Monthly Archives: August 2012

Real Jewish Weddings | Delray Beach, FL

Kim and Adam’s beach town wedding was a mix of natural shades and crystals so as not to compete with the stunning views and decor of The Delray Beach Club.

The bride’s bouquet was a stunning mix of garden roses, roses, lisianthus with ivory, and pale pink ranunculus accents. The couple took the local tram to the Delray Beach Club, stopping along the way to take a few photos.

After setting up the Chuppah for the traditional Jewish Ceremony, the skies opened and it poured with rain. The white satin got soaking wet. The solution? A new Chuppah inside out of the club’s tablecloths!! The guests were seated on a mix of the lounge area’s sofas and chairs as they witnessed the ceremony.

The bride’s parents are avid travelers and had gifted the couple a handmade sculpture of a bride and groom to top the cake they came across in a gallery in Venice Italy. It looked perfect on the cake and was a real conversation piece!

The table numbers were tags over wine bottles on which each guest was asked to write a special note to the happy couple, so that as they opened the bottles in the years to come, the memories and best wishes of this special day came flooding back to them!

Beautiful details helped accomplish a stylized wedding that blended the venue’s beauty and the couple’s love!

Mazel tov, Kim and Adam!

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Venue: The Delray Beach Club
Photographer: Albert for Jeff Kolodny Photography
Florist: J Morgan Flowers
Event Planner: Kiss the Planner

Venue: Delray Beach Club
Makeup and Hair: Ultimate Bridal Beauty
Band: Private Stock

Top 5 Reasons You Should Have a Wedding Website

When Motel the Tailor and Tzeitel got married in Fiddler on the Roof, they didn’t have a website. After they tied the knot, they revealed their pride and joy, Motel’s new sewing machine, and while that sewing machine was pretty snazzy for 19th century Old Country, the sewing machine was their only piece of technology and it did nothing for their own piece of real estate on the web. That’s probably because there was no web except for the ones built by spiders, but I digress. I wouldn’t want a sewing machine to make clothes anyway. Hel-lo? That’s what Nordstrom and Bloomies is for!

So, here’s what I say: don’t act like you’re a babushka-wearing, cow-milking, old school, nice Jewish girl. Welcome to the 2000s. You’re a modern, mainstream bride! Create a wedding website. Why? Here are the top 5 reasons!

1. Learn About The Couple!
It’s unlikely that 100% of your guests will know each of you intimately. Here’s your big chance to share who you are and other obvious reasons why you love one another. The more details, the better! I personally enjoy reading about the bride and groom (or the bride and bride or groom and groom — whatever!) and like when details about their background and current lives are included in the write ups. If your Uncle Murray hasn’t seen you since you tap danced in the talent show at the Catskills family reunion and he’s never met your fiance, here’s where he can make up for lost time before attending your wedding.

2. Registry Information
You’re going to get presents for your wedding and it doesn’t suck. For those who decide not to cut a check, you’ll receive something tangible, but if you’re taking the time to register, you may as well make sure people know about the coveted list. Your website is the perfect place to house this precious information as it automatically links to the stores’ sites and your registry. Two clicks and your Internet savvy friends and family are on their way to gifting your gravy boat. Groovy. Where does registry information NOT go? Your wedding invitation! It’s a no-no. And since your registry information should be included on your wedding website, the wedding website should not be on the formal invitation. I know, I know, here I am preaching the registry gospel, and I’m telling you to leave it off the formal invitation. It can be on shower invites, save the dates, and even rehearsal dinner mailers. And if you must include the website in the formal invitation suite, put it on a separate card, but never on the actual invitation with the “Mr. & Mrs. So and So invite you to the marriage of their daughter” yada yada part. It’s considered pandering for presents. Otherwise, go nuts posting your wedding URL on all other methods of communication. And enjoy your registered gifts!

3. Personalize Your Style
Many wedding websites come with options to customize the artwork and format in which details are displayed. This is a great opportunity to give a clue about the style or theme of your wedding. Other than the formal invitation or save the date, there are really no other pieces that wedding guests see to clue them into what your wedding might be like. A formal black tie wedding might have a clean and elegant website design. Likewise, a rustic, vintage, shabby chic event might be a little more casual and flowery online. Here’s one more place you can tie in your colors, style, and personal touches like a logo or quote.

4. Talk Up Your Wedding Party
You didn’t rent bridesmaids and groomsmen, right? They are people that you actually know and even like, correct? So gush about them! Include a list of your wedding party and maybe even write up a blurb about them. Go the extra mile and include photos. They’re the supporting players in your big debut as husband and wife, so make sure they have a little time in the spotlight. Plus, they’ll be VIP the day of the wedding and your guests might want to know a little about the people who make you happy and keep you from going meshuga.

5. Details Of Your Big Day
Just in case your disorganized pals lose your $4.00 invitation (grrrr), they can at least get the must-know details of your wedding day online from anywhere. Make sure to include your date, location or locations (if there are separate venues for ceremony and reception places), time of ceremony (usually the time on the invitation should be about 30 minutes before the actual walk-down-the-aisle-it’s-go-time-there’s-no-turning-back-now time), and dress preferences like black tie or resort wear. Your out-of-towners will especially appreciate hotel information and if there are room blocks you’ve set up for them. The details of such accommodations should be included on the website. Your guests will thank you for making it less stressful to attend your wedding. I mean, travel these days is so annoying. Aunt Marilyn will be too busy worrying about condensing her Jean Nate body splash in a 3 ounce bottle in her carry on. Don’t make her start kvetching about how she doesn’t know if there’s a group rate at the Marriott. All of these details are a must. Additional details like local airports, transportation options, popular destinations and things to do are great additions to your wedding website.

Do a quick Internet search to find out about wedding websites. There are many free resources available (6. another reason to create one: it’s usually freeeee!) and The Wedding Yentas loves the many great sites on MyWedding. There’s even an option for designs inspired by your favorite Jewish wedding planning website (ahem!) so, ya know, you might want to check that out.

Have fun with your website and enjoy your own little piece of property on the web!

Romantic Paris Engagement

Well, in this week of landmark engagement sessions (Griffith Observatory in L.A., the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco), how about we go across the pond… and then some. Letizia and Tim are the adorable couple who are madly in love, so of course when Melvin Gilbert Photography submits these delicious Paris photos taken at the Louvre ad Eiffel Tower, we say “oui!”

The romantic photos make the soundtrack of “The Artist” play through my ears and my eyes drink up the photogenic love. A modern day love on the grounds of some pretty historical shit (excuse my… well… French): classical pieces live inside the Louvre, and I’m willing to bet that Mona Lisa’s smile just got bigger, knowing that this cute couple is frolicking outside her doors. And the Eiffel Tower, a symbol of Paris, stands tall and proud just as these two will as they declare their amour on their wedding day. It’s really all too beautiful to describe so you see for yourself!

I love this more than I love croissants and French toast… er, just toast?

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Sweet San Francisco Engagement Session at the Golden Gate Bridge

Is it me or do you want to take a walking tour around San Francisco with these two? I can just see it now: we’re walking through the Ferry Building tasting cheese samples and gnawing on a baguette. Or we’re riding a cable car between hills with wind blowing through our hair and laughing til our cheeks hurt. Or we’re grabbing a chocolate sundae to-go from Ghiradelli because for some reason, an afternoon sweet treat seems like a fantastic idea. And to top it off, riding along the Golden Gate Bridge singing the theme to “Full House” at the top of our lungs would be the perfect end to a perfect San Francisco day. But since we can’t hang around with these two lovelies, we get to feel the same joy and warmth that they evoke in their engagement photos by Sphynge Photography.

The happy couple, Jessica and Alexander, are full of life and laughter. She’s a fun and smiley school teacher and Alex just knows how to make her giggle! They love nature and art, so going through the woods was the perfect backdrop for their engagement session. There it is folks: taking something you love and giving it a starring role in your engagement shoot — that’s how you do it.

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Real Jewish Weddings | Saratoga Springs, NY

Meredith and Dan had a really beautiful interfaith ceremony just outside of the Gideon Putnam Hotel in Saratoga Springs. There was a ketubah signing, blessings in both Hebrew and English, as well as a unity candle. Their Rabbi and Pastor worked together so well, it seemed like they did this kind of wedding together all the time. Each part of the ceremony was well thought out and personal to the couple.

The focus was on photography for Meredith and Dan. Because they chose to do a First Look (which was an incredibly emotional moment), they were all finished with their photos after the ceremony and could go in and spend a little more time with their guests by going to their cocktail hour. Then, the reception started and the dance floor was packed all night! At the end of the night, they finished with an After Dark Session, coordinated by Scott Kretschmann Photography where he took their chuppah and showed it in a new “light.”

Mazel tov, Meredith and Dan!

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Photographer: Scott Kretschmann Photography
Reception Venue: Gideon Putnam Hotel
Floral Designer: The Posie Peddler
Dress Store: Something Bleu Bridal
Cake Designer: Coccadotts Cake Shop
DJ: The Piano Man’s DJ Productions