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Invitation Wish List

  • April 30, 2010 at 6:00 pm

Dear Wedding Santa,

I’ve been a good engaged bride-to-be. I took careful time picking our venue, flowers, and dress and even stayed in budget. I haven’t yelled (a lot) at my fiance and I haven’t (yet) been called a bridezilla. So when you check you nice list twice, I should be there. Here’s my invitation wish list:

1. calligraphed envelopes

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Bella Figura

2. vintage postage stamps

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100 Layer Cake

3. customized envelope liners

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Smock Paper!

4. baker’s twine somewhere

Oh So Beautiful Paper

5. edge painting

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Mrs. Gloss

6. hand canceled

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Source

7. letterpress

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Bella Figura

8. return address stamp

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For Yoo from Etsy

Um, what else. Oh yeah, a new Barbie doll, a pony, and an E-Z Bake Oven. Oh, and a Snoopy Snow Cone machine.

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Snow Cones!

Thanks, Wedding Santa!

xoxo,
Lobsty

What’s on your invitation wish list? Think you’ve been good enough for Wedding Santa?


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Miss Dolphin’s Easy DIY Daisy Pomanders

  • April 30, 2010 at 12:26 am

What are pomanders? Well, when Mr. Dolphin and I jumped on this crazy ride called our wedding, we had no idea. I simply dubbed them daisy balls ’til I could properly pronounce their official name (thanks to some help from Seminole Bridesmaid, aka, the wedding guru).

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image from Weddingbee Classifieds

After seeing these daisy pomanders in the Weddingbee Classifieds section for $75 for 10 of them (not including shipping or shepherds hooks to hang them on), I figured I could tackle these myself (and since the listing quickly sold, I had no choice but to make them myself). So, on I went to Walmart to purchase 6 green floral foam balls (only 6, not 10, because we are on quite the budget), yellow ribbon, and several bunches of daisies.

These beautiful daisy pomanders are super easy (and really quite fun to put together).

Step-by-Step Instructions: (I apologize I don’t have photos, I made these last May)

  1. Cut the faux daisy off the bunch at about 1.5″ from the flower
  2. Take the flower stem and stick it into the floral foam ball (I originally bought a hot glue gun to glue the daisies into the ball, but found that simply just sticking them into the ball, held them enough)
  3. Repeat, repeat, repeat until the green of the floral foam ball is no longer seen
  4. Then take a strip of ribbon and fold it over into a knot. String a large metal paper clip through the ribbon and stick the paper clip into the floral foam ball.
  5. Adjust the daisies until the paper clip is no longer seen.

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photos courtesy of Mr. Dolphin

And… voila! You have a daisy pomander, ready to hang on a cute little shepherd’s hook, or a chair arm.

  • faux white daisy bunches $4.50/bunch
  • green floral foam ball $2.37/piece
  • 40 inch shepard’s hook $5.97/piece

Total per Daisy Pomander set = $13.28
Grand total for 6 sets = $79.71
all items bought at Walmart

The ad on Weddingbee classifieds charged $7.50 per pomander (no hook), and I made them for about $7.31 each (no hook). Which I think, isn’t quite bad at all!

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Our ceremony decor hanging in our wedding closest. Mr. Dolphin even installed a light in the closest, so I could better see and organize all our wedding stuff. What a sweetie!

These babies are now hanging peacefully (as long as Dolphin Kitty doesn’t get to them!) in our wedding closet.

How are you keeping your animals out of your wedding stuff? :)


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Oh, That Minor Detail?

  • April 30, 2010 at 12:01 am

venue

You know how it goes: you have a general idea of what you’re looking for, do some research, make some calls, look at a bunch of options. Next, you agonize over the pros and cons and eventually embrace your decision. That was pretty much how we came to choose our wedding venue. If Mr. Seashell is reading, he’s rolling his eyes right now. More on that later.

Going with the tradition of celebrating the wedding where the bride is from, we had come to embrace a Rhode Island wedding. From there, selecting the season was an easy choice: spring is far too unpredictable and rainy, summer is too hot and sticky, winter is a crap-shoot between snowy perfection and gloom, and fall is… well, fall is when New England is at its most gorgeous. The rich, golden, colorful leaves, warm days and cool nights, apple cider, pumpkin picking, sweatshirts and shorts at the beach, and grabbing one last meal of clam cakes and chowder before winter arrives, makes fall my absolute favorite season. Thus, in a venue, we wanted something that felt uniquely New England.

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And here it is! The Glen Manor House in Portsmouth, RI: historic, beautiful, surrounded by trees and gardens, set on the water, and very Rhode Island. More than anything, it has an essence and feel that captures everything that makes my home state special.

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Photos courtesy of The Glen Manor House website

What elements were important in selecting your venue? Was there something you were hoping your venue would specifically reflect?


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Mine at Last: Getting with the Program

  • April 28, 2010 at 12:07 am

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Lamberdoodle’s sweet cousin handed out programs on the day of our wedding. She was so excited to be part of the festivities and took her duties quite seriously.

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I was really proud of how they turned out, but of course, there’s a whole, long back story.

One day, I was at Michaels. (Aside: Michaels probably wonders where the loony scavenging for black and white goods on discount went – or maybe they just think I morphed into the lavender and sage hunting crazy getting married in June?) Since I had previously left some very good, cheap paper in our wedding colors on the shelf to never be found again, I jumped at the chance to buy them out of 3 stacks of 8×8 crafting paper. I had no earthly idea what I was going to use them for, but gosh darn it, I would have them laying around when the time was right.

The time was right when I conceived of the idea to make programs. I quickly cut out a few pieces of scrap paper to ensure the measurements would work out. Lo and behold, if I cut the 8×8 sheets exactly in half and then created a tri-fold program on 8.5×11, I could get two programs from each piece of paper and tuck them neatly into their little jackets.

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Program024

Program025Program026Program027

It took a few hours and several printing tests, but I finally was able to squeeze all of the information we wanted into the allotted space, using Publisher.

PublishPublish01

I used Abigail font for the titles and Californian FB for the rest of the text (with some italicized). Both of these fonts were standard in my version of Office. I set the margins so that they would all be equal when I cut down the middle of the paper. In execution, I sent a PDF to Kinko’s and had them print and cut the cardstock. For $24 dollars, it was definitely a sanity saver not having to print double-sided on my home printer and cut each by hand.

The day after Christmas, I set my family to work. I had previously cut and folded all of the jackets while burning through my Netflix queue, but tri-folding the freshly printed insides was taking a bit of time. I also had a 1/16″ hole punch that was the needle eye to my 1/8″ ribbon camel. I also had quite a bit of pre-cut ribbon; however, I overestimate how many we would get from each roll. Since we needed more ribbon, I decided to break down and buy the 1/8″ hole punch while at Michaels. To top it all off, I had a ribbon length sample from a previous project, so Ewe Mother inadvertently cut all of the new ribbon into ties about 2 inches short, making them harder, but not impossible to tie. There was some rough going, but nothing says holiday cheer like everyone gathered around the table, carols on the radio, and teaching your Dad how to handle the bone folder. He’s a regular Martha Stewart now!

Did you con your family into wedding craft projects during a holiday gathering?

*First two photographs by our wonderful photographer Sam Hughes, and the rest by me.


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

The Organized (Modern) Bride

  • April 27, 2010 at 5:06 pm

I always thought I’d be the kind of bride lugging one of these things around everywhere I went:

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(source)

But, alas, I haven’t so much as bought one wedding-organizing-anything. It’s so not me! I imagined papers, receipts, and magazine snippets clogging a (neatly) overstuffed wedding binder. I just adore folders, labels, paper clips, and ultra fine point Sharpies. The just make me smile. I’m smiling as I write this.

So, where’s all my “stuff” you ask? Right here:

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(Personal Photo)

Notice the purple?

Jump drive: the perfect solution for a traveling bride. I’ve got the gazillion photos I’ve pulled from various blogs and websites, copies of all of our vendor contracts, our guest list on an Excel sheet, engagement photos, etc., backed up in one place. I take it with me every time I know I’m going to see someone who is going to want to see my latest wedding ideas!

Do you have all your wedding “stuff” in one place?


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Invitations Are Here!!!

  • April 24, 2010 at 11:55 pm

Our invitations arrived on Wednesday, and I am just giddy with excitement! Our mailman probably thought I was crazy, considering how fast I grabbed the box out of his hands and closed the door on him.

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I know I haven’t shared much about our invitations yet… but I love them so much that once I get started, I’m sure you’ll be begging me to stop. For now I’ll just say that I designed them myself and had them letterpress printed by Kristin at Twin Ravens Press. They turned out even better than I’d imagined, with double thick Crane Lettra paper, delicious indentations of my most favorite fonts, and pink envelopes, of course! I will slowly reveal them to you over the next couple weeks as I’ve only begun the little touches I’m planning to add!

Until then, I hope you all have a wonderful weekend! How are your invitations going? Are you designing them yourself, or turning to a trusted professional? Is the process going better than you expected or turning out to be a disappointment?


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Fun with STDs*

  • April 24, 2010 at 10:20 pm

I cannot craft. And I really, really mean that. I cannot craft. Back in my seventh-grade-teacher days, I sometimes assigned my students to make the occasional poster or collage and usually made an example for them to see. The kids always, ALWAYS soundly trumped my example with the projects they turned out. I was out-crafted by thirteen-year-olds on the regular.

So when it came time to start planning for our save-the-dates and invitations, I knew that I would not be touching a Gocco, a Cricut, Adobe Illustrator, or even plain ol’ MS Word with a ten-foot pole. Instead, I turned to your friend and mine, Etsy, and put out an Alchemy bid requesting someone to design PDFs, which I could then print myself (that makes it sort of DIY, right?!).

I got some good bids and some very, very not-good bids (think www.regretsy.com), but I got one outstanding bid, from seller gramkinpaperstudio. She offered me a great deal: $100 to design for our save-the-dates, invitations, RSVP cards, and information inserts, with five rounds of revisions for each item. Then I checked out her badass portfolio:

(Source: all from gramkinpaperstudio’s Etsy shop)

Hi. Sold.

So we got crackin’ on collaborating to design save-the-dates! I described my ideas—red and purple, statement fonts, throw a calendar in there somewhere, and can you find a spot for a few quirky little graphics?—and she responded incredibly quickly. With each revision, the design got closer and closer to what I had in mind, until, on the fourth round, it was perfect. I sent my PDFs off to OvernightPrints, and squealed with glee when these showed up a few days later:

I was really happy about how sharply the details of the design came out in the printing process.

They’re the “premium” postcard option, and they turned out exactly how I was hoping. The design is just what I had dreamed up in my head, and the print job is perfect. I was looking for something pretty and classy, but also a little off-beat and unexpected. I really hope everyone enjoys them as much as I do (although to be perfectly honest with you, I don’t actually mind if they do or not, because I love them enough not to care!!).

I included this picture so you could see the shine from the “gloss” treatment the postcard gets.

The one dumb, dumb mistake I made in the design process? It never occurred to me to ask the designer if, instead of putting lines for the return address in the top corner, she could instead actually include our return address. I paid for that oversight by writing our return address eighty times in a row. It was so super dumb, you guys.

And now, after many hours of address-writing and hilariously-irrelevant-polar-bear-stamp-affixing, these suckers are ready to be mailed to our guests!

Here’s a bonus shot of our save-the-date cozying up to Bridesmaid Erica’s save-the-date on our fridge.

Cost breakdown:

  • Design fee: $25 (though it was really all one lump some with the invitations; I just broke it down like this)
  • Postcard printing: $47
  • Postage: $23

Total: $95—exactly 95 cents per card!

Where did you get your STDs**? Was it a DIY, a semi-DIY, or a DISE (do-it-someone-else) job?

*Ha!
**Ha ha! Seriously, can’t stop myself.


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Wedding Dresses from the Vineyard Collection

  • April 22, 2010 at 5:00 pm

Continuing with all things fashion week, we have a sneak-peek of the Vineyard Collection from the powerhouse of bridal ware, Priscilla of Boston. This line is known for classic, clean shapes and perfectly tailored dresses with a flirty side. As always, kudos to Matthew and Enna Grazier who captured these frocks to perfection.

Vineyard Collection

Vineyard Collection

Vineyard Collection

Vineyard Collection

Vineyard Collection

You know what my most favorite part of this line is? The pockets! So genius. You can find more from the Vineyard runway show in our gallery. Happy perusing.

Grazier Photography is a member of our Little Black Book. For more information on how members are chosen, click here.

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This article was originally posted onStyle Me Pretty.

Don’t Be Such a Pansy – The Flowers

  • April 22, 2010 at 4:24 pm

Confession: I’m scared of flowers.

Before wedding planning, my flower facts included yellow roses are for friends and the fact that I like gerbera daisies (just to prove how clueless I am, the first time I wrote this post it read “Gerber daisies”. Gerber as in the baby food brand, sigh). I can tell if something is “pretty” but I can’t verbalize what I like about them. This is why I dreaded the floral decisions.

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Gerbera Daisies, Gerber Baby Food

Sadly, Googling “wedding flowers” didn’t help me much either. Then I found Style Me Pretty’s 121 pages of floral inspiration and Martha Stewart Weddings’ flower section.

I’ve always loved the fluffiness of them but I’m pretty sure peonies are out of the question in August. Then I found a viable alternative from Martha Stewart… and look how fluffy they look!

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I wanna be peony

Belathe

Source

Better yet, roses are less delicate than peonies and so they’ll be able to withstand the August heat and my abuse better (I don’t treat my things nicely, especially under stress). I also like dahlias and ranunculus, but maybe more for the centerpieces:

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Source

I love how the tones of pinks and purples in this centerpiece tie the colors together.

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Source

The multiple vases with different or single blooms adds some texture to the tablescape. The antique silver vases add a nice vintage garden feel, too!

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As you know, many brides are shocked when they get their first floral proposal. I didn’t want to be one of them. Luckily, I stumbled upon Weddingbee’s sister site Weddingbee PRO which has florist bloggers. This blog post was also helpful in understanding why wedding flowers are priced the way they are.

I am now armed with a few ideas and inspiration and a better knowledge of floral pricing. The next step would be to meet with one of the recommended florists.

Are you as scared of the floral decisions as I am? How did you do your research to prepare yourself?


This article was originally posted onWeddingbee.

Wedding Headpieces by Twigs & Honey

  • April 21, 2010 at 5:00 pm

What fashion week would be complete without the genius creations of Myra Callan, the mastermind behind Twigs & Honey? She is a purveyor of all things feathery and girly and I literally die over every single one of her pieces. Lucky for us, she has just joined the ranks of other fab designers in Style Me Pretty’s Look Book so you can peruse and shop her collection to your little heart’s content.

Twigs & Honey

Twigs & Honey

Twigs & Honey

Twigs & Honey

Twigs & Honey

If you are looking for that perfect finishing touch for your wedding day or you just feel like rocking some fabulous head gear, be sure to check out The Twigs & Honey collection in the Look Book because this, my dears, is just the tip of the iceberg.

Twigs & Honey is a member of our Look Book. For more information on how members are chosen, click here.

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This article was originally posted onStyle Me Pretty.