effect. The possibilities are endless. This is a HUGE trend that employs this dramatic visual as a reminder of the important union taking place.

As in days gone by, to protect the runner from your guests walking on the runner before you do, there are two things you can do. If you want to have your runner already rolled out when your guests arrive, but don’t want anyone to walk on it, place a ribbon across the aisle and allow your guests use the outer aisles to gain access to their seats. OR, you can wait till your guests are seated and attendants have already gone down the aisle and roll the runner out immediately before you-the bride are ready to walk down the aisle. This later method can add even more drama to your arrival!


Article By: Beth Martin/designer/artist
Take a look at our gallery of ideas for a Chic and Unique aisle runner for your special day! www.chicuniqueinc.com