Question for the Marrieds!
Dec. 21st, 2006 10:39 pmHow does one go about properly researching wedding stuff? I've bought one Modern Brides magazine and looked at some others and been to brides.com and am mostly baffled and overwhelmed. Anyone have any suggestions on good books, sites, etc?
I want to get some research in cos hey, vacation. Also I really don't have too much idea what's out there or what costs what.
Stuff I DO know:
--NEED inexpensive where possible
--LIKE the idea of a Renaissance theme
--definitely no priest/church involved; possibly have ceremony performed by friend with internet certificate or just a mutual exchange of vows
--REALLY LIKE the idea of outside, either first day of spring or summer solstice.
What say you all?
I want to get some research in cos hey, vacation. Also I really don't have too much idea what's out there or what costs what.
Stuff I DO know:
--NEED inexpensive where possible
--LIKE the idea of a Renaissance theme
--definitely no priest/church involved; possibly have ceremony performed by friend with internet certificate or just a mutual exchange of vows
--REALLY LIKE the idea of outside, either first day of spring or summer solstice.
What say you all?
Welcome to the roller coaster!!
Date: 2006-12-22 10:40 pm (UTC)Getting married outside of a major metropolitan area is cheaper. Athens, for example, is saving us oodles compared to Atlanta. Are you planning to do it in Maryland or back in Georgia?
re: magazines. Most of those are nutty, too. However, I highly, HIGHLY recommend Bridal Bargains by Denis and Alan Fields, which is a book. Buy it used and read every section relevant to what you're doing. It's not romantic and starry-eyed, but it will save you moolah.
The reception is usually the majority of the cost, so if you can avoid feeding people a full meal, go for it. Ain't nothin' wrong with cake, punch and nibbles--hell, we're planning an "afternoon tea" sort of thing.
Check your preferred dates--if they're weekdays, you can probably get crazy-good bargains, but most folks won't be able to attend. Weekends, on the other hand, are more expensive, but more people you'd like to be there could probably make it (such is the balancing act of wedding planning). The first day of spring (I assume you're going for Ostara and not Imbloc?) might be a tight schedule, and depending on where you want to have it, sites might be booked already.
Outside weddings can be gorgeous--are there any parks you're thinking of? My cousing got married in a state park, and most are really quite reasonably priced. Private gardens and such can be more expensive, but are also more decorated (balancing act again).
There's a ton of stuff on Renn weddings on the net...just Google, if you haven't already, and you should find a gracious plenty. One of the things I find most helpful is when people post pictures of their weddings--it's one of the best ways to get ideas of what you like and don't like. Print pictures of what you do like (or rip them out of mags, should you happen to find any), and keep them all. Then take a look through them and figure out what the common elements are. That can help you pick out colors, dresses, etc. that really work for you.
Also, S and I did a neato little exercise that's helped a lot: Pick all the things you're going to end up spending money on. Make a list, then rank the lists (by yourselves) in order of most to least important. The compare lists and do whatever negotiating is needed. Helpful for illuminating expectations.
Re: Welcome to the roller coaster!!
Date: 2006-12-23 03:14 am (UTC)Scott and I think we want to have our wedding during the Cherry Blossom Festival, which will be beautiful and is also meaningful for us since it's where we met. So that means we're aiming for April 2008. I think I'm going to take the next few months to do research and really work out what we want solidly and then we can get things on the go. What do you think?