Archive for March, 2009

Things I am loving…

Friday, March 27th, 2009

Quirky (and practical) save-the-dates from Chewing the Cud

Letterpress isn’t just for invitations anymore…

Though I am a fan of digital, nice to know some photographers are loyal only to film…

Who said nothing was free anymore? DIY favor labels…

Working with your location… does this gorgeous engagement shoot not scream “San Francisco!”

How about using these for a uber-mod wedding (and in my home!)?

A tandem bike to take you off into the sunset…

More sophistacated color palettes for weddings…

FInding unique floral containers in unexpected places

We're in the Paper!

Friday, March 20th, 2009

Make sure to pick up a copy of the Post and Courier today, Friday, March 20th. Our wedding from last weekend is the feature story in Section D, the Moxie section! Hear more about Deborah’s and Craig’s story… it’s well-written and inspiring.

Cheers to this wonderful couple!

back to Moxie home

Wedding contest losers win big after all

Wedding pros shower cancer survivor and fiance with support

The Post and Courier
Friday, March 20, 2009
Deborah Singer and Craig Stuart walk toward McCrady's for their reception. Singer said getting married in Charleston, "one of the most romantic places in the world," was a dream come true.

Photo provided by Elizabeth Leighton

Deborah Singer and Craig Stuart walk toward McCrady’s for their reception. Singer said getting married in Charleston, “one of the most romantic places in the world,” was a dream come true.

About 50 guests witnessed Singer and Stuart exchange vows inside Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Photographer Elizabeth Leighton said she "felt so blessed to be with them."

Photo Provided by Elizabeth Leighton

About 50 guests witnessed Singer and Stuart exchange vows inside Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Photographer Elizabeth Leighton said she “felt so blessed to be with them.”

Stuart and Singer kiss outside Redeemer Presbyterian Church, which was one of many vendors offering services at a free or reduced rate after hearing the couple's story.

Photo by Elizabeth Leighton

Stuart and Singer kiss outside Redeemer Presbyterian Church, which was one of many vendors offering services at a free or reduced rate after hearing the couple’s story.

Looks like their dream came true after all.

Deborah Singer and Craig Stuart entered a contest to win a free wedding in Charleston. They lost, but in the process won the hearts of wedding vendors from Florida to New Jersey.

And as a result, the Arkansas couple tied the knot in the Holy City on Saturday.

“Something inside of me told me I had to shoot her wedding,” said Elizabeth Leighton, a photographer who donated her services. “I just thought that it would be something good — for her, for me, for her soul, for my soul, to be able to capture her day for her.”

Singer and Stuart had entered the Charleston Area Convention & Visitors Bureau’s “The Ultimate Wedding Giveaway.” The winner was chosen by online voters, based on short videos the couples had submitted.

The race for first was “very close at times,” according to marketing director Louise Ballard.

In the end, Stuart and Singer placed second with 13,185 votes. The winning couple, South Carolina natives and pseudo-celebrities from their time on the reality show “Survivor,” had 15,588.

But the Arkansas couple’s video, in which Singer tells of her medical bills due to breast cancer and her dream of getting married in Charleston, resonated with some viewers who weren’t about to let her walk away empty-handed.

A perfect Match

Singer was in her late 20s when she was diagnosed with breast cancer.

“The experience really put life into perspective for me and made me realize that life is short and should be shared,” she said in the couple’s contest video. “I wanted to find my soulmate.”

She found him on Match.com.

Stuart had entered very specific criteria. Among other things, he wanted to find a redhead who liked cats and Thai food.

He lived in Arkansas and she in Georgia when they met online in 2005. They felt an instant connection and two weeks later met in the Atlanta airport.

Singer remembers telling her mom that Stuart was the first man she could picture waiting for her at the end of the aisle.

She eventually moved to Arkansas to be closer to Stuart and got a job producing documentaries for nonprofits. Stuart is the executive director of Visiting Angels, which provides in-home care for the elderly.

Ten months later, on Singer’s 32nd birthday, Stuart proposed.

Having grown up in North Carolina and having traveled here multiple times on family vacations, Singer knew she wanted to get married in Charleston, particularly in one of its historic churches. But when she found out that most charge nonmembers $2,500 to $3,000, it took the wind out of her sails.

She’s been cancer-free for nearly five years, but is still paying medical bills. Because her risk of developing cancer again is high, she is monitored twice a year with breast MRIs and mammograms.

She learned about the wedding giveaway in a print ad and decided to give it a try.

Clearly it didn’t work out as she had planned, but now she thinks the outcome was better.

For one, Singer believes she had more freedom in her wedding decisions. Second, she and Stuart learned after they entered the giveaway that they would have had to pay taxes on the prize, valued at $80,000. They ended up spending about $10,000, far less than what they estimate the taxes would have been.

Singer is quick to point out the contest opened doors for her and Stuart, giving them the exposure, and assistance, they needed to have their dream wedding.

Acts of kindness

A jewelry store manager in New Jersey sent Singer a gift: a pearl necklace and matching earrings to wear on her wedding day.

Genevieve Hadid (left) drove from North Carolina to do Singer's makeup for free.

Photo provided by Elizabeth Leighton

Genevieve Hadid (left) drove from North Carolina to do Singer’s makeup for free.

A makeup artist who has worked on shows such as “One Tree Hill” and “Dawson’s Creek” came from North Carolina to do Singer’s makeup. (It stayed on through the tears.)

Two photographers, Leighton, who lives in Florida, and Tomme Hilton of Charleston, shot the wedding for free.

Multiple other local vendors wanted to donate their services, including Hannah Alexander of WED. The wedding planner, who had a tumor removed from her breast at 21, said she felt compelled to help Singer.

“When we first talked on the phone, she just had such a great spirit about her,” Alexander said. She called the bride “humble,” “laid-back” and described her as “a bona-fide sweetheart.”

Singer and Stuart and their wedding guests move to the (free) music of deejay Lee Edwards in The Gallery Room, located inside McCrady's Restaurant.

Photo provided by Elizabeth Leighton

Singer and Stuart and their wedding guests move to the (free) music of deejay Lee Edwards in The Gallery Room, located inside McCrady’s Restaurant.

Free music was provided by Lee Edwards, owner of Lee Edwards Entertainment.

“We really thought that it was a couple that deserved the opportunity to have a beautiful wedding in Charleston,” Edwards said.

Stuart and Singer received discounts from various vendors, including Redeemer Presbyterian Church, McCrady’s Restaurant, The Cake Stand, Snyder Event Rentals and The Mills House Hotel.

Singer said she and Stuart were “blown away by the outpouring of support.” Without it, they wouldn’t have been able to have their wedding in Charleston, which she calls “one of the most romantic places in the world.”

The bride was overcome with emotion halfway down the aisle.

“You dream about that moment — walking down the aisle — your whole life, and it felt surreal to be in it,” she said. “You see certain faces in the crowd, certain family members, certain friends. It’s so nice to know that the people that were there love us, support us and believe in us.”

Both she and Stuart were thrilled with how the event turned out, and afterward gushed about the vendors who helped them.

“The setting, the ceremony, the reception … it was exactly what we wanted, and we’re not just saying that,” Stuart said.

“It was just so perfect,” Singer said. “I wouldn’t have done a single thing differently.”

"It's a Beautiful Day"

Monday, March 16th, 2009

“It’s a beautiful day,” she told me. Though the clouds were out, the temperatures down, and the threat of rain eminent, our bride yesterday could only see the beauty in her wedding day… I love that!

This wedding was an adventure for WED. Deborah contacted us this fall and told us her story of receiving her breast cancer diagnosis, enduring treatments, coming out stronger than ever (5 years cancer-free!)… but being plagued with medical bills. She had finally met the love of her life in her fiance Craig and had always dreamed of a Charleston wedding, but was debilitated with mounting hospital payments. She asked us if we’d be willing to help her out and help her in finding other vendors to donate of their time and services, and we were thrilled to be invited to be a part of this gorgeous couple’s wedding weekend. With having gone through a breast cancer scare myself, I was excited to help this deserving couple out.

Our planning started with the cocktail hour space: the ever-chic Robert Lange Studios. The space was donated by the owners (and friends of Deborah’s family) and proved perfect for their 50 family and friends to cocktail.

  

With this space secured I thought it only made sense to have their guests walk right up to dinner in the beautiful Gallery room at McCradys. Fate would have their wedding date open (the only weekend in March that was still available!!), so we picked a beautiful menu and the couple could not have been more excited about the space (“George Washington ate here!” I heard the bride tell just about every guest!). Lauren Robertson of The Cake Stand rounded out their meal with this gorgeous cake:

WED did all of the flowers in house, creating nature-inspired bouquets of andromeda (the bride’s favorite), button and cushion mums, garden roses, heleborus, cymbidium orchids and local dogwood blossoms:

  

So many of our vendors “wow”ed us with their generosity… FABULOUS photographer ELizabeth Leighton flew up from Port St. Lucie, FL to shoot the wedding (Tomme Hilton was her local second shooter),  Redeemer Presbyrterian Church donated their gorgeous sanctuary on Wentworth Street, Lee Edwards his night to DJ, Snyder Event Rentals the linen and Allure Salon the bridal hair. THANK YOU SO MUCH to everyone who chipped in to treat this very deserving couple!

Make sure to grab a Post and Courier this Friday — Deborah and Craig’s story and more wedding pictures will be featured in the “Moxie” section.

Platinum Wedding

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Unfortunately I’m not talking about the (fabulously funny) show… but we did have our own “platinum” wedding this past February… platinum, black, and white to be exact.

The stormy skies may have dampened anothers day, but I love that the bride proclaimed, “Well, I asked for a gray wedding, right? The weather fits right in!”

It was a gorgeous night…. lots of sparkle, but oh, so chic. Here are a few of the details:

Creeping flowers up black birch branches in custom-tin containers…

Orchids were hung from one of the lounge tents to create an art deco-inspired “chandelier”

Sequined linens paired well with minimalist arrangements…

Silver silk draping and white leather furniture created a hip space…

And the interior rooms for dinner will all about elegance… with a little bling, of course…

We had a silver graphic print designed to meet their mod tastes and carried this throughout the night, beginning with the save-the-dates, then on to the placecards, menus, etc.

The lighting in the dance tent was gorgeous!

Flowers were simple and elegant…

And of course the martini bar was a huge hit…

Beautiful!

Rainy day post

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

On this rainy weekend, here’s something to put a little sunshine in my (and your!) life: dozens of bright yellow ranunculus, one of my favorite flowers. This is a perfect centerpiece to me- lush but somehow still feels clean and minimal. Here’s to hoping for a bright day tomorrow!