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Friday, March 31, 2017

LOVE! Barbie & Ken Finally Get Married!

Loved this so much I had to share! This is beyond cute, and the photographs are absolutely amazing! Everything is like a real wedding; couple photos, photos of the dress and shoes, the ladies getting ready....genius idea! Check out Rock and Roll Bride to see the complete set of photos....they're all worth looking at!

From the Photographer, Béatrice de Guigné: “Barbie & Ken were married at Faraway Castle, in Plasticity. The bride bought her dress from The Fairy Godmother shop and her shoes from the Cinderella Store. The groom wore a suit from The Prince Charming Emporium. The couple met more than 50 years ago (yes I know they look young). Barbie was tired of waiting so she asked Ken to get married.” Photography Credit: BdG Photography




 














Thursday, March 30, 2017

Planning Tips :: Cost Cutting on the Cake

Planning, Coordination, Flowers & Décor Rentals :: Michéll Events
Cake :: Wendy Kromer Confections
Photography :: Trejo Photography


Fake It
If towering tiers of frosted chocolatey goodness are what you had in mind for your wedding day, it’ll cost you.  But hey, brides are donning fake eyelashes and nails, so why not fake the cake?  You can still have your larger than life wedding cake by only having a few tiers of real cake.  Then, your designer can add on Styrofoam layers decorated just like the rest of the cake for those extra tiers and height.  Your cake will still elicit oohs and ahhs from all the wedding guests, and they will be none the wiser! Check it out above! The Eiffel Tower cake's bottom tier was fake - - it was Styrofoam!


Keep it Simple
Time is money – but it works both ways! One of the main costs for your wedding cake comes from the amount of time required to create your confection.  The more intricate and detailed the design, the longer it will take for your designer, and the more dough your designer will take from you.  The icing on the cake?  The simpler the design, the less cash you’ll be forking over for it.  Work with your baker to come up with a beautiful design for your wedding cake that still expresses you and your wedding, but that will cost less of the designer’s time and your money.


Wedding Coordinator :: Michéll Events
Photographer: Cavanaugh Photography


Keepin It Real
Fake tiers may be a game changer in wedding cake costs, but fake flowers can be a whole other ballgame.  Sugar flowers that look impressively real can look gorgeous on your wedding cake – and they’re edible too! – but, they require extra time and effort on the part of your cake designer, which means more moolah!   A cake blossoming in real blooms will still look amazing and will keep your costs down. Locally grown flowers that are in season during your wedding are your budget-friendly best bet.


Kitchen Aid
If you’ve got a big guest list but an itty-bitty budget, figuring out how to feed everyone may be a bit daunting.  Let them eat cake!  A great money-saving tip is to have a smaller wedding cake at the reception for the cake-cutting (tradition is free!), and then sheets of cake in the kitchen that will be served to your guests.  Once the cake is taken to the back to be cut for dessert, your guests will never know the difference – but your wallet will.





Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Kudos from Stacey & Ben!

I received a wonderful review from the lovely Stacey today! Stacey and Ben are adorable clients of ours from San Francisco who had a beautiful outdoor Jewish ceremony and rustic lodge reception. The bride and groom were completely bubbly and joyous, and I was so happy to be a part of such a love filled event! It warmed my heart to receive your review, Stacey....thank you so much! 

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"Seriously could not have gotten married without Amy. She was our day-of coordinator and ensured that everything ran smoothly and without a hitch. I turned over all vendor management to her in the days leading up to the wedding and she handled everything with grace, efficiency and care. Highly recommend working with her - your wedding day should be joyous and easy for both the bride and groom, and Amy ensured that it was for us."

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Venue :: Happy Days Lodge at Cuyahoga Valley National Park
Wedding Coordinator & Lantern Rentals :: Michéll Events
Cocktail Hour/Reception Music :: Moss Stanley & Nitebridge
Photographer :: Steven Mastroianni
Videographer :: Kojak Creative Media
Ceremony Music :: Ed Horowitz
Cake :: Piece of Cake
Caterer :: Spice Catering Co.





5 Ways to Greet Guests in Style

Greet your guests with an unexpected surprise as they arrive at your ceremony or reception. A small special touch will go a long way! You want your guests to feel comfortable, welcomed, and appreciated, so add a special touch that they will remember!

Greet them with a cocktail or mocktail. If you're having an outdoor summer wedding, set up a cute table with mason jars of iced lemonade and straws. If you're having a more elegant indoor affair, greet them with a white gloved server and a silver tray of champagne flutes containing a special champagne cocktail created specifically for your wedding.




Provide interactive entertainment. Photo and video booths make for great entertainment and give your guests something to do during your cocktail hour. You can incorporate your guest book with the photo booth, so when guests arrive they can take a photo and put in the book as they sign. You can even provide props that go with the theme of your wedding! A caricature artist is always a great form of entertainment. Even those who don't want their own photo drawn enjoy watching the artist draw others. A strolling magician is another great idea to keep guests of all ages entertained. 




Have games and icebreakers available. It usually happens that there are guests at the wedding who don't know everyone, so create a fun game of ice breaker questions about your and your groom-to-be that will get your guests talking. It will be an entertaining conversation starter! Games like cornhole and horseshoes are great for outdoor events. You can also provide a few casino games, whether it's renting a roulette table or simply putting dice on the cocktail tables.




Hire live musicians. Whether you have a harpist or a string trio for your ceremony, or a jazz trio for your cocktail hour, live musicians create a festive ambiance for your wedding. We've had tropical themed weddings with steel drummers, trumpet fanfare as guests arrive, and even bagpipers! Make it different than the normal unnoticeable background music and your guests will be sure to take notice.


Photo by Michéll Events


Provide a "sugar rush" to get the party started. Candy stations and buffets are very popular with children and adults alike! The candy buffet can be designed in your wedding colors to add to the decor of the room, and providing take home bags for the guests will create an interactive favor station for everyone to participate in. Provide scoops and tongs, label each different candy with a sign , and get creative with the setup using jars, bowls and vases.....your guests will enjoy the pre-party boost!



Photo by Michéll Events





Tuesday, March 28, 2017

DIY :: Burlap Doily Luminaries

I always love creative ways to incorporate candle light at an event. Candles are great on their own, but adding that extra touch of décor with a special holder is one of my favorite things!



You will need:

Glass jars (Mason jars, any size)
Adhesive Spray (like Elmer's Craft Bond)
Doilies
Burlap
Twine, buttons, and/or ribbon
Tealight Candles or Battery Operated Tealights



Make sure your jars are clean and dry. Lay the doily flat and spray it with glue. (Make sure to lay out paper, cardboard, or another surface underneath your doily so you don't spray glue directly onto your table!)  With the doily still on the table, place the jar onto the doily and roll it until the entire doily is attached.



Spray the rim with adhesive, then wrap the jar rim with burlap. You can also wrap the rim with pretty ribbon then tie a piece of twine around the rim as well. Tie them both in a bow. Another option is to use the canning jar lid, then wrap that with twine or loose threads from your burlap. Thread two of the ends through a button and tie in a knot.





See the full article and instructions at Crafts by Amanda





8 Wedding Rules That Can Be Broken

Good to know!

Couples are personalizing their nuptials more and more, and as budgets become stricter, a lot of the old etiquette is being pushed aside. From who pays for the reception to how long afterward you can send a gift, find out which wedding rules are being bent and which ones can be broken!


Planning & Coordination by: Michéll Events
Cake by: About the Cake


1. The bride's family doesn't always pay.
Tradition has always dictated that the bride's family pays for the wedding and the groom's family pays for the honeymoon. But because of the recent recession, that's not necessarily the case anymore. "Oftentimes the actual funding for the wedding, the expenses, are taken care of by a slew of people as opposed to only the bride's family," says Lizzie Post, spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute and great-great-granddaughter of etiquette expert Emily Post. "You want to honor the tradition by allowing the bride's family to take the reins if they want to, but the groom's family should honor the new custom by offering.” 

2. Your wedding party can include all ages and genders.
A male maid of honor, a female best man, grandma as the flower girl—your wedding party is just that, yours; there should be no restrictions. "Platonic friendships nowadays are crossing the gender barrier, so it's not a problem at all if the bride would like a gentleman standing up at her side; she's more than welcome to," Post says. "And even the couple's family [can be included]. There are people who ask their mother to be the matron of honor or ask their grandmother to participate. So it's nice to see that's opened up a lot and people are embracing it."

3. Guests no longer have a full year to buy a gift.
Unfortunately this one might mean a few of us are in trouble! Unlike in years past, you no longer have up to a full year from the wedding to buy the bride and groom a gift. The appropriate time line is now "three months, so it definitely is something you want to try to get done as soon as possible," Post says. "Your friends would be thrilled if a year later you sent them a gift; it's never too late. But three months gives you enough time, especially now with the ability to just click on an online registry."

4. You can decline to be in the wedding party.
You've been in five weddings this year, and with the cost of the dresses, travel and gifts, you're broke. So if another dear friend asks you to join their wedding party, it's more than OK to politely decline. Just explain why in a heartfelt way. "Many modern brides really understand with the travel and distance [usually involved], but it's all in how you do it," Post says. "Say, 'I love you so much and I want to be there to support you, but right now being a bridesmaid is not something I can commit to. Is there another way I can help you on your big day? I know it's so important to show you how much I love you.' Make the bride know you do want to commit to it, but you can't."

5. It's acceptable to ask for gift cards or cash.
Nowadays, with family and friends living across the country and at various stages in their lives, it's definitely acceptable for a bride and groom to ask for gift cards or cash. "It's a great way to make it convenient for the guests and easy on them. I don't think it's tacky," Post says. Whereas you can ask for gift cards on your registry, as far as cash, just be polite about it. "You usually want to spread it by word of mouth. You definitely don't want to put 'cash only' on your website and you never put it on your invitation," Post adds.

6. The groom can see the bride in her wedding dress before the ceremony.
Superstition has it that it's bad luck for the groom to see the bride dressed in white before she walks down the aisle. But a lot of couples are kicking this to the curb for some alone time and a better photo op beforehand. "If the bride and groom are very traditional, they won't see each other before the ceremony. But photographers will encourage it because the bride's makeup is fresh and her hair is done so they can get a lot more photos done before the ceremony," says Elizabeth Todd, wedding coordinator at Blackstone Country Club in Peoria, Arizona. "Afterward, they can take a few family shots and enjoy the cocktail hour."

7. Men can take or leave the wedding ring.
Depending on where you grew up, there was probably a pretty clear norm regarding whether or not husbands wore a wedding ring. But nowadays it's really up to the groom—as long as his bride is fine with his decision. "I think it's totally a personal choice. I know some people choose to tattoo the ring on their finger," Post says. "It's a new option."

8. You don't have to do a wedding cake for dessert.
Maybe Cupcake Wars is responsible for this one—more and more often, modern couples are eschewing the traditional multi-tiered wedding cake and opting for cupcakes, or sometimes a dessert bar. "It's fun for the bride and groom to switch things up for dessert because not everyone likes wedding cake. It's also more fun for little kids; it’s easy to eat, less messy," Todd says. "[The bride and groom will] just do a smaller cake to cut for pictures and then after that's over, guests know they can go ahead and dig into the dessert bar."






Monday, March 27, 2017

Guestbook Idea :: Personalized Calendar

Looking for something different from the traditional guestbook? This is a wonderfully creative idea! Provide a calendar instead of a book and ask your guests to sign their names on their birthday. You'll never miss a birthday again! You could also ask married couples to note their own wedding anniversary on the calendar.

Make it a calendar that matches your theme and/or colors (nautical, spring time, birds, etc...). You could even take it one step farther and order a personalized calendar online. Use photos of you and your sweetie for each month; engagement photos, vacation photos, holiday photos, etc...  You can also put a special stamp or sticker on your wedding day/anniversary!







Sunday, March 26, 2017

Love this Strawberry Bar!

*Swooning* over this amazing Strawberry Bar! Not only is everything strawberry flavored, but everything is strawberry themed - - even the pots for the flowers are strawberries! This is taking a candy/dessert station to the next level! Perfect for summertime - - Cocktail hour? Bridal brunch? Birthday party? Ladies luncheon? Yes please!




Source: Bridal Bar




DIY :: Creative Candle Holders

Photo from Restored Style


 Photo from Michéll Events




Photo from Smarty Had A Party