reclaiming wife

Posts Tagged ‘DIY Wedding’

Long time readers know that I started APW because I spent a previous lifetime working in professional theatre and planning productions and parties on limited budgets. But none of the common sense experience event planning experience I was so familiar with seemed to be reflected anywhere in the wedding world. Sadly, that seems to still be the case. So today, I’m thrilled to bring you some actually useful information on how to throw this party that is your wedding. Way back when I got married I coined the term Wedding Stage Manager. I had one at our wedding (who, funny enough, I’ll introduce to you later today… cliff hanger!), and there is a whole section of the APW book on wedding stage managers. So I’m beyond delighted that APW’s own Cindy has started Crafty Broads, a Wedding Stage Managing Business out of Chicago. Cindy is a professional theatrical stage manager, a brand new professional wedding planner, and here to tell you how to stage manage the hell out of your wedding.


{When you’re getting ready, someone else better be in charge. By Emily Takes Photos}

Hi, My name is Cindy, and I am a Stage Manager. I’m addicted to paperwork, checklists, sharpies, and starting on time (which, I’ve learned, is a near-impossible task). If you’re like me, you probably don’t need to read this post. But if you’re currently keeping track of your guest list on the back of a greeting card (I recently met with a client to discuss her upcoming wedding, and she whipped this out of her purse and started counting check marks…), or you’d be hard-pressed to find your photographer’s phone number if she doesn’t show up on time, you may need my help.

1. Get Organized

This is the hardest and most important step.

You need to set up a system for yourself to keep track of the big picture and all the little details. Get a big binder and divide it into tabs for each big part of your wedding. Here are some you might want to start with and what’s likely to go in them. You can use this binder from the get-go and include inspirational pictures and ideas as well, if you want.

  • Important Info(for me, this is a couple sheets in page protectors before the other sections; it’s the stuff you’ll reference most often on/right before your wedding day)
    • Contact Sheet – Name, Cell Phone Number, & Email Address of everyone with a role in your wedding (vendors, wedding party, family members, officiant, anyone needed for pictures)
    • Timeline – Detailed breakdown of what happens, when it happens, where it happens, and who needs to be there – for the entire day, including getting ready & getting home or to the hotel after the party is over
    • Checklist – of everything that needs to be brought to the ceremony or reception, and who is responsible for bringing it
    • Shot list for your Photographer
  • Budget
  • Ceremony
    • Venue information, including floor/seating plans, and any needed setup
    • Copy of your ceremony text
    • List of your processional/recessional order
    • Your marriage license, ready to be signed!
    • Anything else related to your ceremony
  • Reception
    • Venue information, including floor/seating plans, and any needed setup
    • Menu/Beverage List
    • Playlist for the DJ, with special songs (first dance, etc.) noted
    • List of who is giving toasts & list of people you want to remember to thank!
    • Anything else related to your reception
  • Guests
    • In addition to the guest list, you might also keep track of gifts received & thank you notes sent in this section.
  • Attire/Rings
    • Many of you may find this section optional. However, if you are coordinating dresses and/or suits for a large wedding party and/or parents, that could go here.
  • Décor/Floral/Photo/Video/Entertainment
    • Depending on your personal organizational style, you might put any of these in another section.
  • Vendor Contracts
    • All of them. You do have contracts, don’t you?

 

You probably noticed a bunch of paperwork referenced in that list (Contact Sheet, Guest List, Timeline, Checklists, Playlist, etc.). I recommend you use an online document service (like Google Docs) for these things. That way you can access them quickly from just about anywhere when you think of something that needs to be added or edited, and you and your partner can collaborate easily.

 

2. Make Backup Plans

Ok, now that you’ve got everything in one place, there are probably some things for which you should have backup plans. Examples are: outdoor events, which should have an indoor location secured in case of inclement weather; flower girls/ring bearers who may be suddenly shy and unwilling to walk the aisle in front of all those people; your iPod playlist which should be copied onto someone else’s iPod too!

3. Find the Missing Details

Read wedding grad posts, consult online checklists or friends who’ve gotten married, ask a planner – whatever. There is probably something you forgot (reserved signs for your family’s seats? someone to press play on the iPod? toasting glasses your grandmother sent you a month ago?), and if you take a little time now to check your list twice, you’ll figure it out before the big day arrives and thus avoid panic.

4. Hire a Wedding Stage Manager or Sweet Talk a Friend. As I said in my wedding grad post, a stage manager is not optional. Not because you need someone to plan your wedding for you, because, obviously you already did that in step 1. But because on your wedding day, you do not want to be setting up chairs and centerpieces before you run back to the hotel to get ready, wearing a watch to keep things happening on time, or talking to the catering manager every twenty minutes about what food to bring out and which tables go where.

Do you have to pay for this? No, you absolutely do not. Continue reading How To Stage Manage Your Wedding (In Six Mostly Easy Steps)

* Kiara, Archivist at the University of Glasgow &  John, Microbiologist * Photographer: Emma Case * Soundtrack for reading: Camera Obscura “French Navy” *

indie white wedding dress

wedding by river

small indie wedding

indie wedding up-do

indie wedding hair

groom wedding beard

indie social hall wedding

indie wedding decor

indie wedding balloons

indie wedding dance hall

scottish wedding first dance

The InfoVenue: Crear, Argyll, ScotlandDress: Made by Lisa of Dragonfly Dress Design, Glasgow / Bride’s Shoes: Vivienne Westwood Melissa shoes / Suit: Kenneth Cole / Groom’s Shoes: Brogues from Russell & Bromley / Flowers: bought wholesale from L & H Flowers and arranged by bride’s mother / Paper goods: designed by the bride and printed at MooPhotographer: Emma Case

Other cool stuff you should know about: We practised our first dance in our pyjamas at 6:30 the morning of the wedding in our wee cottage.  Halfway through we decided it was way too long and boring, so cut two minutes off it—best decision ever. Our brothers each took charge of a camera (one of them was a £10 super 8 ebay bargain) and we diy’d our wedding video (Meg’s note: watch it, it’s amazing.) My dress had pockets which I absolutely loved!  We set off all the sheepdogs at 3am walking back through a neighbouring farm after the wedding which was scary and hilarious and broke the magical spell of walking home along a country lane under a bright starry night sky.

One sentence sum up of the wedding vibe: Hanging out with our favourite people the whole day when they were all just really bloody happy for us was the best feeling ever, pure joy.

Favorite thing about the wedding: We had a friend read an extract from Jane Austen’s Emma as our second reading.*  As I listened to the last sentence, holding John’s hand knowing we were both blinking away tears I realised that we were indeed surrounded by our true band of friends. This made the fact that they all then spontaneously whooped and applauded at the end of the ceremony even more special and one of our favourite things about the day.

*As featured by Meg here

Wedding found via the APW Flickr stream

After this morning’s beautiful wedding, featuring a lovely and huge hair flower, I thought it was high time for a hair flower tutorial. As someone who made her own wedding hair flower (with only a little help from her husband), I can tell you: these things are as easy to make as they are expensive to buy. And I am, rather decidedly, not a crafter. So today’s tutorial comes from Sophia, and it is both simple and lovely.

DIy wedding hair flower

Materials

  • Fabric. I used the 1.5 inches that were hemmed off of my wedding dress and the wedding dress liner. If you don’t have extra dress fabric find any fabric you like with a finished hem. I used the hem of an old ratty linen skirt for this tutorial.
  • Scissors
  • Floral wire (USE SILVER NOT GREEN since green will show through many fabrics). Green is what I have at home right now so you’ll have to pretend it’s silver for this tutorial…
  • A fancy button that you like
  • Needle and thread
  • A denim iron on patch (not shown

Directions

Cut a 1.5-2 foot length of wire and make a loop with the end of your wire. Thread it through your finished hem and sew the loop to the end of your fabric. Continue reading How To: Make A Wedding Hair Flower

When I was little girl, and was a flower girl (only once, though it was my life’s ambition), the bride took me aside at the rehearsal dinner to show me her veil (squeee!) and to explain to me that you should always, always make your veil. She explained that veils were marked up, and a huge rip off, and pretty easy to sew. I, of course, listened carefully, and nodded seriously, and then Remembered Forever. So when it came time for our wedding, I knew I was going to make what was on my head. After a What To Wear On Your Head When You Wed series, I finally ended up making a crazy beautiful hair flower (tutorial coming soon). So today, I’m super delighted to bring you a lazy girl How To on making a veil, from Adria. Let’s get started, and bury ourselves in Tulle:

Let me start with some words of advice…

If you’re going to roll with a DIY veil, start early.  Look, I love crafting, and I have some (limited) time to do it, and I really enjoy knocking out projects, but if I was trying to make this thing one month before our wedding, I would have lost it.  The details are tedious, and totally boring.  Sewing beads onto tulle?  Aw-ful.  But the end result is worth it.


Start with a good idea of what you want your veil to look like.  The first trial veil that I made wasn’t based on anything other than the concept that trimming a veil with ribbon would be the easiest of all edging techniques.  I like the trial veil, but it’s not quite as complete and inspired as I wanted my veil to be.  I wanted the veil that I tried on in the bridal salon, trimmed with scalloped lace and accented with beading.  I just didn’t want to spend $200 on it…it was that simple.

Use the good idea of what you want as a starting point, but don’t attempt to copy it 100%. I say that because 1) It’s probably going to be impossible to copy anything 100%…I’m convinced that either the veils out there are made by machines or are hand made by very, very talented people. And, 2) These people (or machines) (Editors note: Or people who are machines…) have resources that you and I can’t access.  I scoured the internet and the local fabric/craft stores for scalloped lace, but was unable to find exactly what I wanted.  Mainly, that’s because I started wanting the exact same lace that was on my inspiration veil and it just doesn’t exist in the places that I can shop.  I ended up buying lace from a shop on Etsy and trimming it down to the width that I wanted.  It turned out far better than I could have ever imagined.

Be patient and don’t try to be perfect.  This is my mantra in most everything that I craft.  Look, there will be some beads askew, or you’ll forget to put on four beads and instead only have three in a certain spot.  Or perhaps your tulle oval will be every so slightly “off”.  No one will notice.  Don’t let it drive you batty.  The beauty of anything hand made is that it’s made from the heart and soul, and it’s not perfect.  That’s what makes it awesome. Continue reading How To: DIY A Wedding Veil

As we’ve re-started the new APW How-To series, we’ve tried to keep things fun. There are plenty of sites that will give you detailed how-tos on craft projects. But what about those of us that just want to make fun things, with not too much effort? Well. What’s more fun to make than booze, I ask you. So today’s super simple, super fun How-To post is from Meghan, who’s mountain cabin wedding and miscarriage story I’m sure you remember. She’s talking about homebrewing beer for your wedding, because if you’re going to DIY, you might as well prioritize the important stuff, eh?

The Key Questions:

1. Do you like beer?  (If yes, go to step 2 and if no, proceed to step 12.)

2. Have you always wanted to brew beer?

3. Do you want to brew beer for your wedding?

4. Do you realize this will not necessarily save you any money?

5. Can you bring beer to your venue and do you have a place to store it until that time?

6. Is it at least a few months before your wedding date?  (If yes, go to step 7 and if no, you probably cannot make beer in time.) Continue reading How To: Homebrew Your Wedding Beer

When we re-introduced the APW How-To Series, long time APW sponsor Blooms By The Box contacted me and asked if they could do a step-by-step tutorial on how to make a wedding bouquet, and I believe I said, “Eeeeee! Yes!” You see, back when I was figuring out how to do flowers for my wedding, I scoured the web for this sort of tutorial, in the process of teaching myself how to make a round, hand-tied wedding bouquet. And thank goodness, they are easy to make. So I’m thrilled that we finally have a full tutorial here on APW. Also, to be clear, this is in no way a sponsored post, but I do want to say that if I had to do my wedding flowers all over again, I’d order from Blooms By the Box (and they didn’t pay me to say that). Running around a flower mart the day before our wedding was a little stressful, and having flowers land on my doorstep? Yeah. Easy and awesome, and I’d do that now. But no matter where you get your wedding flowers (and this post has lots of ideas to help you out), you shouldn’t be scared of them, because they are actually pretty easy. So let’s do this thing:

When Meg relaunched APW’s How-to series, I immediately emailed her to do a lazy girl’s step-by-step DIY. We decided to focus on bouquets because we both felt that: there is a misconception that DIY’ing your own bouquet is an arduous feat, which it’s absolutely not. Meg has proved that making your own bouquet is not scary in the least. But, hey, a foolproof step-by-step How-to never hurt anyone, right?

Before we go into how to make a bouquet here’s some things to think about:

Sourcing Flowers

You can buy your flowers from:

  • A flower market (like Meg did)
  • An online wholesaler (Like Blooms By The Box)
  • A grocery store,Trader Joe’s, ,Costco, Sam’s Club, wherever you can find the best quality flowers on the cheap

I agree with Meg, DIY doesn’t save the world, and it isn’t always cheaper. But when it comes to wedding flowers I personally feel that the latter of the two should be true. When you hire a florist you are not only price quoted for the flowers, but also the labor put into making your floral arrangements. So, if you can take the labor out of the cost by DIY’ing your own flowers, you’ll be spending a lot less money.

And with that in mind, make sure to get the best bang for your buck! Figure out what your budget is, what kind of flowers you want, and how many flowers you’ll need; then do some research. If your local grocery store is stocked with awesome quality blooms for a great price, then go that route. And if an online wholesaler is your best bet, click away! Just figure out what’s best for you and what you feel most comfortable with.

Next, don’t be afraid to mix and match suppliers and/or vendors.

We live in a world of many, many options; and no one said that you had to go one place and one place only to get your flowers. With other aspects of your wedding, yes, you may have to be loyal to one particular supplier or vendor. But with your flowers, do what works for you and your budget. If you want to get your roses from Costco, but your greenery from the flower market, then go for it! There is no flower-buying etiquette to be followed here, trust me the flowers will understand.

Lastly, keep seasonality in mind.

I’m sure lots of you didn’t know that “seasonality” is a proper word, but it’s a common phrase in the flower industry. We use it to describe flower varieties that have very seasonal growing patterns, which you definitely need to think about when choosing certain flowers. For instance, peonies have a very sporadic growing season, which is why they are insanely expensive at certain times of the year and not available in hot summer months. On the other hand, hydrangea are grown in green houses all year-round which makes them less costly because they are more readily available. Basically, when seasonal flowers are in season they are the best quality and most affordable!

And now, without further ado, here’s my take on…

How-to make a bridal bouquet

Set up your workspace, keeping in mind that you are going to make a mess. Kitchens are ideal because clean up is easy, and if you have a lot of counter space, even better! An outdoor space would also work. Keep all flowers in big buckets too!

Things you’ll need: Floral shears, floral tape, bouquet pins, and the bouquet wrap of your choice (we used white ribbon). And your wedding flowers, of course! We used pink lisianthus, white spray roses, green pompon button mums, painted lady wax flower, purple statice, and green hypericum.

Prep your flowers. Make sure all foliage has been removed from the stems, roses are de-thorned, and whatever you need to do so your flowers are ready for action!

Make sure that all of the stem lengths are about the same (anywhere from 10-14 inches). You can always trim as you go, or cut them at the end.

Choose 2-4 flowers to start the “base” of your bouquet. These flowers will serve as the anchor, as you will build around them. Bunch the stems together and wrap with floral tape. Make sure that there is 1 to 1 ½ inches of exposed stem visible from where you begin to wrap the stems and anywhere between 4 to 5 inches of exposed stem from the bottom. Continue reading How To: Make A Wedding Bouquet