Ideas and Tips for a Magical Winter Wedding Theme

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A Winter Wedding

Ideas and Tips for a Magical Winter Wedding Theme

By Nina Callaway

In the movies, everyone seems to get married in June. But a winter wedding can be terribly glamorous, cinematic and magical. With the right elements, your winter wedding will be a wonderland.

Attire for Your Winter Wedding

Think about you and your sweetie in the elegant look of old Hollywood; the groom in tails, and the bride in a white long silk dress with a white fur or faux fur wrap. Evoke the season with “ice” –diamond or diamond-like jewelry. 90% of wedding dresses are strapless or sleeveless, but that’s not so practical for a bride who wants to take pictures outside, or needs to walk any distance. Look for wraps, shrugs, and capes, or dramatic coats. I’ve always loved the look of a bride in a white dress and a large red shawl, huddled against her groom who has a red boutonnière. And don’t forget your bridesmaids! An attractive wrap to wear on the day of your wedding and beyond makes a great bridesmaid present.

Where to Have a Winter Wedding

Look for an inn with a fireplace for an intimate winter wedding. For a larger affair, you may be able to use a historic mansion or private club that will still have intimate warmth. Unless you’re getting married in a state that will have guaranteed snow during your wedding date, avoid a room that has a large picture window. You may imagine drifts of beautiful snow, and end up with a grey rainy day. Be sure to ask what seasonal decorations they use – you’ll save money as many sites are already heavily decorated. Also, check to make sure your site will be adequately heated during the winter months; old churches can be especially drafty.

Planning the Menu

You can have all of your favorite food but add some winter touches like a squash dish, or warm pumpkin soup. Consider serving eggnog, spiced wine, or hot chocolate (alcoholic or non-) as special treats. Look for an all-white cake, decorated with snowflake patterns, silver embellishments, or sugar sculptures. Ask your caterer about using a decorative snow globe as a cake topper

Winter Wedding Flowers

Decide whether you want to go for a silver and white elegant look, or celebrate the season with reds and greens. For those who like silver, look for dusty miller, silver-dollar eucalyptus, and baby blue eucalyptus, mixed with white flowers such as roses, football mums, crocus, lilies and stephanotis. If you’re looking for a brighter bouquet, consider red roses with holly and pine-tree greenery. In season flowers such as tulips, roses, and ornamental berries generally will be less expensive choices. (Talk to your florist, as your region may have different availability)

The Décor for Your Winter Wedding

Decorate your tables with simple and inexpensive white poinsettias, or fill the room with light by arranging pillar candles on a bed of pine branches At the after-Christmas sales, stock up on strands of small white lights, then string them decoratively around doorways, over tables and on archways. Bright red cranberries in a bowl surrounding floating candles make an easy and inexpensive centerpiece. Look at this article for other simple holiday centerpieces.. Or, decorate a pre-made gingerbread house for each table, and center it on a bed of greenery with candles around it.

Favors

If you and most of your guests celebrate Christmas, an ornament makes a perfect favor. An inexpensive homemade favor is a pretty tin of spiced hot chocolate mix or hot cocoa mix with marshmallows. Also consider a snow globe, with a bride and groom inside, or a holiday cookie cutter with a cookie recipe attached that says your names, wedding date, and “truly cut out for each other”.

Special touches

  • Have the bride and groom travel by horse and carriage to the reception, complete with a fur throw to keep them warm of course!
  • Decorate the reception with miniature and life-size Christmas trees.
  • Commission an ice sculpture to decorate the reception hall
  • Use a crystal bouquet for that extra wintery feel. As a bonus, you’ll get to keep your your bouquet forever.
  • Greet your guests with warm coffee or hot chocolate as soon as they come in the ceremony or reception site.

Attack of the Anti-Bride

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Attack of the Anti-Bride
by Jennifer Lofquist

When the Beloved proposed, my first thought, after the ‘yes’, was ‘oh dear God, I’ve got to plan a wedding.’ We all know that planning a wedding is the equivalent in cost and energy as a root canal, becoming a pilot and running for President – all combined. But what really worried me is that I’d become ‘The BRIDE.’ Oh, you know her. The girl that can’t talk about anything but her wedding. She walks through malls, only if she can stop by and look at crystal. She checks bakeries during the weekends, has long conversations about the merits of ‘Trumpet Voluntary’ over ‘Ode to Joy’, and carries swatches in her purse so she can choose her ‘colors.’ Having been ‘the BRIDE’ before, I had in depth knowledge of how annoying to everyone around you that can be. You think you’re going to be nice and laid back until you find yourself arguing with your mom whether you should have the little plastic swords to carry out the medieval theme or just regular toothpicks.

I set out to be ‘the ANTI-bride.’ I would send all of my friends non-wedding e-mails at least once a day. I declared ‘wedding-free’ weekends. I made sure I discussed politics, my career and Jesse Ventura. I was going to not be ‘the BRIDE.’ I was determined to be ‘Jen (who happens to be getting married in eight months).’

If I could keep focused on the rest of my life, I knew that I could succeed, but the world is against us ‘anti-brides.’ Every morning, I log in to find 10 different e-mails about weddings. Obviously that one site I logged into when I was searching for wedding invites has made a killing selling my name. My favorite this morning was from some site telling me that since I’d be getting married soon, I obviously need some fine hardwood furniture. Now, maybe I’m missing the link, but why would I now need hardwood unfinished furniture just because I’m getting married? Is this some tradition that the Beloved and I don’t know about?

Between the offers of crystal, china, flower girl dresses and magazine subscriptions, I try to actually work. But even that haven of sanity is denied to the ‘anti-bride,’ people I’ve barely seen in the halls, come up to me and ask me how the planning is going. ‘Have you picked your colors?’ ‘Do you know what the bridesmaids are wearing?’ ‘What’s the bouquets going to look like?’ Unfortunately, my usual ‘I have no idea’ doesn’t seem to cut it anymore. Anytime I plead ignorance, I’m reminded that my wedding is ‘just around the corner.’ Not only am I not allowed to be the ‘anti-bride,’ but I’m now the ‘lazy bride.’

As wonderful as my friends are, and they are wonderful, even they are sucked in to the notion that all women love weddings. They call to tell me about the weddings they go to and buy me magazines. These aren’t homebody women either. These are girls that wouldn’t be caught dead wearing pink, yet they are discussing bows on the pews. My best friend has even been heard to giggle when I mention I need a hotel room the night of the wedding for me and the Beloved. I thought I had friends who were immune to this need for fluff, but obviously not. Society has made sure that every girl longs to be ‘the BRIDE,’ and if they aren’t ‘the BRIDE’ at the moment, they long to be ‘the BRIDESMAID.’

My days as the ‘anti-bride’ are numbered. Even I have been discovered huddling in the wedding section of the bookstore, staring at bouquets and centerpieces. I have walked into crystal departments, and complained that nothing is what I wanted. I’ve been wondering where to register, and do I like ‘honeydew’ or ‘orchid’ better as my color. Yesterday, I discussed fabrics with my mother for 45 minutes (I like crepe better than chiffon). And I’m starting to annoy myself.

In an effort to save me from this fate, I have given over many decisions to the Beloved. Rather than worrying about these things, talking about them or pleading ignorance when I get the barrage of questions, I simply reply ‘oh, my fiance wants to help, so he’s handling it.’

I’d like to see ‘the BRIDE’ do that one.

Written by: Jennifer Lofquist, Reston, VA, USA
JenLofquist@yahoo.com
http://www.geocities.com/jenlofquist

How much does a wedding cost?

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  • 25 Wedding Favor Ideas

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    25 Wedding Favor Ideas
    by Vanessa Kasal Kunze

    Need wedding favor ideas - check out our list of 25 Wedding Favor Ideas! Many of these ideas are basic; you can then personalize them, such as wrapping the favor in tulle, placing it in glassine bags, or whatever else you can think of.

    • Candles in terra cotta pots
    • Splits of wine/champagne/sparkling cider
    • Personalized Chocolate Bars
    • Fortune Cookies
    • Personalized Wedding Phone Cards
    • Bubbles
    • Hershey Kiss Rosebud Roses
    • Jordan Almonds
    • M&M in wedding colors
    • Votive Candles
    • Personalized Pens
    • Charity Donation
    • Handcrafted Soap
    • Heart Shaped (or other shaped) Cookie Cutter
    • Printed Scrolls
    • Frame (can also double as Placecard)
    • Tree Seedlings
    • Flower Seed Packets/Sachets
    • Bookmarks
    • Taper Candles
    • Magnets
    • Potpourri Sachet
    • Christmas/Holiday Ornaments
    • Hugs and Kisses Spoons
    • Keychains

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