Monthly Archives: July 2011

Revisiting: Day After Wedding Brunch

Let’s face it. Our people always want any opportunity to get together and eat. Passover seders are basically dinner and a show and even when there’s a death in the family (pooh-pooh, spit, spit!), the mourners can always feel better knowing there’s a lavish deli platter in store. We eat. It’s just what we do. So on the weekend of your wedding, it doesn’t seem like it’s enough to have only a Shabbat meal, rehearsal dinner, and wedding reception entree. No, we need just one more chance to get together, discuss the previous night’s events (“Did you see how snockered Aunt Sylvia was last night at the wedding? Oy vey, she’s become such a shicker since she moved to Leisure Land!”), and sit around to eat… again.

So, where does this leave us? Presenting: The Day After Brunch.

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As with all things wedding, this is not a required or mandatory event. If you’re not doing it or don’t want, forget it. You can go play Words with Friends and skip the rest of this article. But if you’re considering having a Day After Brunch, read on for a little guideline.

You need to make sure you know who you’d like to invite to the Day After Brunch before you send out the invitations. Typically, the guest list is made up of the out-of-towners and immediate family. Your boss at work and his girlfriend don’t need to be there. Your next door neighbor probably isn’t going to make the cut. Just think about the people you really don’t get to see often and who you’d want to spend more time with, and go from there. If it makes it any easier, usually the Day After Brunch is comprised of the same group from Shabbat and/or rehearsal dinner.

Make sure you send out the invitations separately from the wedding invitation. As a rule, each wedding weekend event should have its own invitation. They don’t all have to be the same wedding paper ensemble — oy! That would cost you a fortune! — but the Day After Brunch can be a simple, standard invitation that details the place and time of the brunch.

brunch-bunch

Sometimes it’s hosted at a hotel where most guests are staying or if it’s the wedding venue. Other times, a parent or grandparents has the guests over at their house for a catered brunch. The menu does not have to be elaborate. Regular “brunchy” items — fruit, cereals, bagels and lox — can absolutely suffice. Oh and coffee. Lots and lots of coffee. Especially for Aunt Sylvia types.

Here’s the one question that may be burning in your mind: What if the bride and groom are ticketed to run off for their honeymoon the very next morning after the wedding?

That’s a lucky bride and groom to be starting their lives together ASAP! But it’s okay if they’re not there. As much as everyone would love to see the new star couple, it’s all about the gathering of the family and friends. The Day After Brunch is also great closure for the parents of the bride and groom. They don’t get a honeymoon after the wedding. Life continues as usual. So here’s a chance to take a breather, transition from a wonderful night of seeing their children marry, and spend time with loved ones.

After all, it’s not just food that binds our people, is it? As guests trickled out of the wedding reception when it ended, they hugged and kissed goodbye as if they wouldn’t be seeing each other again. Individuals could be leaving for Siberia or heading off to war the way they carry on with the bear hugs and wet kisses. But then, 12 hours later, they’d all be re-gathering for another round of shmoozing with company and coffee. This phenomenon is called the Jewish goodbye. And the Day After Brunch is one heck of a Jewish goodbye.

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Fab Creations by Bliss Extraordinary Floral

Bliss Extraordinary Floral, located in the painted deserts of Sedona, Arizona, doesn’t just build flowery accessories for weddings. No, no. They seriously create masterpieces that are dreamlike and rich in detail. Amy Mills, owner and talented designer, knows a thing or two about flowers, but also has the eye for going the extra mile to work with a bride on executing her vision. Take note, Arizona ladies: working with Bliss is truly, well, bliss!

Let’s take a tour of her work that proves my point because I promise I’m not a liar!

Remember last week’s post about the hottest trend of including peacock elements? Bliss Extraordinary Floral does an extraordinary job with this scheme. The photos are by Leeann Marie Photography who beautifully captured the bridesmaids’ small rose bouquet with a touch of peacock feathers; and tables that held extra large milk jar vases, filled with white hydrangea, purple stock, purple alstromeria, Bells of Ireland, Akita roses and of course lots of feathers.

Something else Bliss does well is perfectly-stated simplicity. Amy knows not to mess with natural beauty. When it comes to sunflowers, they’re about as naturally beautiful as flowers come. So when a bride wants a sunflower-heavy wedding, a good floral designer knows to let the big yellow blooms speak for themselves. And boy do they! Summer and fall brides, take note! Photos by Melissa Dunstan Photography.

For ultimate bridal softness, take a snoop at this wedding! I’m not sure how she does it, but Amy can use the most powdery colored florals and still create a palette that pops with chic colors. This design screams “bridal!!!!!” but with a tenderness and plushness that makes me want to trade in my mattress for a bed of these flowers. The pomanders were whimsical and the centerpieces consisted of David Austin roses, Equidorian roses, carnations, sweet peas and hypericum in moss covered urns that graced the tables. And her wrought iron tree chuppah marries natural beauty with modern flair. It’s sturdy and traditional, but emits a new and fresh style. Photos are by Heather Kadar Photography.

Glass For Your Wedding Day

By now, you know all about the crowd-favorite tradition of breaking the glass, but do you know what your groom is actually breaking? Yes, he needs glass, but what kind and where do you get it and can you do anything with it after it’s broken?

Yentas readers, you asked for it and now you’re getting it: Today you’ll learn about what glass to use, where to get it, and how you can use it to commemorate your wedding day!

So, a lot of people say that you should use a wine glass. Sure, you can, but they’re not that easy to break. In fact, how many times have you, um, enjoyed a little too much wine from your glass, acquired a case of butter fingers, and dropped the glass? Hopefully it’s not a regular occurrence, but you might find that a fallen wine glass that reaches the floor may not even break, and if it does, the stem will probably just snap off the bulb. But that crunchety-crunch of glass will not emit from the fall, so a stomp probably won’t accomplish it either. Look, I’m no physicist — ha! Far from it! Please, I’m a nerdy Jewish writer! — but something tells me that a wine glass is just not the item you want to place under your groom’s foot. Plus, a wine glass is big, it can roll away, and it’s a wine glass!!! Surely, you have better things to do with it… like drink from it.

Well then, what can you use? You can purchase glass that’s hollowed out and sized perfectly for the hyped-up stomp. Many Judaica stores sell these blown-out glass pieces intended for this tradition. ModernTribe, BFFs of The Wedding Yentas, sells this variety of glass and it’s a great way to go! Plus, they’re pretty!

Pick the color of glass you want your groom to smash and make sure your coordinator or venue manager picks it up for you to take home for after your wedding. You can use the smashed glass to include in your home or Jewish custom items. For example, you can insert your smashed glass shards into a mezuzah or Shabbat candlestick holders. What a beautiful way to bring some of your wedding day love back into your home and serve a reminder for why we smash the glass in the first place (one of the reasons: love is fragile; treat it with care).

For some extra crunch, take sandwich baggie and stick a used lightbulb in there and shove it in the bag that has the decorative glass. It’ll give your groom’s stomp an extra crunch. You could probably use a lightbulb or two alone, but then if you had lifelong dreams to include your smash glass in your Judaica, then that won’t work because there’s really nothing that pretty about a dead, smashed lightbulb. So supplementing your colorful glass with a lightbulb gives you some enhanced noise for additional ruach (spirit), making for a heartier “mazel tov” that your guests will enjoy shouting!

Take it a step further and include a Mazel Tov Stone in your glass smashing! A Mazel Tov Stone is a beautiful piece to add to this rich tradition. The artists work with you to completely customize your slab of Jerusalem limestone that can have your names, wedding date, and other details inscribed. Placing a Mazel Tov Stone under the glass guarantees the glass will break (ohmygosh, how embarrassing if it doesn’t, right?) no matter where you two are standing. Beach wedding on the sand? Garden wedding in the grass? Mazel Tov Stone saves your day… and your stomp.

You and your groom should now be equipped to purchase decorative glass, select a piece of Judaica in which to keep the glass, and include a personalized element that can assist his stomp that you two can keep as a memento from your wedding day. Get smashed with your wine glass on game night with friends, and instead, on your wedding day, smash glass that will evoke the prettiest and loudest “mazel tov!” from all of your friends and family!

Real Weddings | Westlake Village, CA

Nicole knew it was truly love at first sight when she met her Superman.

Sparks flew immediately when she met Dennis, her new JDate match. He was HOT! “Did I really just meet this guy on Jdate?” He looked like John Travolta from his “Grease” days. The plan was to just meet for coffee, but coffee soon turned into breakfast, and breakfast turned into an afternoon hike, and finally, at the end of the day, Nicole knew she’d just finished her first date with her future husband.

They spent Halloween together and Dennis dressed as Nicole’s favorite hero, Superman, which also happens to be the metaphor she’d always used for her true love and b’shert, whoever he’d be. In the same weekend, they enjoyed a Jason Mraz concert where they shared their first kiss! And Mraz’s song, “I’m Yours” would also be the tune they danced to at their wedding.

Nicole and Dennis were engaged six months later, followed by a wedding six months after that, and they now have a beautiful baby girl and another on the way!

Mazel tov, Nicole and Dennis!

Venue- Westlake Village Inn
Photography- Photography by Charise
Cake- Edie’s Pastries Pastries by Edie, Inc.com
Jeweler- Zamir & Company Diamonds
Entertainment / Music- Pini Cohen
Dress- Jenny Packham
Hair Stylist- Barry Reitman
Makeup Artist- Makeup By RonAnn
Officiant- Rabbi Joshua Hoffman of Valley Beth Shalom in Encino, CA
Yarmulkes- SkullCap.com
Ketubah- Gallery Judaica

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