17 Mar

In sifting through Jenna’s mountain of wedding inspiration, we came across this cute window display she designed during her tenure at Anthropologie:

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And immediately we thought, hello fun escort card display! Jillian recreated the idea over the weekend to share with you all.

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It’s a simple project (one that could easily be done with your girlfriends the morning of the wedding), but adds such a fun bit of whimsy to your wedding decor. You could do this project with less expected colors too; especially if you’re not going for the vintage country fair or Coney Island vibe. We can totally see a board full of pretty neutrals working beautifully.

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16 Mar

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bottom row images: cool tickets through fffound, saipua

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13 Mar

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Ready? This wedding is so good, with so many beautiful details, and such a simple heartfelt ceremony, you are going to die. And then there’s the dresses. Anyone considering wearing a non-white dress to their wedding will be sold after seeing what these two wore.

Mary & Claudine had wanted to marry for some time, but they were really hoping to do it legally. The day California overturned the band on same-sex marriage, they started planning. And in 6 weeks they were saying their vows. Their photos and details make you think twice about spending a whole year stressing about party favors, especially when you can put together such a perfect celebration in less than 2 months! Of course it helps that we’re talking about an art director and photographer couple, both with distinct creative vision and a natural sense of design.

From M + C:

“We wanted an intimate and relaxed wedding with close friends and family and we wanted to marry outside. We found the perfect venue in Berkeley: a beautiful house with a large tiled patio surrounded by lush greenery. It was like having a wedding in our own home (only bigger than our San Francisco apartment!)

Instead of a formal bridal party, we had two “best men” on either side of us during the ceremony to hand us our rings. Both men wore black tuxedos. We each wore a blue, floor length dress by the same designer, Carmen Marc Valvo. We asked our guests to stand around us as we took our vows. We picked a long love poem for the reading, and divided it into ten parts. We had ten friends and family members each read their part from wherever they were standing. It was so beautiful to hear each unique voice come from a different place behind us.

After our ceremony, guests gathered at the front of the house. The waiters gave out miniature champagne bottles so our guests could blow bubbles as we made our formal appearance as a married couple. The first bottle of champagne was opened with an antique saber. After toasting and greeting our guests, we all gathered in the house for hors d’oeuvres. We then had a candle light dinner in a room off of the terrace where we married. Our after dinner reception was dancing and cupcakes on the terrace.”

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A few notes on their details and decor, which were so sweet and thoughtful and meaningful…

“It was important to us to reference our French and Italian heritage.

We placed antique locks along the outside gate in the front of the house as a homage to Ponte Vecchio in Florence, Italy, where lovers put locks on the rails of the bridge and threw away the key to “lock in” their love. After the wedding, we gave them to close friends to remember our day.

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An old French tradition is to saber open a bottle of Champagne after a victory. Mary’s brother used a saber to open the first bottle of champagne of the evening. 

Instead of flower arrangements, we decided to use glass candlesticks of varying heights as the center piece for each table. This created a romantic mood for the evening, gave a graphic, yet soft look we wanted and saved time on floral arrangements for each table. Candlesticks from cb2.com

We placed little tickets that said WISH inside of a glass vase and placed it on a side table that had little white cards, pens and envelopes for guests to write us wishes and leave in a glass jar.

Vendors:

DRESSES: Carmen Marc Valvo

OFFICIANT Sheila Kappeler sheilakappeler[at]gmail[dot]com

VENUE: beautiful rented house in Berkeley with a downstairs party room and large terrace surrounded by greenery. www.36domingo.com

PHOTOGRAPHY: Laura Morton

Diana camera and photo at the courthouse: Scott Clark

CATERING: Catering was Chef Adair. Absolutely delicious. Because our wedding was only 36 people, we hired a private chef instead of a large catering company.

DESSERT: Kara’s Cupcakes

FLOWERS: We made our own flower arrangements. We went to the San Francisco Flower market  to see what was in season a week prior and placed our order. The day of the wedding, we created two large arrangements to frame the “altar” area. We made two medium sized arrangements on either side of the outdoor entry to the house and a few smaller arrangements to be placed around the house. We used green sprigs on the cupcake tiers.

Instead of traditional bouquets, we had pink cala lillies and pink roses that our sisters and best friends could each hand to us as we walked in.

INVITATIONS: We created a monogram and typeset our invitations. We had them letter pressed in Berkeley by Richard Siebert. He’s a former chef from Chez Panisse turned master typesetter. It was a joy to visit his small press and see his work. We typeset our menus, vows, and readings and printed them on an inkjet with paper from the Paper Source.

**update: To see more of their wedding details, visit their website. (note: It is best viewed in Safari).

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If you would like to help Mary and Claudine stay blissfully and legally married, go to www.eqca.org and help overturn Prop 8.

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12 Mar

Our very own Jillian married her hubby Scott in the pretty, laid back beach town of Sayulita a year or so ago. Her wedding was beautiful and fun and full of cold Pacificos and warm sand… but most importantly (to us) it also included the pretty paper details that she designed herself.

She wanted her invites to reflect the lightness of the actual wedding, (they asked their guests to wear white), while incorporating pops of bright colors that are so essential to Mexican culture. For inspiration, she and Amanda too a trip to Olvera Street in downtown LA, where they bought a bunch of bright paper flags. And she found a beautiful embossed card at Soolip, but buying enough for every invite would have been a little pricey… so she improvised.

She contacted John Sullivan from Logos Graphics in SF create a plate (for $25!) using a pattern she found. She was also able to purchase the paper, cut/scored to the right size, from him. A close friend knew a little about letterpress, so they went to the San Francisco Center for the Book where they blind embossed the pattern onto her own gate folded card, in the style of the inspiration Jillian found at Soolip. To save on printing, the main invite was printed at home on her Epson printer.

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Aside from the invite and pretty cover piece, her invitation suite included tons of little details to get her guests excited about their trip to Mexico. For her reply postcard, she used a perfect bird graphic she found from Beaumonde and had custom stamps made based on those super cute, semi-iconic vintage Mexican playing cards. Her red and yellow envelopes came from Paper Source and she had Jenna (obviously) do the calligraphy. As an added bonus she created little velum packets that she stitched together herself, full of sand, photos Scott had taken of Sayulita, and a teensy Bienvenidos greeting.

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Then Amanda, being the good friend that she is, designed a website based on Jillian’s invites! Absolutely essential for a destination wedding, in our opinion. And how cute is this website?

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As a final note, Jillian says creating her own invites “was a lot of fun but took serious time and planning. Ultimately you have to utilize your resources and trust your creative vision!”

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10 Mar

Most of you probably know of Jenna Hein at this point, unless you’ve been living under a blog rock. She’s an insanely talented, sought after calligrapher and one of our dearest long-time friends. After lettering hundreds, if not thousands, of wedding invitations for super ecstatic brides, it finally became her turn. She got engaged last Fall to Jon (who calls her “darlin”. how cute!). And she’s been planning for their “Coney Island meets Marie Antoinette” wedding in May, while still managing to write her little fingers to the bone for a few lucky clients.

Being her friend also has some nice perks…like having access to all of her collected wedding inspiration, and getting to see her amazing invitations firsthand. But we won’t show those just yet…later…we promise. For now, here is a fun collection of things that are inspiring her as she plans:

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more to come…

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