Monthly Archives: June 2010

The Big Ones

On Sunday night, JP and I had a massive dance-party with ourselves and the kitten– we finalized our choices for “the big ones,” as I like to call ‘em. I thought I’d share ‘em with you all, as well as our runners up, just because we had so much fun doing this. Also, way to put this off until the last minute, us. What can I say? Music was super important to us, so choosing it seemed virtually impossible– we didn’t want to cut any of our favorites!

First up, is the song for the bridal party intro. This… well… I lied. This we haven’t decided on. There are two options. One is the cover of “With a Little Help from My Friends” by Jim Sturgess and Joe Anderson from Across the Universe.

For the rest of our songs, keep reading after the jump!

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Get with the program!

I designed our programs to be design-friends with our invitation suite. I’m a stickler for consistency, so they work well together, but I also went a little more whimsical with these guys. The pressure was off for the programs, and I had quite a lot of fun with these. This weekend, JP and I spent a good two days printing, cutting, folding, measuring, nailing, threading, sewing, and assembling our eighty programs. He was a marvelous helper, and we are both so thrilled with the results.

The assembly of these guys was not an easy one, even though we knocked it out in two days. A quick run-down of the supplies used and, well, how in the heck we did it is most definitely  in order. Spelling it all out makes us seem totally bonkers– Me bonkers for coming up with it, and him bonkers for going along with it. Photos first, insanity second!

Oh, so you’re curious as to what all went into these puppies? WELL…

Supply List (for 80 programs)

  • 400 sheets of 65 lb. cover
  • Part of a spool of carpet yarn from the 70s (My father works in textiles, and we have a mountain of this stuff around. It’s my favorite for pretty much everything.)
  • Rotary trimmer
  • Scissors
  • Two tack nails
  • Hammer
  • Ikea catalogue
  • Bignormous needle
  • Pencil
  • Ruler
  • Computer (le duh) equipped Illustrator and InDesign
  • Printer with 2-sided printing capability and a butt-ton of extra ink (We have an Artisan 710. Love it for this stuff.)
  • Fonts used: Gotham, Carousel, and Memoriam Pro

Assembly (for a single program)

  1. Print out cover from Illustrator and 4-pieces-of-paper-requiring booklet (the insides) from InDesign. Use 2-sided print settings with a saddle-stitch binding setting.
  2. Trim the paper to 6.5″ by 11.5″. The reason I didn’t just use a half-letter was that I didn’t want a “We printed this out and folded it in half” look. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, I’m just nuts and a weirdo about sizing.
  3. Fold all 5 pieces of paper for the booklet. (Sweet JP did the majority of this step. This was the most time-consuming part, it seemed.)
  4. Stack the pieces of paper one-inside-of-the-other. This is where the saddle-stitch setting comes into play. Everything is magically lined up.
  5. On the innermost sheet, mark 2 inches in from the top and bottom along the fold.
  6. Over the Ikea catalogue, keep the pages lined up and hammer the nail into each of the two marked points– this is to start the holes for the yarn.
  7. Thread the needle, and go in one set of holes and out the other. Be careful not to stab yourself. I did about 40 times.
  8. Tie a lovely little bow, and move on to the next program. Lather, rinse, repeat.

There you have it! Our crazy-sauce labor of program love. I hope our guests actually look through these guys. I need to find some people to hand out [read: be pushers] our programs.

What approach did you take with your programs? Did you go to crazy lengths and develop an overly-involved (but totally fun) process?

13 days left

Photo from a project I'll soon detail.

We have 13 days left. Holy cow. Updates soon, I swear– a lot has been getting done! Busy bees are we.

Give me down to there hair

{ source* }

In my previous hair posts, I kept assuming that I had to do an up-do. Georgia in June? Up-do, else-way there will be floofy frizzy fly-aways. Problem: I couldn’t ever envision myself with a bridal up-do. Couldn’t do it. While pouting and flipping through my inspiration folders crammed full of gorgeous brides, I re-discovered this gorgeous bride with super-straight down-to-there hair, and was determined to be a down-do bride.

So yes. My crazy butt will be wearing my hair down in June. Before you write me off as being totally off my rocker, I have some things in my corner that will help me make this work.

  1. I’m getting a Brazilian hair-straightening treatment. No, not the one that is packed with formaldehyde, the other less-scary one. Even though my hair is super-straight on its own, with sweat and humidity, I get baby curls and fly-aways. This will help my hair to be as stick straight as possible. Added bonus? It will supposedly make my fine hair appear to be thicker. Winsky!
  2. I’m getting extensions. My hair is already pretty dang long. It’s grown out a good 4 inches below my collar bones. However, it’s pretty fine, thin, and isn’t as thick as the bottom as I’d like. Extensions will add some more much-needed hair, and while I’m at it, some extra length. 18″ and color 1b, if anyone cares.
  3. My hair magician is rescuing me on the wedding day. Months ago, when I first started talking wedding hair with Luke, my hairstylist, he said that he wouldn’t be able to do my hair for the wedding. Hola, burst bubble. He never did weddings because it was too expensive to comp a whole day’s work and tips, plus the extra crazy bride and bridal party stress. WELL. A few weeks ago, my puppy dog eyes did their work, the planets aligned, and Luke has the day off. So sweet, talented, awesome Luke will be trekking all the way down to LaGrange to do my hairs. I’m so excited.

I may be crazy in my goal of being a straight-haired down-do bride, but hell, it’s worth a try to be able to look and feel like myself on the wedding day. (Well, a more glammed-up and blown-out version of myself, but who’s counting?)

Who else is a down-do rather than an up-do bride? Straight, wavy, or curly? My fellow summer brides, what are you doing to protect your ‘do from the elements?

* I starred this source link, because I am not 100% sure of the source. I had it saved in my “pulled from google images” folder, but that isn’t really satisfactory sourcing imho. If anyone knows the original source of this bride, let me know so that I can correctly cite it!