Friday, December 26, 2008

Recession on Wedding Budget




December 21, 2008
Field Notes

Recession? Time to Slash the Flower Budget

PITY Lauren Huber, 27, a Baltimore bride-to-be who began planning her wedding 12 months ahead only to see the economic downturn force her to forgo not just the icing on the cake, but the cake itself.

Her fiancé, Ryan Priem, who is 28 and a salesman, saw his income drop, and the couple found themselves spending the $35,000 set aside for their March 2009 wedding on everyday living expenses. They began trimming costs from every aspect of their event.

The big hotel to which they had committed early in the process suddenly seemed unaffordable. So Ms. Huber sold her $3,400 Amsale dress on Craigslist and plans to wear a less costly one. She canceled the morning-after brunch, cut a half-hour off the photographer’s services and halved the size of the bouquets. Finally, she canceled the cake, as dessert is already included in the dinner she ordered.

“We can do without,” she said. “Dessert is tiramisù, so we’ll get pictures of us slicing that instead.”

She’s hardly alone. As the financial condition of the country worsens, the wedding industry, so long considered recession-proof, is seeing fairy-tale weddings stripped of their sprites, their sparkle and everything else that suggests splurge.

Some couples are slashing guest lists to include just immediate family and very dear friends, leaving aunts, cousins and the friends of friends out entirely, and bridal consultants say that they are seeing more couples postponing their events until they can be more certain they will have the money to pay for the wedding they want. Others are ratcheting up plans for quick, simple weddings that allow them to more readily take advantage of a safety net woven from the government and corporate benefits available to married couples.

Still other couples, armed with the skills they learned in a go-go economy, are trying to forcefully renegotiate with vendors to keep some semblance of their ideal wedding.

One bride had put down a deposit and locked into a contract with a site in a town south of Philadelphia, where she and her fiancé live. Given the amount of debt piling up from their graduate school studies, she suddenly thought that the $30,000 to $40,000 she had planned to spend on her wedding seemed ridiculous.

Furthermore, the downturn in the economy left the bridegroom’s parents unable to provide as much financial support as the couple had hoped for. And although the wedding venue has been accommodating, it is not willing to make a refund. The bride is now aiming for something in the under-$20,000 range. To get there she has cut the number of people she has invited from 200 to 115, and made her wedding dinner a less costly luncheon, hoping to save another $30 to $40 a person.

“You can negotiate prices with any wedding vendor,” said Kristal Joiner, the wedding coordinator at Event Source Northwest in Kirkland, Wash., a company that has seen plenty of clients seek to do just that recently. But businesses like Ms. Joiner’s, which specialize in supplying disc jockeys and masters of ceremonies, are also caught in an economic squeeze.

“We understand that people don’t have as much money these days,” Ms. Joiner said. “We can cut back on hours, or we can do a couple less speakers, or we’ll throw in an extra hour.” However, she added, “We have to charge what we’re worth and make money, so it’s a little difficult.”

The same economic forces that are encouraging couples to trim their expectations may actually be encouraging more of them to marry sooner, if less expensively. Some who earn their livelihoods in the wedding business report that they are seeing more couples opt for hurry-up weddings that will allow them to claim married-filing-jointly status on their income taxes for 2008.

“Whereas last year I did 197 weddings, this year I’m up to 299 weddings,” said the Rev. Marie April Gismondi, a nondenominational minister with the Church of Ancient Ways in Babylon, N.Y. “I’d say a lot more of them are those quick-I-want-to-get-married-this-week weddings."

To be sure, a certain number of couples each year schedule their unions to take advantage of the tax break. “December is a kind of funny month,” said Sari Venegas-Skalnik, a bridal consultant in Guaynabo, P.R., who recently has had three couples come to her with plans for weddings on short notice. “We get a lot of last-minute pop-ups. People who say, ‘I’m already going on vacation, what do I have to do to get married?’ ”

But Ms. Gismondi, who is also the vice president of the American Association of Wedding Officiants, said she’s seeing an unusual spike for some simple economic reasons. One bride, she said, “who was paying $400 and change a month on her health insurance,” told her that by marrying she would save nearly $5,000 a year in premium payments.

Getting out of town can have its advantages, too. Susan Alexander Shapiro, the owner of BravoBride (bravobride.com), a Web site for the purchase and sale of new and used wedding items, said that some couples who had planned large formal weddings “now are doing destination weddings because it’s cheaper.”

“Typically there are fewer guests,” she said, and “some places will even offer a ‘free wedding’ if you stay at their resort, which means they will throw in the cake, Champagne, bridal bouquets and more.” But even those who have not yet felt the sharp bite of the economy’s incisors have been chastened.

“They don’t want to look ostentatious,” said JoAnn Gregoli, a wedding planner who is also the New York metropolitan coordinator for the Association of Bridal Consultants. “They say, ‘Make it simple.’ You don’t want to be there promoting your wealth to people who don’t have it.”

She pointed out that the industry’s woes have created opportunities, too.

“It’s a buyer’s market if you’re still getting married and you have the money,” she said.

Andi Vance, a 31-year-old bride-to-be from Chicago, has used the recession to put her priorities in order. She began planning for her September 2009 wedding with a budget in the $15,000 to $25,000 range, but when the economy began to falter, she decided a down payment on a house was more important to her than a dream wedding.

So instead of the $5,000 venue, she booked a cabin for $150 at Malabar Farm, a state park in Lucas, Ohio. She also decided to use flowers from her mother’s garden and intends to have a hometown friend take pictures.

She is now searching for a secondhand dress. And in a perfect marriage of technology and parsimony, in lieu of a band she is going to hook up an iPod to a speaker system.

“We’ll be able to do it for under $10,000,” she said of her event. “Right now, we just need to save money. The wedding is one day. The house is going to last a lot longer than that.”

Copyright 2008 The New York Times Company

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/21/fashion/weddings/21FIELD.html

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Picking wild flowers has always been my back up plan. It reminds me of when I used to cut the roses in my neighbor's yard. Their flowers were over blooming and pretty hot and tempting.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

Ah! My Goddess! Wedding


When I lose weight... I will do as Keiichi and Belldandy.



Bachelorette Party



Red Red Wine



I like the ceiling drapery and wish that for my wedding, provided that it is held in a high ceiling location

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

Manly Arm Cover-ups

Wedding Dress Design by taeliac

The strategy to taking attention away from my unfeminine arms is in the cover-ups. Shoulder straps I've already mentioned and now this idea from Taeliac Studio. Although it exposes the shoulders it does cover the biceps.

Crying-incompetent


Crying on my wedding day - problem is, can I do it?

Flute Sleeves

Jonathan Liang

I don't like the flute sleeves.

Putting on the Wedding Band

Tenhiro Naoto

Should I act surprised if I already know what it looks like?

Hanging Balloons in Church



Hanging balloons in church - only in anime.

Anime Bride & Bridesmaid I

The-Melancholy-Of-Haruhi-Suzumiya_suemura


wedding day chisatonaruse


Hagane Tsurugi



Happou Bijin

Anime Bride & Groom I



Aoi Nanase


Toujou Sakana

Notice how her hair matches with his bow tie in the picture above.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Thursday, November 27, 2008

5 B's

Bride on Beach by gimei


Ideally on Hawaii sandy beaches.

Bride, Bikini, Beach, Bouquet, Bells.

1 Groom 3 Brides



Drawings by Kuroda Akimi


I like the neckline of the first wedding dress although it's a bit showy but that's just because anime drawings could be very exaggerated.

Monday, November 24, 2008

Dress Bed


I would love to take a pose like Leah above. Her dress is so pretty with the added sparklies in the gown.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Sakura Comics Wedding Manga Favors



Our Wedding Manga

2 Page Black and White
Price: $300 (29,800 yen)



16 Page Full Color Mini Book
Price: $2,000 (191,800 yen)



Website: Sakura Comics






Source: Otaku Hime: Things Japanese: Personalized Wedding Souvenir: "Wedding Story Manga"

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Aqua Bamboo & Spa



Aqua Hotels & Resorts now would like to give hotel guests the following complimentary:

A thoughtful arrival amenity (per arrival, per person)
Complimentary Coffee and Tea Service 7am-12noon
Complimentary Coffee and Tea Packets in-room to be replenished daily
Complimentary High Speed Internet Access
Wi-Fi hot spots in lobby
Complimentary Daily Continental Breakfast
Complimentary AQUA Discount Book including 2-4-1 Luau
Weekly Manager's Party: Tues. at Aloha Surf, Wed. at Palms, Thurs. at Bamboo
We now offer Room Service, through Room Service in Paradise


Room Rates

January 02, 2008 ~ February 06, 2008;
March 16, 2008 - June 19, 2008;
August 17, 2008 ~ December 10, 2008;
December 15, 2008 - December 18, 2008;
January 15, 2009 - February 06, 2009.


Address: 2425 Kuhio Avenue, Honolulu, Hawaii 96815
Telephone: (808) 922-7777
Fax: (808) 922-9473

Floors: 12
Total Rooms: 93

Front Desk: 24 hours
Check-in: 3 pm
Check-out: 12 noon

Location. The Aqua Bamboo & Spa is located two blocks from Waikiki Beach in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Honolulu Aquarium is located one mile from this property. Diamond Head is less than three miles away.



Hotel Features. The hotel lobby contrasts with bright, bustling Waikiki by displaying subdued fabrics in deep chocolate hues, fresh floral bouquets and dark toned seating areas. This Asian themed boutique property provides complimentary continental breakfasts and offers use of a gas grill that is built into a tiled food preparation counter. Weekly receptions feature the hotel’s signature drink, the aptly named Bamboozle. A business center houses three computer stations. Wireless Internet access is complimentary in the lobby and adjacent to the outdoor pool. The Aqua Spa houses three treatment rooms and offers massage therapies and facials. Recreational amenities include a garden with an outdoor saltwater pool, a waterfall, a spa tub and sauna. The surrounding sundeck provides padded lounge chairs, umbrellas and open air gazebos enhanced with curved benches and pillows.



Guestrooms. This 12 story hotel offers 93 guestrooms with private balconies. Select accommodations provide kitchenettes or full kitchens. All rooms contain refrigerators and microwave ovens. Décor is Asian influenced and is embellished with live bamboo plants. Accommodations feature flat screen televisions and complimentary wireless Internet access. In room safes are complimentary.



Expert Tip. Nothing is more valuable to a true surfer than the surfboard. The hotel offers a secure rack where surfers can store their boards between uses.

Sample Aqua Bamboo & Spa’s signature drink, the Bamboozle, at the weekly-hosted cocktail reception. In 2008 Travel and Leisure magazine lists Aqua Bamboo as Honolulu's hippest and most affordable place to stay in Waikiki.



Aqua Bamboo & Spa amenities include:

  • FREE daily continental breakfast
  • FREE in-room high speed Internet access
  • FREE coffee and tea service in the lobby
  • FREE daily local newspaper
  • FREE local & toll free calls, LCD TV’s
  • In-Rooms mini-refrigerator, microwave, coffeemaker and safe, some rooms with stovetop or full kitchen
  • FREE Manager's reception every Thursday evening.
    Parking: $20 daily charge subject to change at the discretion of the hotel.

  • Complimentary coffee & tea service in the Lobby 24x7
  • Complimentary daily Continental breakfast
  • Complimentary daily local newspaper
  • Complimentary Manager’s Reception every Thursday from 5:00 – 6:00 p.m. featuring the hotel’s signature drink, “The Bamboozle”.



  • Hotel Room Moderate (guest/room: 1 ~ 2):
    $138.00 per night (Value Season) Rack Rate: $200.00
    $169.00 per night (High Season)
    $187.00 per night (Holiday Season)

    OTHER CHARGES

    Cribs: $25.00/night
    Extra person: $25.00/night
    Rollaway: $25.00/night




    Hints and Must Do's: Walk around and into Diamond Head. It may cost you about $2. entry fee for park maintenance, but the views are worth it and you get to say you "worked out". This moderate hike round-trip from the hotel front door is about two hours....depending on how many roses you stop to smell along the way. Consider the farmers market on the way back to fill up your refrigerator with locally grown fruits. Consider The Bus: an award winning transit system, you could go around the island with several stops along the way at local beaches for an all day tour for under $5 per person! Pack your towel, camera and a small cooler!



    Monthly Climate Summary

    Month High Low Rainfall
    January 80.9°F 64.6°F 3.65 in.
    February 81.0°F 64.7°F 2.36 in.
    March 82.0°F 66.3°F 2.61 in.
    April 83.3°F 67.9°F 1.39 in.
    May 84.9°F 69.1°F 1.44 in.
    June 86.5°F 71.3°F 0.62 in.
    July 87.4°F 72.6°F 0.78 in.
    August 88.3°F 73.0°F 0.79 in.
    September 88.3°F 72.3°F 0.95 in.
    October 86.9°F 71.3°F 2.20 in.
    November 84.3°F 69.5°F 3.47 in.
    December 81.9°F 66.7°F 3.87 in.
    Avg./Tot. 84.6°F 69.1°F 24.13 in.


    Visit the Hawaii Weather Webpage. It's an amazing site! It's like the Google of weather pages. It is so complete and simple I can't even begin to tell you how in awe I was looking at the different radars and diagrams because they were all ANIMATED to live time! You will only see it if you scroll towards the bottom so don't be fooled and stop at the first sight! SCROLL down please! You will be greatly rewarded.


    As for the hotel review: as soon as I get back from the trip I will write one so that you could all see how many stars this hotel deserves.

    Turkey Die-Cut Place Cards

    Ben & Jerry's Thanksgiving Place Cards feat. Turkey

    I would imagine that the wedding ones would feature something like a heart with a red thread threaded through teeny holes and tied.

    Abigale by Romantica Gown


    Abigale by Romantica


    Confetti magazine, Designer dresses, pg.8
    Patterned Designs
    This daring dress has achieved a sophisticated yet sexy look with a red corset and beautiful detail to create a princess line gown.
    Telephone 08707 701 024 for stockists.
    From sizes 6-32.
    Recommend Retail Price: $595 English Pounds.