Our Wedding Story: How an Unexpected Loss and a String of Bad Luck Turned Into the Best Day Ever

As I sat here and reflected on the past year, as I’ve tried to do the last few years, I realized our wedding story took on a life of its own. Most would think the year they get married would be one of the best of their life; however, the months leading up to mine were by far the most stressful I can recall. I’m not talking normal wedding stress, no, that would have been a walk in the park compared to what we went through.  

Throughout this post, I want to share my story, while also giving a tremendous amount of thanks to my dear husband, our close friends and family, strangers who turned into close friends and our vendors, who have made me look back on our wedding with pure happy thoughts, which I never thought possible when we received news back in August of this year.

Will proposed in April of 2015. While I didn’t grow up planning my wedding, the second Will proposed, I got extremely giddy about the details and couldn’t wait to start this journey together. I started to think about what I wanted and Pinterest led me down a rabbit hole…open space? necessary; vineyard? that sounds beautiful; water? sure; trees? yes!; gorgeous house to get ready in? absolutely!….there was no way a place like this could actually exist within our budget, so I knew I’d have to give up a few things. As we set out to look for venues, it wasn’t easy, how was I going to give up any of these ‘must-haves’ ??

After seeing four venues in person and scouring the internet at countless others, I realized I may not have to. Insert Elk Manor Winery.

We found them on the typical wedding websites, great reviews, beautiful photos, and every single thing we were looking for. We went to see it and fell in love immediately. The town was a bit small for our liking since we had such a large guest list; hotels worried us, but they had plenty of weddings there our size before, so we overlooked that. We met with the coordinator Molly (this is a fun turn of events later in the story), she was sweet and made us feel like we’d known her for years. There were two locations on the property that could fit our wedding party, the Manor House and the Beach House. Molly informed us that at the end of 2015, they would have a state of the art double decker glass tent installed at the Manor House that would provide a beautiful rain plan and we could get it at the current price since we were booking before it was built. As much as I liked the Beach location, I had always been worried about a rain plan so after several days of back and forth, we chose October 1, 2016 at the Manor House.

While it was a tad longer of an engagement than we thought we’d have, it meant that we’d have a lot less stress during planning since we had more time, right? Once the venue was chosen, we got to start the fun details! We signed a contract that also included Rouge as our Caterer since they had a relationship with the venue, they offered a discount and people raved, not only about Rouge, but how both establishments worked so well together. We were to make payments to Elk Manor and then they would pay Rouge, marketed as a “one stop shop for couples.” Over the course of the next several months, working with Elk Manor was not always easy, but we kept telling ourselves that it was worth it to have everything we wanted in a venue. The amount of rules set with this venue was astronomical and as coordinators started to change, more and more rules were set into place and we had no say in it. For example, the price to use the Manor House to get ready went from no extra charge, to $250/hour to $500/hour.  These were conditions documented in emails with coordinators, rather than in the contract (my fault), that were not honored. I was told that coordinators who I worked with when I signed, were never really coordinators, even though I had their business cards to prove so.  

I constantly checked in about the double decker tent because we needed dimensions for other vendors and I was always told that it would 100% be completed by the early part of 2016. Come July 2016, it still wasn’t on the property. But bigger things started to unfold in July that made the tent the least of our worries.

I received an email from Rouge’s Vice President informing me that none of our payments had been received from Elk Manor and that if they weren’t received by the end of the week, that they would no longer be catering our wedding. Naturally, I turned white, and felt pure panic. We had paid two of our three payments to Elk Manor at this point, with the third to be due at the end of that month. I immediately called Elk Manor to find out what was going on, yet another new coordinator answered my call explaining she couldn’t give any information. She couldn’t give any information about my wedding that was three months away and the $16K that I had paid them.  I called Rouge and they told us their story and that 20 other couple’s were in the same situation, but at this point it was their word against Elk Manor’s. Who was I to believe. Rouge provided this bit of information: Simon Tusha, the owner of Elk Manor Winery had been found guilty in May of 2016 for fraud against the U.S. and embezzlement. Simon Tusha?? Who was this?? I had never heard this name in all the correspondence I had with Elk Manor. I went on to the Maryland Judiciary Site and I couldn’t believe my eyes. The owner of my wedding venue, whom I had never met or spoken with, had a three page long rap sheet. Will and I were in shock. We didn’t know what to do. How was this happening. I was supposed to be stressing about invitations, not being the mediator of two large establishments investigating where my large sum of money disappeared to. We figured this had to be a mistake.

Thanks to Facebook, I was lucky enough to get invited into a group that included some of the other Elk Manor affected couples, nine brides and one groom. We were all very formal at first, not knowing who to trust, or who’s information was correct, but one thing we did know was that not feeling alone in this scenario made things a lot less scary. We started to bond. Every bit of information one of us got, we shared with each other. We talked 24/7. If we weren’t attempting to call Elk Manor or Rouge, we were talking to each other. We referred to ourselves as the EMSS (“Elk Manor Shit Show”).

As I kept trying to get information from Elk Manor, I kept being told by the coordinators that they could not tell me anything and finally I asked to go to the source, Simon Tusha, himself. That man is shocking. First, he tried blowing smoke, telling me and the other couple’s all these terrible things about Rouge (completely untrue) and that he definitely paid them, but had no receipt to show for it because “he doesn’t ask for receipts for large sums of money.” That day, the first day I spoke with him, he threatened me, called me names, screamed at me, threatened my wedding and basically gave no remorse about what we were dealing with so close to our wedding day.  

Through all this back and forth, our final payment was due to Elk Manor, in which they told us that if we didn’t pay, we’d be forfeiting our contract, meaning we’d lose our venue and deposits we’d already put down. Somehow, the language in the contract protected them. So we paid our final payment of $12K. A full $28K sent to this man, still hoping our wedding would happen. He promised it would happen. While we knew we couldn’t default on our contract, we decided to protect ourselves in a different way, by getting wedding cancellation Insurance. We weren’t sure if this would do much, but figured why not?

Fast forward five weeks to August 9, 2016, the day before I left for my Bachelorette party and seven weeks before our wedding date. Myself, along with the EMSS and others, received an email none of us were ever really expecting to receive. “Elk Manor Winery is closed indefinitely and there will no longer be any weddings held unless an additional $1K is paid per staff member required to be there.” Was this serious? Did I read this right? I couldn’t have. Even with everything that had happened until this point, we always thought we’d still have our wedding there. Once I snapped back into reality, I thought well, if he isn’t allowing us to have our wedding there, he has to at least give us our money back. Nope. He was $4 million in debt to the IRS alone. We weren’t going to see a dime. When we emailed him about that, he responded, “this wasn’t my choice.” This wasn’t his choice. Hm. It wasn’t his choice to defraud the government and lie to innocent people who had saved money, who’s parents had saved money, who’s grandparents had saved money, and spent months, even years planning this one day. But it wasn’t his choice to strip that from us. The day after he sent that email, he posted photos on Facebook of him in the front row of a Coldplay concert and of his Range Rover. Meanwhile 20 couples and their families sat in utter disbelief of this man’s “choices.”

Somehow I now had to get on a plane and disconnect from this entire situation, forget that I needed to replan an entire wedding in less than two months, to enjoy my Bachelorette party. This was something I could do and did have control over and let’s just say I didn’t allow Simon Tusha to take this from me too. Thank god for amazing friends who handed me a drink every second I may have even attempted to think about this and for my fiancé who spent his weekend calling venues and answering countless emails.

The Monday I returned home, I had taken off of work in advance because I knew I’d be moving slowly after four days in Key West, but I didn’t know I’d also be calling close to sixty venues looking for openings and driving hours to see others. Not only were we already feeling low, but to hear ‘unavailable’ or ‘we have the Friday and Sunday of your weekend available’ so many times was making it hard to feel anything. I was supposed to be focusing on normal stresses of my wedding and making small decisions, not hustling to find a venue.

 At this point we were six weeks out and every single weekend was filled with either a wedding or bachelorette parties or travel. We didn’t have the time to wallow. We spent every weeknight driving up to North East, MD to look at venues. We didn’t want to change the location since all of our guests had already booked the hotels because there weren’t many in the area. Our radius was limited. We looked at venues that weren’t even completed yet. We were desperate. Then I received a call from someone giving me the name of someone who used to run a bed and breakfast and told me to just give it a shot. I did.

Captain Laurel Waters of the former Woodland Gardens Bed and Breakfast welcomed me into her home. I sat in her backyard for hours at my lowest talking with her and her parents. She offered me lemonade, at this point any kind gesture was huge in my eyes and something about it felt right. It wasn’t going to be easy. It was a blank slate. A large backyard on the water. Everything for this wedding was going to have to be DIY. But it was a space. Jenna of Pop the Cork Designs, my fantastic florist, Genevieve of La Fleur Du Jour, photographer, Kate, of Kate Ann Photography and Rouge POC, Sarah, came to meet me at the potential new venue to see if this was something we could work with. Exactly four weeks before our wedding date, we booked our new venue. Laurel even let us carry out the old southern tradition of burying a bottle of bourbon in hopes of good weather on our wedding day.

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Every single day up until the wedding was exhausting. Calling rental companies because now we needed chairs, tables, bathrooms, etc, all of which was included at Elk Manor. (Noteworthy: Lawn games were one big thing we were excited about that was included with Elk Manor and when we lost that, we were disappointed. We had several family/friends step up and surprise us with hand crafted lawn games, including connect 4, giant jenga and corn hole). Sending out revision cards to guests with new information. Plus the things on our to-do list that were meant to be done the month of our wedding. Jenna answered countless calls and texts from me frantically asking questions and requesting last minute referrals.

I had a vision for my wedding. When I lost that, I was crushed. Not that the backyard wasn’t pretty. It just wasn’t what I had envisioned. And now with $28K down the drain, I didn’t have much room for details, since we had to repay Rouge and pay for all of the additional rentals. Insert Lisa Limberger of White Glove Rentals. I had went to White Glove at the beginning of my planning process and fell in love with absolutely everything. However, the prices were out of our budget, so we focused on a few key pieces. When I called Lisa about the situation, she felt terrible. She knew what losing my vision did to me and what her pieces could do to transform that space, so out of the kindness of her and her husband’s heart, she offered us a steep discount. I will never be able to repay the kindness they showed to us, but those rentals made the space absolutely beautiful.

The week of our wedding was here. That Monday afternoon I went down to our basement to get something and to my utter panic, our entire basement was flooded. Water was up to my ankles. In normal circumstances this would suck, but this was on another level. My wedding dress was in the basement, half of which was on the floor, meaning half of my dress was completely soaked, the week of our wedding. Wedding party gifts and décor covered our basement floor. Completely drenched. I called Will in a state of pure panic. After everything, how were we also dealt this hand? We weren’t sure if it was rain water, so we were worried the dress was completely saturated in murky discolored water, which doesn’t fare well with a white dress. I had a planning meeting with Jenna in an hour, so she just let me come over and we called cleaning companies. A man in a van came to pick up my dress. He took away the dress I had spent months picking out and months altering, with five days until our wedding. I was broken. Our house was a train wreck. There was stuff everywhere and somehow we were supposed to pack up and head to our wedding in just a few short days.  

Not to mention it was a complete downpour every single day that week. I had rental companies calling me to figure out back up plans (which we didn’t have because this was a back yard wedding). I wasn’t able to use certain things we had picked out with White Glove for fear of ruining them in the rain. I kept telling myself, what next? Every time the phone would ring, every time a new email popped into my inbox, my heart stopped. The man in the van returned my dress Wednesday before our wedding and to my surprise, it looked good as new.

 At the rehearsal on Friday evening, it was decided that we should at least do a run through of the ceremony under the tent since there was an 80% chance of rain the next day, all day. I was crushed. After all this. After replanning a wedding and opting for rentals and flowers and arches, I’d now have to get married with the backdrop of plastic tent side walls. I became numb. What could I do? Nothing about the weather, so I enjoyed the heck out of the rehearsal dinner night with my favorite people.

Our wedding day. We arrived at the venue at 8am (no extra charge per hour, thank goodness) to help the rental companies set up and start to get ready. I was jittery, but not because I was about to marry my best friend, but because there were about a million moving parts and a storm cloud ready to unleash at any moment.

Hair and makeup were in full swing. Vendors were rolling in. It was happening. My bridesmaids kept me updated with the weather by hour. “It went from 80% to 60% at 4pm!” “Now it’s only 30%!” “Wait 15%!!” Was it possible we were going to be able to have this outside the way I wanted? Before our first look, they asked if I wanted ceremony chairs set up outside, I nodded and that was that. I wasn’t thinking about it anymore. I first looked with my mom, my dad, my girls and then Will. Will, the one who I would be spending the rest of my life with. I wasn’t even thinking about the weather any longer, or Elk Manor, or Simon, or any of that chaos. This was my wedding day. I was surrounded with the people I loved and it was going to be a party one way or another. The rain held off for the ceremony and cocktail hour, I could hardly believe it (shout out to that bourbon tradition). It poured the second we entered the tent, but hey, that’s what tents are for. I walked into the tent and was absolutely amazed. What these vendors pulled off was pure magic. I remember saying over and over how beautiful everything was. The night was absolutely perfect. It was as if that was where we were supposed to get married all along.

Fast forward to now. I just received all of my photos from Kate and I am in absolute awe. What she was able to capture was incredible. She made those photos look like something out of a magazine. Maybe I’m biased, but you’d have never known this was a back yard wedding reconfigured four weeks before the date. I’d like to say all of the wonderful things about every vendor here, but I’ll save that for the reviews and I’ve linked them all below.

If you made it this far, I commend you. This was long. And mainly a way to gain closure for myself, but since you’re still here, I want to say thank you. This was my biggest challenge of 2016 and probably the hardest year of my life. Some may say I’ve had a pretty easy life then and I can’t say I disagree, but it doesn’t discount the fact that there were times this year I wasn’t sure if I was going to make it. I felt low, I felt lost, I felt helpless, I felt numb, all when I should have been feeling the happiest. And it reemphasized the fact that I’m not in this world alone. There are bad people, but there are also some really really good ones and I’m lucky to be surrounded by them. During this year, I got to see magic before my eyes. This situation taught me that I’m actually a lot stronger than I thought I was, but also taught me to not be afraid to ask for help. It taught me that everything really does happen for a reason.

To my husband, to my family, to my friends, to my vendors, to EMSS, to my coworkers, to the commenters on Facebook, thank you for listening to my story, thank you for helping me along the way, thank you for being there. I’ve never been so grateful and I truly believe in paying it forward. Our wedding day worked out better than we could have ever imagined and there’s something to say about resending that positive energy back into the universe.

Enjoy the photos. All vendors are linked below, they’re fantastic!

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Venue: Woodland Gardens Bed and Breakfast | Hair: Megan and Amanda from Halo Salon | Makeup: Brittany Cretella of Izzy B Makeup | Photographer: Kate Ann Photography | Florist: La Fleur Du Jour | Planner: Pop The Cork Designs | DJ/Band: Hero Band | Caterer: Rouge Catering | Gown designer/retailer: Leanne Marshall (Designer) Garnish Boutique (Retailer) | Bridesmaids Dresses: Bella Bridesmaids | Invitations/Signage: With Wild and Grace | Videographer: Cinematic by David M | Transportation: Viennas Transportation | Wedding Cake or Dessert: Rouge (Dessert Bar) & Sugar Bakers (Ceremonial Cake) | Rentals: White Glove Rentals (Vintage Unique Pieces) & Party Plus Rentals

 

30 Pre-Wedding Party Whites ON SERIOUS SALE

If you have a wedding coming up this year (congrats!), you’re probably in the thick of planning and  have yet to take a second to think about all of the fun parties in store, such as your bridal shower, bachelorette party, rehearsal dinner and FINALLY the big day! While the big day’s attire gets months of planning and attention, let’s not forget about those other events! More than likely you’ll be wearing white to these events and in just a few months, white is going to be uber pricey! So I took the liberty of getting a jump on things and put together 30 of my favorite white options (dresses + rompers) that are still on serious sale!

Whether you’re into boho chic, short + sweet or somewhere in between; there’s something on this list surely to catch your eye!

As you can tell ASOS and Revolve has some of my favorites!  Happy shopping Bride-to-Be’s!

ASOS – $47.04 | Originally $94.09

asos white crochet

 

 

ASOS – $39 | Originally $77
asos 7

 

 

ASOS – $55.60 | Originally $111.20
asos 4

 

ASOS – $39 | Originally $66
asos 6

 

Revolve – $39 |Originally $65
revolve 1

 

Revolve – $31 | Originally $114
revolve 2

 

Revolve – $47 | Originally $77
revolve 3

 

Revolve – $47 | Originally $94
revolve 4

 

 

Revolve – $55 | Originally $127
revolve 5

 

 

Revolve – $41 | Originally $89
revolve 6

 

Revolve – $64 | Originally $152
revolve 7

 

 

Revolve – $60 | Originally $100
revolve 8

 

Free People – $69.95 | Originally $128
FP

 


Free People –
$99.95 | Originally $168
FP2

 

Free People – $99 | Originally $168
FP3
Anthropologie – $79.95 *Use code TAGTIME for additional 25% OFF* | Originally $148
anthro white

 

Nordstrom – $109.98 | Originally $275
nord white 2.jpg

 

BB Dakota – $59.97 | Originally $128
bbdakota white

 

BB Dakota $37 | Originally $92
bbdakota2

 

BCBG $62 | Originally $128
bcbg 1

Michael Kors – $70 | Originally $175
MK 1

 

Calypso St. Barth – $132 | Originally $235
CSB

 

 

Amelie – $24.99 | Originally $34.99
amelie

 

 

Macy’s – $32.99 | Originally $89.50
macys1

 

 

Macy’s $44.99 | Originally $89
macys2

Macy’s $44.99 | Originally $89.50
macys3

 

Macy’s $53.99 | Originally $149
macys4

The following are regular price, but they are too good not to share!

 

ASOS – $44.48
asos 3

 

ASOS – $76.98
asos 5


Nordstrom
– $52

Pre-Wedding Party Whites ON SALE Now

 

 

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How to Propose to Your Bridal Party on a Budget [DIY]

Happy WEDnesday! I’ve got weddings on the brain today, probably because we just hit our negative 1 year anniversary! And thankfully we’ve got most of the big stuff booked! One of the events that I knew would take a lot of thought was deciding how I would propose to my half of the bridal party. Right after Will & I got engaged in April, I immediately started thinking of how I would ask my MOH and Bridesmaids to be in our wedding. These ladies are extremely special to me and have been by my side through everything; I knew it had to be something more than just a question.

Pinterest is beyond overwhelming with various sites to purchase cards/jewelry etc. to propose to your ladies, but that also tends to be pricey, especially if you’ve got six in your party like me. Being a MOH/Bridesmaid isn’t easy on the wallet either, so I wanted to show each of them just how much it would mean to me to have them standing by my side on one of the best days of my life. This is a completely DIY proposal that still packs the sentiment [I even got tears!] without breaking the bank [you’ve got plenty of time for that leading up to the BIG day]!

Because I’m having six ladies on my side, it was a little difficult finding items that were all exactly the same, so some I switched up based on their personalities and others I kept uniform, if possible.

I decided to pick tentative colors of Navy, Gold and Lavender and make gifts with the theme of those colors running through.

Here’s what I used:

Wood Box/Shadow Box
We’re going with a rustic theme, so I used unfinished wood for the boxes/crates. For the Bridesmaids, I used a hinged shadowbox from Michaels. I wanted the top to be glass, so they could immediately see what it was, but I had to go to a few different locations to find these, so if you can only find solid topped boxes, so work great too! For the MOH, I used a crate without a top, since there were a few more things I wanted to include.

Initial Letters
I wanted to personalize each box, so I got a letter for each of their names and spray painted them Navy. I tried gold, but all the spray paints I found were too light. The golds that were darker incorporated glitter and made a huge mess. So, Navy it was! For me, trial and error was key here.

Cards
Of course, I wanted to write a little something to each of them reminiscing about our friendship and telling them how I’d neverbeenso lucky to have them in my life! I got blank cards from Target and wrote a little something in each. But I also wanted to include the main question on the envelope. I was going to just write it, but decided to get crafty and emboss them. I’ve never used an embossing tool before [again, trial and error], but I think they turned out well! Essentially you write with a glue pen, layer the glue with glitter and then emboss [or heat] the writing, so that it gives some texture, but stays in place. I used gold glitter here to offset the navy.

Photos
I’m a big fan [and have a ton] of photos with these ladies, from embarrassing middle school days to drunk nights to being a grown up, so I knew those would be a staple in the presentation. I’m lucky enough that these ladies have had time to get to know Will very well and build a special relationship with him in their own way, so I included photos of each of them with him also. I found some gold binder clips at Target to hold the photos together.

Soaps
I LOVE soaps! The smells are so relaxing and they feel luxurious on my skin! I wanted the ladies to feel this as well! So I found some lavender colored soaps to go with the theme (and because they smell delightful). For the MOH, I included a couple fancier soaps and tied them together with string. Again, little enhances to the MOH’s box just gives her that bit of something special, you picked her as your MOH for a reason!

Notepads
I included a gold notepad and gold pencils I found at Target. These ladies will be keeping lots of notes for you, they’re going to need a place to keep track of it all!

Special Quote
I found these magnets that say “when I count my blessings, I count you twice!”

Important Info
When you ask your bridal party, you probably wont have a ton of wedding info just yet. But it’s likely you will have the names of all the bridesmaids and groomsmen, the venue, and the date, so include those on a piece of paper so your ladies have a couple details to work with. I just typed up each piece of information on a separate page in word, printed it on a small piece of cardstock, punched a hole in the corner and tied each piece together with string.

Flowers
I included some fake flowers from Michael’s to fill up empty space in each box. Go with a color you think you may use on your wedding, but remember nothing is set in stone, it’s still early!

Colored Candies
Include sweet treats that have wrapping coinciding with the color scheme set up for your gift! I used gold-wrapped Lindt truffles and gold-wrapped Ghirardelli squares.

Champs & Straws
Most liquor stores have small bottles of champagne and what better reason to toast than you making the decision to include this special person on your special day! I found some great gold/white paper straws at Michael’s. Cheers!

After all was said and done, I’d say each of these was roughly $20, which is an ultimate steal, IMO.

Here is the box I made for my MOH:

How to Propose to Your Bridal Party [DIY] - MOH

Here are a few I made for my bridesmaids [they both have K names], but just wanted to include a few different angles.

How to Propose to Your Bridal Party [DIY] - Bridesmaid

How to Propose to Your Bridal Party [DIY] - Bridesmaid

Here is another one I made for a Bridesmaid, you get a better look at the amount of photos I included and the inside of the card.

How to Propose to Your Bridal Party [DIY] - Bridesmaid

Ultimately, you want it to be special. These are your girls; you know them best and what they’ll love! How did you propose to your bridal party?! What other DIY projects did you create to save money?!

How To Propose To Your Bridal Party on a Budget

15 Tips for Enjoying the Wedding Dress Search

You’re engaged?! Congrats! You’re a supportive MOH, Bridesmaid or MOB reading this in hopes to prep your Bride-To-Be?! That’s sweet of you! Either way, wedding dress shopping is in your near future and you’re looking for some assistance for how all this is supposed to go down. You’re in luck! Take a deep breath and soak it all in!

Anyone who knows me knows that I’m extremely indecisive and a big lover of fashion..the two coupled together proved to be a bit tough when it came to picking out my wedding dress. I went to six shops and tried on 100+ dresses. Consultants would ask me what I didn’t like about certain dresses and I couldn’t pin point it, I just knew it wasn’t mine. Then finally, I found the dress I couldn’t take off. It was beautiful and completely different than anything I imagined I’d wear or pick out. Naturally, before my first appointment, I googled how to have a successful wedding shopping experience. I didn’t come up with much and a lot of what I read online or saw on TV about how a wedding dress appointment should go ended up not even working for me. That being said, here are 15 tips I’ve learned along the way that I wish I’d heard beforehand!

1. You Don’t Need to Know What You’re Looking For
While it’s fun to think you have an idea of what you’re looking for in a wedding dress; just keep in mind, there’s a very big possibility you end up with something completely different. Before my first appointment, I spent days printing photos and style numbers of dresses I wanted to try on and organizing them in a pretty little white wedding binder, to basically have it ignored for the most part. Consultants are going to ask for some key words and then basically have you try on dresses and gauge what you like/don’t like from there. Don’t waste your time printing out millions of photos, have an idea in your head, but keep an open mind.

2. Bring As Many Guests As You Deem Appropriate
When I started making appointments at shops, I received shocked responses when I told them I would be bringing 4-6 people with me. A few even said they couldn’t accommodate me if I brought more than 2 people (red flag, IMO – this is a special time for you that you want to share with people, a stranger shouldn’t be dictating that – their loss anyway). Like I said, I am extremely indecisive, I NEED opinions from the people important to me. The places I ended up having the most fun at, were when I brought 6 of my ladies, we brought champagne and we just had fun! It took so much pressure off and I felt much more comfortable in my skin.

3. It’s Okay to Be Indecisive
While many bride-to-be’s get a lot of flack for being indecisive, I say when it comes to your wedding dress, why not be? This is the most important dress you’ll ever wear and on a day when all eyes are on you! If time allows, be indecisive! If you aren’t happy about something with the dress, but you can’t pin point it, don’t get frustrated, just take it off and move on to the next. I dealt with one consultant who made me feel so uncomfortable when I couldn’t specify what it was that I didn’t like and it was a terrible experience. I ended up just saying I liked dresses so that she would stop pressuring me (needless to say, I didn’t return).

4. Take Pictures
Before my first appointment, I didn’t even think about not being able to take pictures, I figured that was a given, but to my surprise most of the shops I went to did not allow photography. However, pictures are necessary! There are so many dresses I either wouldn’t have remembered or realized how I felt about them without being able to see a photo after and process it. I told all of the consultants that my Grandmother couldn’t be there and she was the one paying for the dress (which was 90% true) and that she needed to see it before I made a decision. Luckily, this worked. Ultimately, the consultant wants the bride to be happy, so hopefully if you have a good one, they’ll work with you. Try not to take no for an answer; trust me, the pictures are important. Bonus: you can print off the pictures of the dresses that weren’t the one and save them in a journal to remember and show your fiancé after the wedding!

5. Try EVERYTHING On
Okay, maybe not everything, but this is the only time you’ll get to try on wedding dresses in your life, why not make the most of it! There were a few times where I was nervous that maybe I’d just never find anything, but I also had a ton of fun in the interim. Your consultant asks if you want to try on more, if you’re up for it, why not! Your mom picks out a hideous number that you could never see yourself in, give it a shot! You may end up falling in love with something you would have never chosen. Which brings me to my next tip….

6. Know When to Put Your Foot Down
If you’re no longer having fun and no longer ‘up for it,’ then say No. You may be worried you’ll hurt feelings, but again, this is the time to be somewhat selfish. I agree with trying on the gown your future MIL fell in love with to be nice, but you don’t need to keep it on and you don’t need to try on any others. The consultant is pulling the appointment into an entirely different direction than what you’re liking, then ask her to take a detour, it will save everyone time.

7. Do Your Hair and Makeup
You are trying on a dress that you plan to wear on a day when you’ll be the most beautiful gal at the ball. You might as well give the dresses a fair shot by at least primping your face a bit. I found that I felt so much more beautiful in dresses when I actually looked put together vs. rolling out of bed, no makeup, hair a mess. Trust me, it makes a difference.

8. Extend the Invitation
I worried about inviting my bridesmaids and Mom and my fiance’s family to multiple appointments because I didn’t want them to feel obligated to attend, but I also didn’t know who would be free when and if everyone’s schedules would align. As expected, schedules did not align (in the slightest), so I ended up just making the appointments and sending an email with the dates and locations and allowed them to decide which one’s they’d like to attend (if any). It ended up working out and I think everyone who attended genuinely enjoyed themselves.

9. Don’t Stress if You Don’t Have Your Wedding Shoes
People started asking me what my wedding shoes looked like and if I was bringing them to my appointments so they could measure and I just sat there thinking how am I supposed to pick my shoes when I don’t even have my dress and I’m 14 months away. You don’t need to bring shoes to try on your dress, most places will have shoes in a couple different sizes. If you’re worried about this or you’re worried they’ll need them to measure you correctly (incase you say yes) then give the shop a call and see what they recommend. If they do say to bring shoes, just bring a pair of similar height that you could see yourself wearing.

10. Bring a Male Figure
My Dad is very important to me, I value his opinion, but he’s also the furthest thing from a fashion guru that you could imagine. However, I didn’t bring him along for his fashion advice, I brought him for his support and the experience. He came to two of my appointments, after which he said he didn’t want to come to anymore because he wanted to be surprised on the wedding day. He questioned things I never would have and provided male insight that may be similar to that of my fiancé. So if you have a male someone who’s important to you, don’t hesitate thinking it’s out of their swim lane, invite them along!

11. It’s Okay to Get ‘The Feeling’ & Still Not Commit
I found the dress I loved that I knew was ‘the one,’ but I couldn’t pull the trigger that day. I questioned every minor detail about it. I had an appointment the next day at another location, tried on the same dress and still couldn’t do it (mainly because it was in a different location, but still). It took me 2 weeks to call up the shop and make the appointment to officially say yes. There were 2 there that I loved so I decided to put them both on. I almost left again without a dress because I loved them both. But then I again, stared at myself and couldn’t take it off, and knew it was it. I knew it was the one (again).

12. Accessorize
If you have the tiniest thought that this dress could be it, then ask to be accessorized! Put on a veil, a necklace, a hairpiece; try to envision yourself as a dream. Never feel like you are taking up too much time, the consultant will inform you of this as you go. The accessories make a huge difference, but don’t feel married (no pun intended) to them. You normally don’t have to make decisions like that until a few months out. And you aren’t limited to just the shop you find your dress at; Etsy has a huge online marketplace of unique wedding accessories!

13. Verify What They Have Online
Like I mentioned, I spent countless hours researching dresses, mainly on The Knot Look Book App, which gets very very addicting. But I must warn you, not everything they show a shop having online is in store and they also have many many more than what is available online. If there was a specific dress I knew I had to try on from a specific designer, I pulled the style code and called or emailed the shop to see if they had it, they were usually very helpful. No sense in going to a shop for one gown to find out they carry the designer, but not that dress. One time, I sent roughly 40 style codes to a shop and the consultant got back to me within 2 hours and informed me they only had 7 of the styles I inquired about, another reason why spending so much time researching photos isn’t all that necessary.

14. Don’t Be Afraid of The Off-White’s
When the consultant brought in the dress I ended up choosing, I originally thought ‘this is cream, there is no way I can get married in cream.’ I was later informed it was in fact ivory, just a more champagne-colored ivory. Either way, it looked tanner to me than I ever expected my wedding dress to be; however, the consultant pointed out, most people are not going to be wearing shades close to white or ivory, so my dress will look white in comparison. She assured me that if the dress is too white, it could wash me out or negatively impact lighting for pictures.

15. Google Your Dress + ‘Real Weddings’
If you are in between a few dresses because you’re unsure how they may look at your wedding, google the name of your dress along with ‘real weddings’ and you will see pictures of the dress from (you guessed it!) real weddings! It reaffirmed my love for the dress when I was being indecisive and gave me some ideas of how to style it that I would have never thought of!

DIY Cork Board Engagement Gift 

Lately it seems love is in the air, everywhere I look around! Will & I have already received SIX Wedding Save The Dates for 2016 (and we’ll be sending out our own very soon!)

Wineries are trending BIG in the wedding industry right now; people are getting engaged at wineries, having engagement photo shoots at wineries, throwing bachelorette wine tours, and having weddings at wineries (like us!).

Recently two of our closest friends got engaged at Barrel Oak Winery in Virgina. I’m a big fan of sentimental/meaningful gifts (I’m a huge sap!), so I wanted them to have something to always remember the place they got engaged (other than the rock on her finger!)!

Coincidentally my girlfriends and I had a bachelorette wine tour at the same winery after I found out they were engaged. Wineries go through corks, like I go through red wine. So i decided to ask if they had any corks I could have for a DIY project.  JACKPOT, the woman ended up giving me an entire bag of corks!

And here in lies the result..a cork board to hang on their wall with corks from the place they were engaged.

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Now you want to get into the nitty gritty of how its done. Three words, SIMPLE, QUICK, CHEAP..my favorite kind of DIY project.

SUPPLIES
Corks
Hot Glue Gun
Frame – White looks clean (size of the cork board you want to give – this one is 24″ x 12″)
Sauce Pan
Strainer
Sharp Knife

I did this project for under $10 – the cost of the frame! And in less than TWO hours!

HOW TO
1. Remove the glass from your frame, but leave the backing in so you have a place to glue the corks.
2. I cut all my corks in half so that I’d have a flat edge to glue down (and then I was able to double the amount of corks I had!) – to make this process easier, I brought a saucepan of water up to a boil and placed a small strainer on top, covered and let sit for 20 minutes. Make sure the water level is low enough that the corks are not touching. You’re essentially steaming the corks to make them easier to cut.

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3. Using a sharp knife, cut all of your corks in half and place them in the frame how you want the finished product to look. This will allow you to fix spacing before you start gluing. Get creative! But if possible, always have the name of the winery facing outward – gives it a personal touch.

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4. Start the gluing process. I left all of the corks in the frame and just picked them up and glued as I went, that way I wouldn’t forget the pattern.

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YOU ARE DONE!
To personalize it one step further, as you saw above, I printed out a few photos of the couple and tacked them on before gifting! How easy was that?!

What are some DIY engagement gifts you’ve given?!