Browsing Tag

wedding traditions

Q & Advice

A Far Away Wedding: Installment 2

Wedding Stamp by Laura Hooper

Both of you have stars in your eyes as you discuss how it will feel to board that airplane and be whisked off to your remote location for the special day.  As each week nears its close the star-y eyes start to lose a bit of their luster because you both have some realizations: there is only so much room in these bags, you are being charged a storage fee for the chuppah your uncle made for you and your mother had shipped to the venue, and will the wine you special ordered from that vineyard in Sonoma make it in time and unscathed? First, breath! Then remember, you have added so many interesting and surprising twists that represent the two of you as a couple and everyone will enjoy them.

How can you give your far, far away wedding a unique twist that is signature to you and your partner? Incorporating cultural and family traditions is one way to infuse the wedding day with personal touches. When you combine important rituals you convey your values as a couple.

One place to start sharing your personal touch is with your correspondence. Upload your own online invitation or wedding website design on Glö to incorporate a family crest or some kind of iconography that is special to you.  Your wedding correspondence is the first contact your guests will have with you both as a couple. This is a golden opportunity for you to start creating the ambiance of your day.

Creating a website or wedding blog is a great way to keep your guests informed and share your excitement. If you are not interested in the standard form wedding sites (many are put out by wedding publications) you do not have to use them, even if you are not tech savvy. Blogger or Tumblr are just two easy to use and free sites for building your wedding blog. Both of these options offer a number of beautiful templates. Your blog and invites can be two sides of the ambiance setting coin. You can even use the same art on both.

So you have set the stage with your beautiful correspondence but you and your partner do not subscribe to any particular tradition. How else can you personalize your far away affair? You will find a way to incorporate the things you both love. Try to think outside the box on this one. Think about how you may translate your love of animals or French cinema. What about a film screening or a volunteer activity pre-wedding? Could you donate in place of a favor or send each guest a DVD of your favorite film as your favor? These are special ways of creating a very personal experience for your guests while being in a place that is location specific.

Can you borrow from another cultures wedding traditions? Why not?

Wedding Henna

Wedding Henna from hennacaravan.com

If you love the tradition of Henna buy a kit and practice with your friends. Have your creative pal work on you and your guests at the wedding. This is a pretty bold option but why not, it’s your day. Do your research if you are unsure about how you would like to proceed. Something like folding 1000 white cranes is elegant, low cost, and memorable. Egyptians like to make a splash by decorating each set of parents’ car (the one that will be chauffeuring the partner to be married) with satin bows, flowers, and ribbons.  The drive to the ceremony is where the games begin. Very slowly, each family vehicle cruises to the wedding hall, honking horns the entire way.  Once both members of the couple arrive they are greeted by a zaffa.  A zaffa is a parade of belly dancers that dance with the couple all the way up the aisle.  The point is to go as slowly as possible, some zaffas have been known to take as long as an hour.  If you both enjoy a great party with dancing this may be a great way to get the energy level up and how memorable would that be for your guests?

by stoneycreekcymru on tripadvisor.com

Whether you choose to hire a mariachi band and serve only margaritas and Mexican wedding cakes or where Korean garb in lieu of gowns or tuxedos, always incorporate your personal/couple flair.  In your correspondence be real in your tone and your aesthetic.  When you are trying to make a wedding your own in a remote or destination location be sure that you and your partner are still represented.  You may choose to go all out with a culturally specific custom that is true to your roots or just your values. That is awesome but do not be afraid to just choose an interest and give a spin to that too. When you are creating the wedding in the neutral location know that everyone loves you both and that they want to see your personalities shine through.

Real Glö-bies

Reflecting on the first days of wedding planning

I remember back to the first days when Enrico and I started planning our wedding. Neither of us had really thought about what we’d wanted (other than hosting a fab party in Italy that our friends and family would really enjoy.) We set out by promising ourselves that we were going to remain low stress and that we wouldn’t argue at all about any of the details. (um, yeah…I know.) E told me that he didn’t really want to be involved in the planning, and that I should only consult him on the big things. (um, yeah, I know!!) I learned that what he really meant was ‘I’m going to pretend like I’m detached, but the reality is that I want to be involved in every-single-tiny-detail-decision.’ Gotta love him.

As planning continued, E and I realized that we’re very alike in some ways and very *very* different in others when it comes to party planning – and that resulted in some pretty enlightening discussions. He is much more of a traditionalist than I am – and although I wanted to wring his neck some days in that loving sort of way (particularly after a 9-day stand-off over a flower archway that he insisted upon), I did love that he cared so much about our celebration and our guests. Plus, on our wedding day, there was so much satisfaction in knowing that we’d accomplished this huge thing together.

Imagine my delight when Revanche emailed me with a guest post that touches on this very topic. This awesome lady was the winner of our recent Glö giveaway on A Practical Wedding. After I discovered she was a blogger herself, I begged her to do a post for us – and she rewarded me by writing about her experience getting started with it all. Revanche is a 20-something girl living on the West Coast who knows ALOT about finances (she’s put herself through college AND paid off $75k of debt on her family’s behalf. You. go. girlfriend!) If we all ask pretty, pretty please – I’m hoping we’ll have even more smart tips from her for managing a budget (and staying sane) during the planning process.

Revanche: A Gai Shan LifeAt a recent meet-up where my partner was introduced to the blogging part of my life, the two men present congratulated us on our recent engagement and turned to him with this sage advice:

1. “Consider yourself an honored guest with a really great seat.”
and
2. “You need a chief of staff on the wedding day. You just can’t be bothered with all the BS complaints at an Asian wedding from your guests.”

We had to laugh because clearly, Advisor #1 was a veteran of a traditional wedding and Advisor #2 had definitely weathered the trenches of your standard, grueling, traditional Asian marathon known as the wedding festivities: if it doesn’t kill you then you should be prepared for marriage. Maybe.

Understandable, these fine fellows A) had never met us before and B) have probably never heard of APW (which I loved from the moment I started reading it, thanks for the intro @tanyasnarks!). Their advice totally makes sense when all you know is the WIC world (Revanche speak for Wedding Industrial Complex, what she jokingly uses to refer to the wedding industry) – that’s all I knew up until a few years ago.

But no, my partner won’t detach himself from the planning. Frankly, life’s tough enough and I have responsibilities enough that my taking on all of the wedding planning, tiny though I’d love it to be, would be both stupid and selfish. Heck, he’s more interested in what my hair’s going to look like than I am. [Apparently, after 6 years of “Your hair looks great any way,” it’s to be long and up for our wedding. Wha?]

A couple years ago, I wrote a synopsis about our family’s wedding traditions which haven’t been bucked through my generation, even unto the cousin only 4 years older than me. I had to explain it all in detail to PiC on the long drive back home down south so that he’d fully understand what it was I wanted to veto.

Definitely check out Revanche’s Chinese family’s wedding traditions for invitations, wedding gifts, the ceremony and evening reception, and thank you notes.

It’s only fair that he gets un-veto power though it burns a little because I Don’t Want. While I hope he’s going to leave more out than in, again, he gets to make his choices and we’ll figure it out from there.

We’ve discussed some aspects privately and with family, though we haven’t made any solid decisions yet.
Whatever modifications we make, it’s going to be interesting, but it’ll be done together.
It’d better be, I’m not taking the blame for this all on my own! ;)

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Revanche is a recently engaged* anonymous personal finance blogger at A Gai Shan Life.  She’s a 20-something girl living on the West Coast. Since 2000, she’s put herself through college and paid off $75,000 of debt on her family’s behalf.

She and her fiance have been together for several years and he still managed to surprise her with the proposal. They plan to share many more happy years together, wedding planning, crazy family and traditional expectations notwithstanding, as what they’re aiming for is a marriage, not just a wedding.

*We’re doing well so far, it’s been over a month since the engagement and we’ve successfully held off all attempts to railroad us into planning. Anything. At. All. *fingers in ears la la la la* Actually, we’re having fun faux-planning, and haven’t committed to anything except each other. Every night, we reaffirm our love and our commitment to each other, and this marriage. That’s what we’re doing this for, no matter what “this” turns out to be.