Wedding Bliss: Tuxes and Bridesmaids’ Attire
December 12, 2007 at 9:48 pm | In wedding | Leave a CommentTags: bridesmaids, dresses, groom, tux, tuxedo, wedding
Early on in the wedding planning, Mr. Andrews knew what he wanted to wear to get married: Humphrey Bogart’s Casablanca tux. White jacket, black pants, black bow tie - very summery, yet also formal. I actually made him get an ivory jacket because my dress was ivory, but otherwise he picked it all out himself. I’m not sure if I was supposed to see it before the wedding, since he obviously didn’t see my dress, but I went with him anyway when he got fitted. Luckily for all of us, I took pictures with my phone.
Looking Good!
The groomsmen and the fathers got the same tuxedos, except their jackets were black. They looked great, and Mr. Andrews got to stand out from the crowd.
Tuxes were rented through Mr. Tux, which was convenient because of the many locations in Massachusetts, as well as their affiliation with After Hours. Groomsmen in South Carolina and Florida could get measured there, and have their tuxes ready for them in Brookline, MA when they arrived. Handy!
Shopping for bridesmaids’ dresses was a little bit more work than my wedding dress – we actually went to three stores! My sister (and maid of honor) was a very good sport and tried on a ton of dresses for me, since my other bridesmaids live in Virginia and Hawaii (the one from VA ended up not even making it to the wedding!).

David’s Bridal – the fabric was too clingy

Creative Bridals – too low cut, too poofy

Country Weddings – pretty, but strapless
I had no idea what I was looking for – we hadn’t even picked colors yet! – so I am glad I got her help. She got to find something she was comfortable in as well as something that looked cute.
We started at David’s Bridal, but didn’t find much. Then we looked at Creative Bridals, my wedding dress store, which had some nice stuff (my mom actually got her mother of the bride dress here – a two piece satin outfit by Impression in Palomino), but the perfect bridesmaid dress was found at Country Weddings in Hingham, MA. We picked a knee-length chiffon dress in Sage from Watters “Wtoo” collection (style 130). The cut was good for the different body types with minimal alterations, and the color was beautiful on everyone dark and tan to redhead.
My mom & My sister
Bridesmaid love
The girls wore the same $20 gold shoes from Marshalls that I wore, and they also got some Old Navy flip flops for the reception. My mom picked them up some very cute gold, green and turquoise necklaces and matching earrings for cheap (really, I think they were like $9 total) to pull the whole outfit together. They looked gorgeous!
Here’s how the entire bridal party looked (try to picture us without the funny faces…)

Bridal Party
In the end, we weren’t a bad looking bunch!
Wedding Bliss: Bridal Attire
November 30, 2007 at 10:23 pm | In wedding | Leave a CommentTags: dress, NaBloPoMo, wedding, wedding dress
The story of my wedding dress is a fairly short one. I bought the second dress I tried on and I didn’t try on anymore.
My mom, my sister, and I stopped into a hometown bridal shop, Creative Bridals in Braintree, MA. We didn’t even have an appointment – we were just checking it out on our way to the places we were really going to shop. I have passed by this place pretty much every single day growing up, and I had no idea they had an enormous wedding dressing room behind closed doors. It was cool!
They gave us a few minutes in the bridal room even though we didn’t have an appointment (good thing we got there right when they opened!) and that is all I needed. The first dress I tried was one of those mermaid dresses, which was nice until I tried on the second one. It was a brand new model, and they claimed I was the first one to try it on. It was by Moonlight. It was perfect. I loved the straps (no way I was going sleeveless, which cut down my options a bit) and the gathered bottom (trendy, yet sort of elegant) and the pretty beads. Both my mom and my sister cried. It was pretty much the cheapest dress there by five hundred dollars, but it didn’t look cheap. I bought it in ivory right then and there.

Me, Sister & Maid of Honor, with the Dress

From The Back
Creative Bridals has an in-house seamstress so she did all the alterations as well. Handy!
I wasn’t going to do any kind of head gear, but my mom wanted me to have a veil. So we got one to match, with a pearl-adorned comb to hold it on. I am glad I got one, because I think it completed the outfit. It took it from this:

To this:

Oh yeah. That’s so bridal.
I went simple on everything else – pearl earrings that my aunt bought me for my birthday at JC Penney, a gold necklace with three pearls from The Derby Street Shoppes, and a pair of $20 gold shoes from Marshalls that no one saw anyway (replaced by a pair of pink Old Navy flip flops for the reception). I was supposed to borrow one of my mom’s bracelets, but we both forgot. I had nothing borrowed! But luckily it still worked out. I think I looked good. My husband thought I looked good, too! And one of my single aunt’s already has dibs on the dress for her wedding. Not bad!
Wedding Bliss: Thank You Notes
November 21, 2007 at 5:46 pm | In wedding | Leave a CommentTags: NaBloPoMo, stationary, thank you notes, wedding
We got our thank you notes today. I know, I am so late with these! But everyone keeps insisting we have a year, so four and some odd months isn’t completely awful. We had elaborate ideas for these, planning a take on Mr. & Mrs. Smith – we even got photographed in that pose Brad and Angelina did on the movie poster. But it got complicated and we didn’t want to delay any longer, so finally we decided to just pick our favorite shot from all the wedding photography from A Fine Image and have that made into cards via Pictage. Here they are:
So, to all those generous souls who gave us wedding gifts – your thank yous are coming! Thanks!
Wedding Bliss: Officiant & Ceremony
November 15, 2007 at 2:10 pm | In wedding | 1 CommentTags: ceremony, marriage, NaBloPoMo, wedding
Our wedding ceremony was raved about by many of our guests, mostly because it was so personalized. Much of that is thanks to our officiant, Unitarian Universalist minister Reverend Robin L. Zucker out of Concord, Massachusetts. My mom saw her at another wedding in September 2006, and recommended that we check her out. She fit the bill for “spiritual but not religious” ceremony well (plus, like me, she used to be a television producer – random, yet somehow comforting).
Rev. Zucker required two pre-marital counseling sessions, so it was a little more of a commitment than just booking a Justice of the Peace. We had to take a multiple choice survey about our relationship, and do the standard communication exercises. This ended up not only being potentially helpful in our marriage, but also in the ceremony as she got to know us a lot before she married us. One funny thing is that she would not allow our dog to be in the wedding because it was “undignified” (luckily, we weren’t going to anyway – Sonny is not quite that well trained). She was a bit no-nonsense for my taste (it was a wedding, not a military coup), but she ended up doing a beautiful job that we were very happy with. Here is an excerpt:
No one can say you’ve rushed into marriage. Quite the contrary –You met around 6 years ago as graduate students at the University of South Carolina, and quickly discovered that you “get” each other; that you shared mutual values, and a desire to buck the status quo in order to craft lives of engagement and meaning.
In one another, you have found a generous companion, dedicated to growing and exploring, and to creating a life of balance, fun, open communication, resilience, trust, achievement, and family, and then there is your zeal for travelling with your pup Sonny and snapping souvenir pictures, renting movies and attending sporting events, urban rambling, film festivals, and spontaneous explorations near and far.
For (the bride), (the groom) is smart, fun, caring, generous and adventurous; a loving and creative partner with whom she feels confident.
For (the groom) , (the bride) is also adventurous, enthusiastic, genuine, caring and open-hearted, an inspiring and supportive partner with whom he feels anything is possible.
You bring yourselves here today to take part in a ceremony says that you will bring all of who you are , all you will be, and all you CAN be to this union, a ritual that affirms that you are not afraid, that whatever may come, you believe in each other , you are secure in your bond, and you’ve already learned there is nothing you cannot face with the other one at your side.
Nice, right?
This description of us and our relationship was especially welcome because we chose to recite simple, tradition vows rather than write our own. It was less complicated, and it ensured we didn’t forget anything that we wanted to promise to one another. I am glad we did it that way, because I even got choked up on the “in joy and in sorrow” part – never mind if I had to say anything more personal than that.
We also chose two readings for the ceremony. I had a hard time picking these, because it seemed that many of the poems or stories I came across were of the “I love you even though you have so many flaws” variety. While this may be true for both of us, it was not something I wanted to highlight on our wedding day! I wanted to say something like “I love you because you are the best person ever to exist on earth” instead. After a long while, we finally settled on No I’ll not take the half by Yevgeny Yevtushenko and Love by Roy Croft. These described our relationship best. Each was read by a good friend of Mr. Andrews.
As for music, we went a little quirky with that. This was something we wanted to use to express ourselves. We did have a harpist from Gilded Harps, which made everything a little more classy. And our musician was very good at learning our songs on short notice! The processional was Across The Stars by John Williams. This is the love theme for Anakin and Padme in Star Wars: Attack of the Clones. Mr. Andrews is a huge Star Wars fan, and it is actually a beautiful song. I couldn’t hear it from where I was, but people said it sounded wonderful on the harp, like it was written for a wedding.
I walked down the aisle (with both of my parents, who are divorced) to Elton John’s Tiny Dancer. This is one of “our songs” – we sung it together while listening to the Almost Famous soundtrack on our very first roadtrip. It, too, sounded pretty good on the harp – just a little bit slower than normal.

For the recessional, we chose the chorus of another one of “our songs,” John Mayer’s No Such Thing. Honestly, not the best song on the harp, but it was an important song for us to incorporate in the whole thing.
One of the coolest parts of the ceremony in my opinion was the sand ceremony. I am a klutz and the thought of lighting a Unity Candle while shaking with nerves didn’t strike me as safe. The sand ceremony was a nice alternative, and it was pretty, too! At first we had planned to use real natural sand, with me getting mine from the beach in Quincy, MA and Mr. Andrews getting his from a beach in his hometown of Charleston, SC. But after buying a cute set of vases from Kensington Classics, we decided it might be prettier and more sanitary to buy colored sand from them. We picked Moss and Lavender, which were closest to our wedding colors.

A lot of our guests thought it was a neat idea. One guest, Mr. Barron, even decided to use it in his own wedding a few weeks later. See?:

After the sand, we exchanged rings, we kissed, and just like that, we were married!

In just a half an hour, too. Seems like it should have taken longer than that but nope! By 7 pm on 07/07/07, I was Mrs. Andrews. And it was time to party!
Wedding Bliss Part II: Venue
November 8, 2007 at 7:07 pm | In marriage, wedding | 1 CommentTags: marriage, NaBloPoMo, wedding
The first step in our wedding planning process was finding the place. We are not really church people, so we agreed to go with a place where we could hold both the ceremony and the reception. Like with most of the things in the wedding, choosing the venue consisted of many hours of researching, looking at two or three places, and making a fairly quick decision. I am not the kind of girl that can go to fifty seven potential function rooms before making a decision. I am not quite that particular, and all that driving around Boston and its suburbs really cut into my TV watching time.
My main sources for info on good places were fairly obvious: The Knot, Boston Magazine’s Elegant Weddings, and my mom, who must go to forty weddings a year for all the ballrooms, hotels, and mansions she knows around town. There were plenty of amazing places. My only goal was to not go somewhere too familiar. The Red Lion Inn, for example, is beautiful, but I had already been to a few weddings there. Other places were awesome but inconveniently far away, some were gorgeous but prohibitively expensive, and one solitary site, The New England Aquarium, was already booked for our date. We narrowed it down to three different types of places: one country, one city, and one at the beach.
The first place we looked was Jones River Trading in Kingston, MA. My mom really liked it, but to me it was a little too rustic, and the nautical themed antiques kind of turned me off. The river out back would have made for lovely wedding day portraits, but the lack of air conditioning for the summer event was the deal breaker. I didn’t want to give any of my relatives heat stroke on the otherwise happiest day of my life.
The second place we looked was Veronique at Longwood Towers in Brookline, MA. It was an adventure to get there (Storrow Drive sucks!) and we almost didn’t make it. Fortunately, though, they accomodated us with a tour even though we were 20 minutes late. Longwood Towers is an old, brick castle-looking building that houses condos as well as event space. One unit was reportedly home to Babe Ruth when he was on the Red Sox (this was a selling point for Mr. Andrews). It has a really unique look on the outside, and a grand, almost medieval lobby on the inside. The wedding planner met with us there (offering us drinks, of course), then showed us two spaces: The Ballroom, an elegantly Gothic space for 250 guests, and The Club, an attractive, smaller room with ornate wood walls and a guilded ceiling (it kind of reminded me of Hogwarts, but in a good way…). It can accomodate 120 people, and costs about half as much as The Ballroom. Both had nice balcony areas for the cocktail hour, which was helpful for transforming the area below from ceremony to reception.

All of us instantly loved this place and I was willing to make a decision on the spot. Just to be safe, though, we drove by Raffael’s in Hull, MA before we committed. It is right on the ocean and we could have had a breathtaking ceremony with the ocean in the background. Fear of rain got the better of me, though. Ultimately, we opted for the urban choice and went with The Club at Veronique. Here’s what it looked like:
Nice, right? This was the best choice we could have made. Not only was it fantastic-looking, but there were many perks. The best part was that the room came with a wedding planner who took care of everything. I would not want to think about doing a wedding without her. They took care of every detail on the day of the wedding, while we just sat around, enjoying champagne and fruit, waiting for it to start. Everyone was so friendly and truly nice. I am genuinely grateful that we got to work with these people. I would recommend the place just for them, even if it wasn’t as good looking as it is.
Another benefit was the food. Finding a place with catering included took an extra chore off our list, and with this site we got the same delicious menu they serve at the glamorous State Room in Downtown Boston – for deep discount prices (plus we were closer to Fenway Park, which was valuable with our out of town guests). They had a tasting for us in February where we got to try everything from appetizers and signature cocktails to several courses of meals to wedding cake, a chocolate fountain, and mini root beer floats for dessert. We didn’t go with many of the frilly extras (we really didn’t need to – it was so nice on its own!) but it was wonderfully fun and it really gave us something else to look forward to at the wedding.
Additionally, one detail that I really loved was the staircase from the balcony. I got to walk down the stairs and then down the aisle to meet my groom. It was death defying and guests could see the fear in my eyes as I tried not to kill myself in heels and a puffy dress. Yet, it was dramatic and all eyes were on me!
More about the menu (including the pretty and yummy cake!), the ceremony, the reception, and all the other hoopla that took place there later. If you are planning a wedding, enjoy your venue search – like me, I hope you find the space of your dreams. And in Massachusetts, consider Veronique!
Wedding Bliss: Part I (Introduction)
November 1, 2007 at 11:02 am | In wedding | Leave a CommentTags: marriage, NaBloPoMo, wedding
The wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Andrews was completely awesome. From the pre-wedding Fourth of July celebration to the last dance, it was fun and beautiful. I wanted to share the details, because it may be of interest to some people, and honestly, I just really miss my wedding and would like to keep remembering it!

As I have said before, I was not the kind of girl that daydreamed about her wedding. I always assumed I would have a husband, but that fantasy took a backseat to my other plans for the future, like naming my eight future children, charting out my future high-powered career in law or education or theater, and deciding what kind of boat I would keep docked at my future vacation home on Lake Winnipesaukee (I like to think big).
It wasn’t until I had a serious boyfriend in college that I started thinking about what I might like in a ceremony/reception (and I started secretly buying wedding magazines). I didn’t end up with that guy, and I am pretty glad I didn’t get married at 20 because:
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I liked those invitations where the little kids are dressed up like a bride and groom (shudder) .
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I would have gotten married on my college campus (and it would have been highly difficult to get the lots and lots of planning help I needed from my mom, who lived 1000 miles away from there).
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I really like the husband I have much better.
But at least I got a small taste about everything that goes into planning a wedding, and a few ideas for what I would want when the big day eventually came. If I had not had that preparation, I would have been totally overwhelmed, and escaped from it all by becoming a nun.
After getting engaged on the steps of the Kodak Theater in August 2006, Mr. Andrews and I started going through dates and places. We briefly discussed a Southern California wedding, since we were engaged there and toying with the idea of moving out there, and Disneyland was a pretty serious consideration. But it was far to travel for everyone we know and love on the east coast, and it would have to have been really tiny (like 10 people) to be in a reasonable budget, so ultimately we chose to get married in my home state of Massachusetts. As for the date, once we realized it was there for us, 07/07/07 seemed the cool and obvious choice. While the stories go that some brides had this date booked years advance, and it was the most popular wedding date in the history of civilization, we just happened upon it just 11 months before it arrived, and had no problem booking any vendors (I thank the gorgeous New England autumn for making fall weddings all the rage in Boston).
Just Engaged, Hollywood, CA
We went through a billion ideas, from a Hollywood Themed Red Carpet wedding to a daytime ceremony on Nantasket Beach, and I even pushed for a simple and natural backyard affair (vetoed by my mom almost immediately). Finally, though, we settled on something in the city, something quietly elegant that was a bit fancier than we are used to, but that reflected us at our best. It turned out to be very personal, and we couldn’t have asked for a better day, or better memories.
Here are the vendors we used for our wedding. You’ll get all the details on everything eventually. Don’t worry!
- Venue/Catering for Ceremony & Reception: Veronique, Brookline, MA
- Officiant: Rev. Robin L. Zucker, Concord, MA
- Wedding Dress: Creative Bridals, Braintree, MA
- Bridesmaids Dresses: Country Weddings, Hingham, MA
- Tuxedo Rental: Mr. Tux, Quincy, MA
- Rings: Lander’s Jewelers, Braintree, MA
- Hair & Makeup: Charles David Salon, Norwell, MA
- Ceremony Music: Gilded Harps, Sudbury, MA
- Reception Music: Ray Papile, DJ/Guitar, Quincy, MA
- Photography: A Fine Image, Cambridge, MA
- Invitations: Invitation Consultants
- Florist: Mantis, Quincy, MA
- Favors: Tankinz
- Bridal Shower: The Common Market, Quincy, MA
- Gift Registry: Macy’s & Target
- Rehearsal Dinner: Jillian’s of Boston, Boston, MA
- Guest Hotel: Brookline Courtyard by Marriot, Brookline, MA
If you like weddings, stay tuned!
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