You’d have to be living under a rock to notice that the world is kinda on fire at the moment! The majority of folks acknowledge that climate change is happening now and that future predictions look, quite frankly, pretty terrifying. The good news is that taking action is the number one way to counter any […]
Something shifted for me this week. Deep within. A desperate longing to immerse within the very heart of Love My Dress - to get back to championing gorgeous
We pride ourselves on details, on making those little moments extra special and so we're here to help you add that special touch to your wedding in the Hudson Valley. Whether you need just a bouquet or you're looking for a full scale event, we can help. Take a look at some of our events and EMAIL US TODAY.
The bride wore a Brock Collection off-the-shoulder taffeta wedding dress—plucked from the runway and reworked by her friend and the label’s designer Laura Vassar.
From wedding newspapers and table arches, to unique venues and world-wide traditions, these wedding ideas are guaranteed to make yours a day to remember
Margaret Wroblewski is a film wedding photographer who is based in Oregon and Washington, D.C who also travels to capture weddings. Through her photojournalistic and documentary style, Margaret Wroblewski encapsulates her couples wedding day into everlasting memories.
Evie and Nate’s gorgeous garden wedding was inspired by Evie’s Greek heritage. A traditional ceremony at St. Barbara’s Greek Orthodox Church led to a stunning outdoor reception at The Canary Hotel, where guests were greeted by a potting bench seating card table with vintage watering cans and plant marker escort cards. Gorgeous florals created by […]
Tyler and Taylor wanted to look and feel good at their wedding. "We selected outfits that made us feel like ourselves. We really valued authenticity. We let go of every tradition that didn’t feel like us. What we had left was a wedding that felt like disco dance night at a Christian summer camp sponsored by tequila!"
More from Tent State! - the most perfect label. Yesterday there were no clouds in sight anyway: today there were quite a few - but judging by the positioning of the notice, it's not attempting to be meteorologically referential. It does, however, fit in very nicely with the ability of the narrator in Cortazar's short story "Blow Up" to become distracted each time another cloud formation floats past... "and again the clouds begin to come, two at a time, three at a time," like they do. And one's left wondering whether the clouds in the tale have any symbolic function, or not, just as it's unclear whether this notice has any purpose whatsoever. Perhaps the artists was apprehensive that, without a descriptive word, we wouldn't recognize white fluffy things on a blue ground for what they are? They do, all the same, bear some resemblance to the wonderful clouds that we looked at very briefly during the course, photographed by Byron Wolfe: "The Life of a Cloud" is at the top of his web page, and is an idea of such wonderful simplicity that one's very sad not to have thought of it oneself. Wolfe does a good deal of work with Mark Klett, especially in the area of rephotography - tracking down sites first stood on by photographers like Sullivan and Muybridge in the C19th, and seeing what's there now - and in the environmental recording and commentary on the American West more generally: their current show is in Phoenix, and will be traveling to the Autry in the fall... where I shall do my best, somehow, even with the travails of chairing, to catch up with it.
Alternative and edgy meets fairytale levels of romance, with Simona & Al's flower-filled wedding at Laurel Hall in Indianapolis
You can never have too many disco balls at your wedding - here's the most cool and creative ways to use them in your décor
This wedding started out at The Flamingo and ended in the desert with a much deserved preroll from one of the dispensaries! They tied the know at The Neon Museum with some close friends and family and then we cruised to the desert to catch the sunset. This wedding was one for the books! PS- the bri
Explore Ana Cristina Antunes' 258 photos on Flickr!
The story of Merve and Nils and their rainy romantic Scottish elopement on the Isle of Skye. Elopement photography by The Kitcheners.
Modest wedding dresses that are fashionable and modern. Setting trends is what our brides do! Modest Bridal Gowns for all aesthetics.
Perfect for modest brides still wanting to make an entrance, Taller Marmo's gown has a dramatic cape-effect back panel that cascades beautifully from the shoulders to a floor-sweeping hem. It's made from fluid ivory crepe that nips in flatteringly at the waist and has a high neckline.
Planning to get married at home? These backyard wedding ideas will spark your creativity to help you plan the most memorable day.
A working knowledge of 90s country music was an essential and inescapable aspect of growing up in Helotes, Texas. In PE, we would run laps to Shania Twain's "Man, I Feel Like a Woman" and we would often quote George Strait's "Check Yes or No" in carefully crafted love letters. No matter what level of hipster you are, if you grew up in Helotes, chances are you know this song by Alan Jackson (don't deny it). This song came into my mind recently when I was thinking back on my wedding day. Like my good friend Alan here, I would marry the same person all over again. His name is Daniel. He looks like this: On our wedding day, he looked like this: Obviously, it's a no-brainer. Given the chance to redo my wedding, I would choose Daniel every single time. However, there are some things that I would definitely do differently. Don't get me wrong -- I loved my wedding. It was the best day ever. Most of my regrets are just details that stem from the fact that Pinterest became a big thing about a minute after we said "I do". Now I have a constant feed of incredible wedding ideas that seemed otherwise unavailable to me at the time that I was planning my wedding. Anyway, I don't have it to do all over, but maybe my hindsight could be someone else's foresight. Here now, for your bridal edification, is my list of Wedding Planning Do-Overs: Do-over #1: I would wear an objectively sane outfit whilst getting ready. If you can't make out exactly what is happening in the above picture, that is because it is a HOT MESS. I am wearing bright pink shorts and a tank top that features a rhinestone octopus. Grace Kelly wore a similar ensemble the morning of her wedding (in a nightmare that David Tutera once had). My bra straps are proudly visible and I am eating Wheat Thins like it is my job. Feel free to Pin this because it's clearly a style you will want to emulate on the most important day of your life. Wait. I can't even joke about that. Don't save this picture to your Pinterest or anywhere, for that matter. Forget you ever saw it. Always remember that you could be immortalized in a photograph at any moment during the day of your wedding. Just channel Beyoncé and everything will be fine. Flee from bedazzled sea creatures. Hide your bra straps like your life depends on it. Wear a delicate robe like this: Pssst...if you're totally smitten, here's a link to buy this robe! and stop eating all of the Wheat Thins (although, seriously, how can you?). Do-over #2: I would paint the soles of my shoes blue. via I don't really get the point of most wedding traditions (throwing rice kills birds and garters itch like hell), but I wanted to adhere to them because it was like a game for me. I don't think I had something blue, which probably destines Daniel and I for destruction. I could have prevented that if I'd painted my soles blue. Plus, they'd be so cute in pictures! If you're digging this idea, there are also some fabulous slip resistant sole stickers that might be a better temporary solution. Do-over #3: I would have a videographer. Ladies (and gentlemen maybe?), I am here to tell you that, regrettably, I do not have video footage from my wedding. You are crying for me right now. I know it. This is the saddest thing you've heard all day. Trying to do as much as possible on the cheap, I thought that moving images from that day would be something I could do without. What a fool I was. I would give anything for any kind of video documentation of our wedding. Get a videographer, folks. If you cannot afford a videographer, slap a GoPro on the head of your five-year-old cousin and see what happens (this is actually an amazing idea. Do this regardless of your financial situation.) There is so much going on (drunk people fighting, amazing dance moves, YOU WALKING DOWN THE AISLE). You will miss something, and a video is a great way to relive it. You probably already knew this. I'm the only idiot I know who doesn't have a wedding video. There is a silver lining, though. I had an amazing photographer (Lauren Guy Summersett...book her) who captured so much of my day in great detail. Without video, I am able to leave pictures like the following up for hilarious interpretation: Do-over #4: I would remember to smile when walking down the aisle. I super dropped the ball on this one. In imaging myself walking down the aisle, I always assumed I might cry a little. I mean, I once cried watching an episode of Full House. To be fair though, it was the episode where Papouli dies, and I had mono so I was a little disoriented. Anyway, I was prepared to shed a tear, but nothing really could have prepared me for the moment those doors opened, and this amazing song was being beautifully sung, and my husband was standing there waiting for me. There's just nothing like that. And it wasn't a pretty cry. Smiling through the tears was the last thing on my mind. I was a mess. The picture above is the BEST picture of me walking down the aisle. At best, I look slightly annoyed. At worst, I look like I've fallen asleep midway through. So remember to smile, ladies! Your photographer will thank you. Do-over #5: I would recommend that my guests use a hashtag (#oshoneywedding) for Twitter and Instagram. via I saw something like this on Pinterest like two weeks after my wedding and I was like.... It was very upsetting. Why oh why didn't I think of that?! I love hashtags. I love seeing pictures of myself with an X Pro II filter. It is the perfect marriage of things I love. We are now well into the 2000s at this point, people. Unless you do not care about this kind of thing, you have no excuse not to post a hashtag at your wedding. Not to be dramatic, but you might be clinically insane if you do not do this. I'm just saying... Do-over #6: I would honor, in some major way, everyone who helped with our wedding. I could not be more thankful to the people who were a part of our wedding. Literally everyone who was there did something incredible for us. My dad risked his life hanging papel picado all over our reception space. We had four of the most giving women I've ever known literally set up every other decoration. Our musicians were our incredibly talented friends who set the tone for our beautiful ceremony. My five bridesmaids were rock stars. Emily and her now fiance, Michael, put together our entire rehearsal dinner. Kaley wrote and performed a song as her wedding toast. Lara traveled all the way from Knoxville so that I could steal the covers from her in the bed we shared the night before the wedding. My sister, Johanna, fed me grapes like I was Cleopatra or something. Daniel's sister, Jessica made me laugh so hard I almost died. We gave some small gifts to everyone, but I wish we had done so much more. As much as a wedding is about the bride and groom, it is so much also about all of the beautiful people that God puts in your life. There are two things from that day that will always be crystal clear memories for me. The first is when I walked down the aisle to Daniel. The second is this moment: All of these selfless, wonderful people who have my deepest respect and love decided to dance like fools around us as Daniel and I danced to "Dream a Little Dream of Me". It was kind of perfect, and it was a moment that embodied exactly how loved we felt on that day. When we get famous, we'll probably buy all of these people corvettes or at least Target gift cards or something. Lastly, Do-over #7: I would have bought something nice on which to hang my dress. Plastic hangers make the most expensive item of clothing of your life look like it was bought off the rack at Marshall's (no judgement if it was). Get yourself one of those pretty wooden hangers like they have at Anthropologie. Better yet, get one of these fancy hangers where the wire identifies who you are. You'll be glad you did. Buy this one here! There you have it. These are just a few small regrets from a day that brought me so much joy that I still can't stop talking about it. Just so you don't leave this post thinking that I regret my marriage, it is probably a good idea to show you some things from my wedding that I got right. My Wedding Do-All-Over-Agains 1. I would wear this dress. and I would make this same I-know-I-look-good face 2. I would spend the day with these beautiful women. 3. I would have a whimsical theme and not care if anyone thinks it's weird. 4. I would shake this maraca. 5. I would do my own makeup so that I don't end up looking like this: 6. I would have it in Austin, Texas. Vintage Villas 7. I would marry this guy...all over again. Please share this post on Pinterest and elsewhere so that future brides can learn from my not-so-terrible mistakes! If you'd like to learn about more ways to avoid weird mistakes in life, feel free to follow Avoiding Atrophy (in the column on the right side) because seriously I write about this junk all the time. Move on to Part Two of this post for even more Wedding Do-Overs! Lastly, I've compiled some product ideas from this post below. Hope these are helpful in prepping for your super stellar upcoming wedding! What are some of your wedding planning do-overs?