Our Big Day Our Way

By The Waters Edge.

July 4th, 2011

Sometimes I am confronted with images so beautiful I am completely and utterly lost for words. Literally.

Anna and Tony who say “I Do” in just a few weeks time are not only ridiculously gorgeous, they are deliciously, hopelessly and unequivocally in love. Their Scarborough shoot captured by Love Lust List member Jon at S6 Photography encapsulates everything that I look for in a RMW worthy engagement feature. And that folks is exactly that – everything. The emotion, the location, that pure unadulterated magic between two soon-to-be newly weds.

So, without further ado, I’ll let you sit back, enjoy and make plans to go hold hands in the sea with your favourite boy whilst fully clothed…..

I know I sure as hell am.

Anna: Being a born and bred south Yorkshire lass I always wanted to get married in my home city Sheffield. So when our search for a photographer started we headed online and very happily came across Jon from S6 Photography, we both loved his pictures and his relaxed yet intimate style.

Having stalked Jon’s blog for the past 6 months we noticed he was starting to do engagement shoots or pre-wedding shoots. We really liked the idea of doing a shoot not just for the photo’s but to get used to having our picture taken and to try and relax us on the day so we knew what was coming. (Hopefully not more water!)

Tony and I live in Scarborough and as we are getting married in the steel city we thought it might be a lovely idea to have some pictures where we live by the sea. Having grown up here Tony also really liked the idea of including Scarborough somewhere in the wedding.

Scarborough is a lovely little seaside town and on the right day, in the sun, looks picture postcard. Luckily for us the day we had the shoot was the perfect day, sun shining and brilliant blue sky and sea. Although I didn’t think we would be taking a dip! Even though we were totally soaked with sand everywhere it was so much fun and looking at the pictures I am so happy we decided to do it.

The wedding in only 2 and half weeks away, final details and table plans are ruling our lives but we are so excited about the whole day and what Jon will capture for us!


Photography - Love Lust List Member Jon at S6 Photography

Was I right?

Do you now have an unprecedented desire to go jump bare foot in the waves?

All I’ll say is this: I can’t wait to see the ruddy wedding.

Big If I was Anna and Tony ALL these images would go on my wall Love

Charlotte xxx

A Farm Yard Engagement Shoot

June 28th, 2011

It’s fair to say that we are getting sent more and more engagement shoots these days and we often get asked what exactly makes the cut for the blog. It’s simple really… great photography, really great styling, or just a really Rock My Wedding take on things and thats exactly where todays shoot comes in, courtesy of Andy Wardle.

Helen and Stuart work and live on a farm so instead of getting all dressed up, they had their engagement shoot on the farm, where their real life love story plays out every day. And aside from the romance of that, they got some absolutely belting (Do I sound suitably ‘Northern’ right now?) images, with more than a little farm yard fun thrown in!

Andy Wardle: Helen and Stuart live and work on a lovely farm out in the cheshire sticks and are getting hitched in July. Such a great couple and are as salty as salt of the earth folk get . So the obvious choice for their E-shoot was to get down and dirty on the farm!

We had a great laugh messing about with all the old farm stuff and at times feeling like a film set with too many props to mention :O)

Now most guys are a bit camera shy so I thought guy + farmer…mmmm. However by the end of the shoot even a burly, no nonsense norther farmer really enjoyed himself…Result!

There’s nothing frilly or fancy about this E-shoot, just two people who are in love and getting married. Just like all of us really, except I wish I lived on a farm. :D

Yours Truly,

Rebecca
xoxo

You can find Andy Wardle on The Love Lust List, however, all features are chosen on individual merit and no part of this post is sponsored.

The First 90 Days…

June 19th, 2011

Before you read this, (which probably isn’t what you’re expecting…) I had to just jump in and explain a little bit about what Gemma has written…

I asked Gemma, (who’s Hobart wedding you’ll remember from recent weeks) to write about her honeymoon when she mentioned that instead of having a traditional get-away, she and her husband had decided to do aid work. It’s something I have contemplated and so suitably impressed, I asked more about it. Aside from the volunteering, it was fascinating, although not entirely surprising to hear her take on how it affected their relationship, the lessons they learned and how it made them stronger as a couple.

I hope you enjoy reading about their first 90 days as much as I did and thank you Gemma for sharing it with us. :)

It has to be said from the outset that I love a bit of luxury, me. Pretty hotels make me happy. If we book somewhere lovely for a night, I take a photo of the room before we touch anything and ‘mess it all up.’ Had I ever really thought about a honeymoon before I was engaged, I’d probably have envisioned it taking place somewhere a bit plush, a little polished. Maybe a tropical resort, or maybe somewhere swish in a city. I certainly would have imagined running water and electricity! However what we actually did turned out to be truly rewarding and inspiring in a way that a posh room can never be.

The guests at our wedding gave (and very generously too, I might add) us gifts of money. We ummed and ahhed about doing our ‘money tree’ on the day because we both felt a bit uncomfortable asking for cash – but because we have made our life in London and we marrying in Australia, physical gifts weren’t practical at all. It was at some point early in the planning process that R floated the idea that we not spend any money we were given on stuff for a home we didn’t have yet (my list of ‘wants’ included a pale blue kitchenaid, a Rob Ryan print, some Portmerion china and an Alessi kettle to name a few) and that we go off and do aid work somewhere instead. Now for all my daily swooning over the luxe and the lovely, I have always wanted to do some kind of volunteer work overseas, and R felt the same. We’ve always agreed that we are incredibly lucky to have comparatively privileged lives. (sometimes I need reminding of this at the shoe counter in Selfridges, though.) We didn’t want to lose sight of the ‘big picture’, but when you’re planning a wedding and bombarded every day with expectations, inspirations and also stuff, stuff, and more wedding-related stuff, it can happen. I started to be able to justify ridiculous expense in my head for various things, and one morning when I was lying in bed I added up my list of ‘wedding wants’ (as separate from ‘house wants’, above) and realised I would have been ashamed to share it with R, the man I was marrying. Oh dear. I kept that little epiphany to myself and when R suggested we go to an orphanage in Asia to volunteer, I readily agreed.


*See the rest of Gemma’s Wedding here.

So we decided on Burma, much to the gasping of our families. A small country bordered by Laos, China, Thailand and Bangladesh, Burma’s official name is The Republic of the Union of Myanmar. Oh, and it’s run by a tightly controlled military government who spend an average of 80pence per person, per year, on public health. The Burmese economy is one of the least developed of the world, and the government is under UN sanction for various human rights abuses. The more I read about life for the Burmese (no freedom of speech, little access to education, no electricity or fresh water in some villages, political imprisonment, etc etc) the more I wanted to help, and the more I wondered whether we would actually be able to be of any real help – we didn’t want to be do-goody Westerners with bleeding hearts getting in the way, or in the case of Burma, getting the people into serious trouble with the government. It was supremely difficult to organise, too, because very few places in Burma have telephones, and the ones that do exist are only able to call within the country, calling out is forbidden. Despite all this we managed and left the snowy UK winter for Kuala Lumpur, where we had to apply for visas to enter Burma.

We arrived about 5pm on a Saturday, after much hilarity on the plane as I was sitting next to two Burmese ladies who couldn’t speak or read a single word of English and therefore couldn’t fill in their landing cards which were written completely in English. I filled them out for them at their request and after much flipping through of the Burmese phrase book, and to say thank you they gave me an orange and a few hugs and told me they loved me forever. One was also determined to lend me her reading glasses when she saw me pick up my novel.

Our first impressions of Burma were in many ways what we expected it to be but in others totally different. I was amazed at how modern, clean and sleek the airport was, but then we came out of customs and arrivals accompanied by our Burmese host and into an ancient kombi-like bus which I won’t go into detail describing, suffice to say no seatbelts, suspension or even attached seats. It did have big windows though through which we eagerly drank in the sights of the city, which ranged from the sublime (the Shewdagon Pagoda – a giant golden temple that is said to be clad in more gold than is contained in all the bank vaults in England, described by Rudyard Kipling as ‘A golden mystery that upheaved itself on the horizon’) to the ridiculous including a man carrying two basket bags at either side, both bursting at the seams with squawking live chickens. And one was perched on his head.

We had obviously been expecting to see a lot of poverty, but I don’t think anyone living a comfortable Western life can ever imagine what it’s truly like until they go. Just outside our guest house were people living in corrugated iron sheds which looked like they’d been cobbled together with thumbtacks and would fall over under the weight of a fairly puny kick, kids squatting in the dust and playing across overgrown, but live train tracks and many wrinkled locals who opened their mouths to smile at us and displayed rows of blackened, rotted teeth. The people were incredibly friendly, and although we attracted a few stares and giggles (I think for our height more than anything else, we both towered over the Burmese by quite a way, and R bumped his head a few times going into doorways) everyone was forever smiling at us and calling out hello. On the first night we were there, we sat outside our guest house and took stock – We had seen no signs whatsoever of any kind of upheaval or unrest, and felt completely safe, just a little excited and nervous about what was to come.

On the Monday, after some sightseeing on Sunday, we took the ‘Circle Train’ to the Paw Khan settlement which is about 8km away from central Yangon. Despite being such a short distance, the train however took an hour to get there and rattled us round like marbles in jar. We shared the ride with chickens, baskets of bananas and a pakora seller who was frying his wares over a bubbling pot of oil without spilling a drop. Going at that speed meant we saw a lot of the countryside and also because we were running late every. single. day. (no change from my London life there, then!) we could make a sprint for it at the station and swing ourselves up on without any major injury which considering my coordination is no mean feat.

We were both a little apprehensive before our first day but as it turned out we needn’t have been, and we spent our time at the centre playing with the adorable children and helping out with basic tasks. Mainly staffed by women, the Eden is testament to what’s going right in Burma – it’s incredibly efficient, the teachers and carers are all very professional and enthusiastic, the parents and communities of the disabled children are integrated into various programs and basically the only thing lacking is funding. R and I certainly provided a lot of fun and laughter for the kids and the staff, and we were told that the thought that people in the developed world cared enough to visit them was amazing. It was incredibly humbling for us, to see how adroitly the people just got on with what needed to be done to rehabilitate their children so cheerfully and with so few resources. I tend to fall back on clichés when I talk about Burma, but I can’t help it. It was a humbling, life changing, ‘you’ll never know until you go’ experience. It did ‘really make us think’ and ‘re-examine our priorities.’ And we will never forget everyone we met at the centre, including a little boy called Goji who insisted on jumping up into R’s arms every time he clapped eyes on him, even if he was meant to be sitting quietly, Oli, a 10 year old downs syndrome boy who ran to meet us in the mornings, Augustina, a downs girl who shyly cuddled my legs and constantly whispered ‘mingalaba’ to me (it’s hello in Burmese but it’s also a blessing) and dozens of others, all of whom we fell in love with and were very sad to leave. We hope to go back at some stage and visit taking some supplies, like books, toys, writing paper, pencils – the very basics which, to spout another cliché, we take for granted in schools at home.

When our volunteering came to an end, we were both pretty exhausted. It sounds a bit precious, because there are people who do it every day without complaint, but we found the work quite emotionally draining. We didn’t have heaps of time to be ‘tourists’ in Yangon but one Saturday we visited the Shwedagon Pagoda which I mentioned above, and it really was one of the most amazing things we’ve ever seen. We lost count of the Buddha statues dotted around after about number 57. Because we were both born on a Saturday, according to Burmese astrology our lives follow the same cycle of good years and bad years, but obviously staggered by a difference of 6 years because R is older than me. We sat down cross-legged for an hour or so with a spiritual teacher at the Pagoda who explained that R is currently under the influence of a ‘difficult planetary time’ and that his luck will really change for the better when he turns 42. If the last year, especially, has been one of the most rubbish of his life, I confidently expect a lottery win in 2021.

Our guide taught us about the way to Nirvana and the road to spiritual enlightenment, and kept mentioning ‘right thought, right speech and right molarity’. We assumed this was a spoonerism and he meant us to keep a strict eye on our morals, though due to the damage he’d done to his teeth chewing betel nuts it is possible he was talking about dental hygiene and not making the same mistake he had.

The following week we travelled by bus overnight (with more chickens!) from Yangon to Mandalay. We had both romanticised the city in our separate ways – for me, it was after reading ‘The Glass Palace’ by Amitav Ghosh, and imagining the life of the Burmese royalty in the late 1800s. We debated about actually visiting the palace, as although it’s open to the public, it was rebuilt by forced labour in the 90s, and any entry fee money goes directly to the government, however we did go and it was a highlight of the trip for me. We roamed the practically deserted citadel, walked silently through the reception rooms and mirrored walls the palace is named for, and with a bit of (over-active if you ask my husband!) imagination the gorgeous design and gracious bungalows of Queen Supayalat’s quarters came alive for us and I danced on the lawn barefoot and pretended it was ours. Mandalay Hill was another fascinating ‘tourist’ site – it was magnificent, with views from the summit stretching out all over the city. Mandalay Hill is sacred to the Burmese, and used as a prayer site. On the steps up to the top though is wedding town! A lot of Burmese can’t afford new wedding gowns and when they put their day together it’s a combination of scrimping together whatever they can beg or borrow.

If they can’t, for whatever reason, get a photo taken on the day, (lots of people we met later in the trip had only one or two photos of themselves taken in a whole lifetime) there are a few photographers who have ‘offices’ on the way up Mandalay Hill complete with ‘props’ and ‘stages’ and even accessories girls can borrow. As you can see in the photos – the ‘sets’ are gorgeous and I was desperate to climb in and have a play, but we didn’t want to be disrespectful (let’s face it, I’d have broken that tiny chair!) and it was just a wee bit disappointing there wasn’t a real bride there on the day! (I wanted to wait around and see if anyone turned up but R vetoed that suggestion.)

From Mandalay we went to Bagan, (another bus ride, this time with a sack of rice as a seat) and hired pushbikes to ride around all day ‘sunset chasing’, seeing literally hundreds, if not thousands of temples as we explored the surrounding villages. The temples in Bagan seem to sprout up on their own so numerous are they, and they’re as much a part of the countryside as the trees and bushes. The oldest ones were built in the 11th century and you can still see the murals on their walls. Super-frustratingly the camera ran out of battery half way through the day and we hadn’t brought any spares with us so we retraced our steps the next day although, as is always the way, photos never really do justice to what we saw. We spent a few days in Bagan and then bussed again to a mountain region called Kalaw in readiness to do a hike into the country-side and see what a lot of the Burmese told us, was the ‘real Myanmar.’ From Kalaw (where we stayed in a guest house room that reminded me of a painted out stable, complete with large fence bolt on the door) we trekked for 3 days and two nights down to Inle Lake, a walk of about 70km that took in some of the most poverty stricken parts of the country. We walked through villages that were so incredibly poor it was mind blowing, where they speak their own, almost unrecognisable, dialects of Burmese, where the kids make their toys out of sticks and discarded fruit, where there are government built schools that stand empty because no parents can afford to pay a teacher to use the classrooms.

One town we went to had the ‘industry’ of making straw brooms, by hand, under the heat of the midday sun. The people had no electricity, took their water from ground wells and have no real roads in or out of their homes – for a lot of people in the mountains of Burma the only way to move around is to walk. Our guide was a 30 year old Burmese man called Jo, and at one stage I mentioned to him that my father was an engineer. His response was ‘what a lucky man your father is, to have been able to study something so interesting and to have such a venerable job. Your family is truly fortunate’ That comment really stuck in my head – Normally we wouldn’t say a family was ‘fortunate’ unless they’d just won the lottery. During the trek we stayed for a couple of nights in Burmese houses with families, and it was, again, incredibly humbling to see that we’d been given what was the best room in the house , decorated with flowers, and had been given all the family’s blankets while they slept next to the cast iron firepot in the kitchen. We ate by candlelight after watching the sun go down and the temperature dropped sharply, so we snuggled up on the wooden floor and looked out at the stars. In the morning we showered with a watering can and steam came off us – we could see our breath in the air, but by 9 o’clock the burning sun was out again. Once we were nearing the bigger cities again we spent one night in a monastery which was absolutely fascinating. Myanmar is a predominantly Buddhist country, and it is a requirement that every Burmese man spends at least two periods of his life (between the ages of 8 and 13, and again between 30 and 40, for between a few months to a couple of years) cloistered in a monastery dedicating himself to Buddhism. We were in the same room (a large hall with rattan sleeping mats on the floor) as the ‘mini monks’ boys between 8 and 11. Despite their ceremonial robes and angelic faces, boys are boys anywhere in the world: very cute and very cheeky! Their day at the monastery started with chanting at 4.45 in the morning but that was ok as we’d been in bed not long after the sun went down the night before (again by torch and candle light) and waking up to the giggles and whispers of 70 baby monks who don’t want to get out of bed was really a lot of fun. Plus there’s something soothing about being curled up on a rattan mattress under warm blankets as the sound of meditation washes over you – very relaxing and it was difficult to be outside for breakfast by 6.30!

Not long after this, unfortunately, our visas were up and we had to leave. There was a lot that we did and saw that isn’t in this report, partly because it’s long enough as it is, and partly because it’s not a great idea to be too specific and people and places in Burma due to government censorship and control. At one stage when we were on the bus it was raided by Burmese military police and each person’s luggage was checked for ‘contraband’ like mobile phones, laptops or incendiary literature. At one stage R is pretty sure we were followed by ‘reporters’ which is apparently the norm – the government likes to know what foreigners are doing and where they are going. We tried to do what we could to help but really it was drop in the ocean. Our trip was challenging, tiring, and at times distressing. We were often really quite filthy, occasionally ill from the food or the water, and sometimes overwhelmed at the notion that we have everything while some people have nothing. And yet it was the best thing we’ve ever done. It showed us sides of each other, and ourselves, that we’d not seen – we impressed each other, and we were 100% together, as a unit, the whole time. It wouldn’t have worked otherwise. And at the end of the day, I think that the ‘being a unit’ is what the honeymoon is meant to be all about.

It might not be everybody’s first thought of what a honeymoon is all about, but I couldn’t have put the sentiment better myself. Anything that has such a thought provoking and positive effect on your relationship can’t be a bad thing and how amazing to know that you have helped other people when we all live our lives in such relatively absolute luxury.

I hope this has given you all a thought provoking story for your Sunday and acts as a fitting end to Wifey week.

May all of you yet to experience them, have a happy and fulfilling first 90 days of building your very own family unit.

Yours Truly,

Rebecca
xoxo

PS You are going to L-O-V-E next week as we unveil the new Real bride contenders day by day. Each morning or afternoon we will be posting a selected entry each hour, then opening the voting. We have six categories and posting will continue right up to and including Sunday. Every individual vote counts! (Friends and family may vote too!) Voting will be open until the friday after next, (Friday 1st July.)

A Love Story.

June 15th, 2011

Because that’s what it’s all about isn’t it.

After the rings have been exchanged and the cake has been eaten and you have both had the time of your life….. what are you left with?

A Marriage. A Happy Ever After. A Love story.

And as much as we adore pouring over every last detail of your W-day we also like to hear about how it all began, how you first met, what happened at the proposal, how much you are looking forward to spending the rest of your lives together.

RMW reader, founder of stationery design company Pocket Typewriter, Love Lust List member AND general uber stylish lady Leckie (so many attributes!) and her fiance John are sharing their love story with you gorgeous lot today. Oh, and their engagement shoot is based on the film “The Notebook”.

I know. I die.

These images are some of the most beautiful I have ever seen.

And that’s all I have to say.

Leckie from Pocket Typewriter: Well it all started with a resignation and the drive of our life, East coast to West coast America! I was hoping that there may be a chance of a proposal but to my disappointment there was no sign, no hidden ring (I checked the bag!) and on the night we reached the Californian coast and he said that we had to get up and watch the sunrise I thought “this is it, my time has come!”

I got up that little bit earlier and popped on a bit of lippy (I had to look half decent if I was getting engaged today). So we snuggled on the edge of a rock looking out at the rising sun on the horizon, I felt so in love and had butterflies fluttering overtime in my tummy. So the sun rise came and went and still we were snuggling (What was going on??!). Next thing I know John is saying “we should get some rest as we have a drive ahead of us in the morning”.

I guess it was not meant to be, oh well at least we have had an amazing holiday. I kept that thought for the remaining few days of our trip as we had San Francisco as our grand finale!

Then came the penultimate day to our holiday and John wanted to catch the morning sun on the Golden Gate Bridge for ‘the shot of the holiday’, he had been snapping away at every given opportunity so this was nothing suspicious. Anyway, we walked to the bridge where we sat with it in full view, no fog (which is unusual for San Fran) and John handed me a folded piece of paper, on which he had written some beautiful words; describing the moment his mind was made up, how he had gone to see my dad to ask his permission and the very place we were now occupying (by this point I was crying, the soppy woman that I am!) John then proceeded to get down on one knee and ask the words I had been dying to hear “Leckie, will you marry me”. I couldn’t speak, I was so happy, all I could do was nod my head manically. “you have to answer in words Leckie”………… I was able to final muster a massive “yes, yes, yes!”

We arrived home, only to be met by our parents at the airport with flowers, flash photography and a million and one kisses, even with mega jet lag (after 3 changes and nearly missing the final flight home!) it was the best feeling ever. We were home and the planning began!

Then came the time to find the wedding photographer! We wanted to have an engagement shoot (that I only discovered actually existed through trawling the wedding blogs and magazines) that told our love story through the setting, styling and theme and so when we met Jade Alana and Michele Gledhill and they suggested we base the engagement shoot on “The Notebook” I was over the moon as this is the ultimate love story! (I weep every time, that’s my soppy side rearing its little head again!)

Well we had the perfect setting, it meant so much to us to have the shoot in a place that was close to our hearts, so we were thrilled to be able to able to use John’s family home…. So, here is what the marvellous Jade and Michele came up with……..

Jade requested a vintage bike with a basket (I started liking Jade even more, we are definitely on the same wave length; John had bought me one the last Christmas). Michele put together a beautiful bunch of flowers, new romantic with a vintage twist, this is the theme for our wedding in July…..

John and I were very enthusiastic about the images that Jade wanted to capture, as I have already mentioned we were on the same wave length so I trusted her, I think trust is key with the person who is capturing your very own personal love story. So when she asked if we could get the horse out (John’s sister’s (Jody) horse Megan) we went for it!

Megan did tread on John’s toes and refused to move, I think it was her way of saying she had had enough!

While we were trying to get Megan off John’s foot, Michele had created an amazing scene with vintage lace and gorgeous little bottles hanging from the tree with those lovely flowers again. It looked magical and really reflected our personalities, which shows with the stationery we have chosen (designed by my brother which has since launched our creative stationery business- had to get the little advert in there!) All I can say is that Michele really is a styling guru!

Then came the real Notebook part of the shoot…..THE BOAT SCENE! It was great fun, John’s dad (also John, yes it gets very confusing!) cleaned out their little wooden boat and pushed us onto the pond, which although looked perfect did smell like a sewage works, the things you do to look good eh!

And so concludes our engagement shoot (and John thinking it would only take half an hour!). Well it was a fab experience that even John relaxed into, but I think that was down to Jade, photographer extraordinaire!

Photography – Jade Webb

Stylist - Michele Gledhil

Stationery – Leckie at Pocket Typewriter

Ok so I have a bit more to say.

I realise that engagement shoots are not as popular as they are across the pond. And I can appreciate that some couples would feel uncomfortable posing in front of a camera (even on W-day, let alone just for “fun”)

However, when it’s this pretty and when everything that is included in terms of styling is 100% a representation of the couples’s relationship?

I think it’s magical.

Big will someone have this bouquet on their wedding day please? Love

Charlotte xxx

Making Peace with My Wedding

June 13th, 2011

Aside from talking about being married this week, I couldn’t help but start by sharing this story with you… the story of why I chose my dress, and I guess lots of other decisions in my own planning.

In a way this post is cathartic… my love/hate relationship with my dress has been well documented on here through various articles. I live vicariously through the selection of glamorous and elegant dresses we post about, with lace, beading and relaxed style, but in a way I feel like I have finally come full circle and made peace with my choice.

I’m not going to talk too long about the mistakes I made in my dress (the short story is that it was too long and the skirt was too big to do anything sensible in, so consequently when I wasn’t triping over it, Pete was standing on it. The lesson? It’s no fun wanting to throttle your new husband on your wedding day ;) ! )

The moral of the story? Always walk around in the dress before you buy it. In my case, I don’t think anything would have stopped me buying that dress and you’ll see why later, but if I hadn’t spent all my alterations appointments in a tiny seamstresses shop which was (and I jest not,) about the size of my skirt width, I would have realised it was too long. Stood still in my heels it perfectly met the floor and I was paranoid about it being too short, but it took me about three steps up the aisle to realise it was too long – very bad timing. Don’t forget you need to be able to walk ‘hands free’ – holding the dress up isn’t an option with your bouquet in one hand and the other in your fathers arm.

However, getting back to my story, there were many reasons why I chose the dress I did but this is the first, and perhaps the most powerful… I fell in love. With this image.


I still love this image, to this day. It still speaks to me in the way it did back in the Christmas of 2007 when I first clapped eyes on it – I had asked my best friend Jess to pick me up a copy of InStyle Weddings (from which the above image is taken) on a trip to the US and she gave it to me for Christmas that year. I had just got engaged and was devouring every posible snippet of wedding inspiration and information possible, when I flipped only a couple of pages into the book and saw it.

I think the dress is a Vera Wang, although I might be wrong. I fell in love with it’s elegance and simplicity. I loved the shape, the buttons, the way the neckline fell at the back, the bodice that showed off her tiny waist and the full skirt. It was chic, no fuss or frills and elegant. It’s not just the dress that I love, but the scene. At a time when I wanted so badly to get married, showing off the ring was something I could only dream of doing. And in that moment, I guess my fashion destiny was decided.

There was one other dress I fell in love with when planning… the dress worn by Liz Hurley to wed Arun Nayar. Being the celebrity she is, Liz wore three dresses that day, but the one she walked up the aisle in was my favourite. Of course, I loved the shredded silk ruffled skirt, but it was the bodice I loved, that dropped waist again and all those overlapped and interlaced tiny little pleats of fabric, creating detail without fuss or beading – which although I love now, in the bridal collections of 2007/8 was nowhere near as lustworthy and beautiful as it is today.


There were of course, other reasons for me choosing my dress. I sometimes think it’s because of a lack of inspiration at the time… after all, wedding blogs were in their infancy then and although I read Style Me Pretty before I was even engaged, (like a few of you on here!) looking back, I don’t think I could honestly say the inspiration wasn’t there to have a more relaxed and casual affair. I guess I just thought I wasn’t cool enough.

Another reason was cost. I can’t pretend I didn’t have my head turned by deisgner collections at the Designer Wedding Show and in magazines, BUT in my mind I always knew I didn’t want to spend a ton of money on a dress that was for one single day. There were many dresses that I didn’t even take down off the rail in boutiques because they were more than I wanted to spend, and I didn’t want to fall in love with one. My own dress was by far the most expensive I liked, and I had only just resigned myself to paying so much when the shop refurbished and put it into the clearance sale at half price. I got lucky.


And how do I feel about my dress today? Well, a couple of weeks before our 2nd anniversary, Pete and I actually got around to choosing the images for our wedding album. Almost 24 months later! And flicking through the images, I felt happy for the first time, I fell back in love with my dress. After almost 2 years of looking at different weddings every day with my RMW hat on and 2 more before that in planning my own, it had always been too easy to fall in love with another wedding, so different to mine. But just as soon as I fell in love with one, another more beautiful one came along to replace it and the last one was erased from my mind. Charlotte and I often say now that although we find something new nearly every week that ‘we wish we had had at our wedding’ those things are passing phases and in reality if we went back, perhaps we wouldn’t change very much at all.


Now when I look back, I got exactly what I wanted, and if I were doing it again, but for the first time, I’m not sure I would make different decisions. It is always so easy to change your mind with the benefit of hindsight but when you’re planning a wedding that is all about the two of you, you have to trust your gut instinct. Now I have my very own favourite image, not of a celebrity or faceless bride in a gown I love, but me, about to leave to marry the man I now call my husband.

And as much as I love that image, when I think of everything that means, the dress is not important.

Yours Truly,

Rebecca
xoxo

A Question Of Culture.

June 7th, 2011

The phenomenally photogenic Ann and Phil are planning on a wedding that celebrates both their Chinese roots and Western influences, Ann gets to wear three amazing frocks (yes VERY jealous over here!) and there will be tea ceremonies and BBQ’s and 10 course meals (!)……. and dancing well into the night.

So not only would we love to get our Blog Queen mitts on an invite, we’re also crossing our fingers, arms and toes that after the big event they want to share the whole vibrant soiree images and planning details with Rock My Wedding.

In the meantime however, you really must check out their colourful urban-esque engagement shoot and lose yourself in some of the super cute couples inspiring W-day ideas.

Oh and Ann’s deliciously stylish wardrobe? I WANT IT.

ALL OF IT.

Tell us a bit about yourselves, how you met, how you got engaged, how long you’ve been together….

We’re Ann and Phil. We first met as family friends when we were in our early teens but we didn’t get together until years later and we’ve been together for 6 and a half years now.

Phil proposed to me in June 2010 whilst we were in New York. We went to check out Highline Park, a new park which has been built on an old disused rail bridge. After strolling casually around the park, when were about to leave Phil was particularly insistent on us having a seat on a bench for a bit. We sat down and then after a bit of natter, he pulled out the ring in a box, I gasped and said (a few times), ‘OMG! What are you doing?’ When I finally shut up, he popped the question!

Who are your photographers and why did you choose them?

The Barbers – Dani and Chris Barber. We’d already been doing a bit of google-ing on photographers and shortlisted some. After seeing their sample works, none of them seemed quite right. Then by chance we came across The Barbers’ site and were completely taken back by their stuff. We were literally both hunched over the laptop gawping at the images going. ‘WOW……WOW……Ooooo…..AWWW’.

I guess when choosing your wedding photographer it’s very much down to the personal taste of the couples. We were looking for something vibrant, stylish and fun with an edge and found that The Barbers were exactly what we were looking for, a bit of everything and completely adaptable to our requests.

How has the planning for W-day been going so far? Any dramarama?

In my eyes, lots of dramas….We both come from fairly big families and I suppose with Chinese weddings in general, it is very much a family affair. So, we have lots of opinion, suggestions and ideas….good and bad in certain senses. As much as we love our family and friends, we now completely understand why people choose to get married abroad!

One major drama involved invitation colour choices, I mean who in the right mind would print silver text on silver card?!?!? It was an error on our part and the printer never pointed it out either and they insisted it was too late to change anything when we finally realised the error. Thankfully though, they have turned out much better than we feared and you can read the text!

Tell us a bit about the wedding itself, talk us through details of the day and what’s really important to you

Chinese wedding themes are predominantly red and gold but to put in our own style we went with yellow and grey (gold and silver to the parents!)

On the day I’ll be wearing both traditional Chinese dress and a white wedding gown.

The wedding itself will hopefully successfully combine both Chinese and Western elements. Chinese elements will include the traditional games and tasks planned by the bridesmaids to test/torture the groom and groomsmen before allowing the groom to see his bride. I personally love this part of Chinese weddings as it’s really fun and kind of breaks up the sometimes slightly solemn mood of weddings. After this, there will be tea ceremonies for the immediate elders of both sides of the family to show our gratitude and respect and also to welcome each other into the new families.

Following this, we will be having a civil ceremony in (fingers crossed for the weather) an outdoor area of a cute hotel. Then onto a traditional Chinese wedding banquet with 10 plus courses! The day will end with a party, some BBQ and dancing! To fit everything in the day will start at 8am and finish at midnight. It’s going to be a long, long day but hopefully worth every minute.

Did you enjoy the engagement session? Tell us a bit about it…

We really didn’t know what to expect from the e-session as we’ve both never really been in front of the cameras like that for anything.

We mentioned to The Barbers that we quite like the idea of old rail tracks, cinema and a laundrette and the delivered it all to us. We were blessed with some decent weather and just went out and fooled around while they did their work.

It really was like just being out with some friends and the hours went so quickly because we were just messing about, having fun and Chris and Dani did what they needed to without restricting time, location or anything. The Barber’s have a very relaxed attitude and made us feel at ease as we were never made to do anything in particular or strike a certain pose I think this is important for people who aren’t comfortable in front of the camera anyway. We think our photos are quite natural for this reason and we absolutely love them!!!

Photography – Chris and Dani at Chris Barber Media

You just know don’t you, this is going to be one hell of an amazing W-day.

Can’t wait ;-)

Big Laundrette Love

Charlotte xxx

Chris Barber Media are Rock My Wedding Sponsors and you can find them on The Love Lust List, however, all submissions are chosen on individual merit and no part of this post is sponsored.

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...