Google+ Real Southern Weddings Archives - Page 467 of 517 - Southern Weddings

Southern Weddings

Category: Real Southern Weddings

Christa, a Southern girl at heart, wore a stunning {Vera Wang} wedding gown to wed her beau, Travis at {Hartley Botanica}.  Read on to hear about the Southern elements she placed in her big day.  Photography by {Meg Perotti Photographer}. Happy Monday, y’all!  Aren’t they a GORGEOUS couple!?

How did the two of you meet? Tell us your story: We met about 4 years ago at a mutual friend’s birthday party. It was at this Hilltop Hotel in L.A., and we ended up talking the entire time and realized we had a lot in common. We were both dating other people at the time so we stayed acquaintances and eventually lost contact. About three and a half years later, we connected again and never left each other’s side. I guess it’s true that timing is everything! After only a month, we knew we wanted to be together forever and 2 months after that…Travis proposed!
What was the design inspiration for your wedding? I wanted the feel to be distinctly southern. I am from South Carolina, and I wanted to feel like a southern belle. I also love the romantic and ethereal vibe and wanted that to be a part of the wedding as well. Our planner Beth did an amazing job bringing the home-y feel of a southern wedding together with the romantic simplicity that represents us as a couple. Some southern elements we definitely wanted included were Mason Jars, sweet tea, and fried chicken (which ended up being a huge hit!).
Favorite design element of your big day: The ceremony site, hands down. The aisle was under a canopy of trees with white floral leis hanging from the branches. There were candles and white rose petals lining the aisle and surrounding us as we said our vows. It was unbelievable and felt like a dream!
Tell us about finding your wedding dress: I looked for quite a while for the dress because I knew the exact feel I was looking for. I wanted the dress to be form-fitting, mermaid style, and a bit vintage looking. Like old southern glamour. When I saw it…I knew. It was a Vera Wang gown in an ivory color and it was perfect.

More to come from Christa + Travis…

Written with love by Katharine
2 Comments
  1. avatar Ashley reply

    I love the charm and coziness of their wedding. The smallest details like the mashed potato bar, the smores station, and the unusual wedding cake help create unexpected surprises for their guests. I love the ideas couples come up with when they decide to incorporate their personalities into their special day

  2. avatar Heather Kincaid reply

    Stunning images! And beautiful couple!

Southern Weddings reserves the right to delete comments which contain profanity or personal attacks or seek to promote a business unrelated to the post.  And remember: a good attitude is like kudzu – it spreads.  We love hearing your kind thoughts!

Reply to:
close

Back with more from Aubree + Ali.  This time we have shots from their Catholic wedding ceremony.  The ceremony was again held at Guilford Colleges’ {The Moon Room at Dana Auditorium}.  Following the ceremony, the couple and guests arrived at the {Revolution Mill Studios} for the reception.  Check out all the shots on Abigail Seymour’s blog.  {Post I} and {Post II}.  Aren’t they such a gorgeous couple!?

The weather on our wedding day was: Spectacular. We had two wedding days (both Friday and Saturday – a Muslim ceremony on Friday, and a multi-faith/Christian ceremony on Saturday) and both days turned out perfect. We truly could not have asked for better weather for October – it was 75 degrees and sunny (those deep Carolina blue skies) with only a sprinkling of those puffy white clouds. While we had stressed a bit following the 10-day weather forecast and the previous weekend had torrential rain, but our weekend was simply better than we could have dreamt.
What was the design inspiration for your wedding? The colors of Fall. I grew up in North Carolina, and was so fond of the beauty of the autumn season. When I moved to Southern California, I used to dream about those autumns, and wish I could have the seasons again – the colors (deep browns, gold, burgundy, burnt oranges), the cool breezes against a warm sun, the smells of nature… It was so nice to come home to have the wedding, and beautiful to tie those elements into the style of everything.
Favorite design element of your big day: The decor at the reception. My mother, mother-in-law, sister, friend and I all worked very hard to make some of the centerpieces, and many of the little touches at the reception. Even Ali got into the arts & crafts of helping to create the decor – he was a good sport! It was hard work, but I felt so pleased with how it turned out. Our venue for the reception really was special – it was an old textile mill that had been converted into an event center – such a beautiful, vintage building.
Describe your wedding flowers: My mother helped me find the florist (since I was planning the wedding from afar). She found out about this family-run florist and greenhouse. I spent one day and a couple e-mails talking with the florist, and since I’m an over-planner, I was very nervous about how they’d turn out since I didn’t get to see them before. I was stunned – they were one of my favorite decor aspects of the ceremony! They were mixtures of all sorts of flowers done in fall colors (for the bridesmaids, groomsmen), and in off-whites/whites for me. We tied everything together with the use of hypericum berries and greenery. We decided to also rent potted mums and other fall-like florals to decorate the outside of the location – it was beautiful, very autumnal, and really added to the overall feel.
Describe your wedding cake: We decided to not just have one main cake, but to also have some smaller cakes that surrounded the bigger, tiered cake. We wanted to have an assortment of flavors to please everyone, and to allow the cake to be more than just decoration (but actually enjoyed) – it turned out to be a hit! People went back for seconds (and thirds)! We had a strawberry/vanilla crème flavor for our main tiered cake, and carrot, red velvet, and chocolate fudge flavors for the smaller cakes. We tied the cakes together with flowers that matched the bridesmaids’ bouquets. There were also Krispy Kreme doughnuts (headquartered in the bride’s hometown of Winston-Salem, NC) for favors for our guests.
What was the biggest challenge you had to overcome while planning your wedding? There were a couple of challenges. First, our caterer – which we had painstakingly selected many, many months prior to the wedding – went out of business just three short weeks before the wedding! It was sheer panic the day we got the phone call to say that they wouldn’t be doing our wedding; but needless to say, we found another, better caterer, and no one went home hungry! The only other major challenge was that our reception site was under construction literally up until the week before our wedding – talk about stressful!
Scariest moment? For me, it was getting my makeup done. It’s almost impossible to sit still in a chair for an hour only moments before you’re about to get married – thinking about everything that this one moment in your life means. I was squirming and jittery, but excited. I just wanted to get out of the chair! Ali: There wasn’t one single moment that was the scariest. My main concern was that Aubree was okay, enjoyed herself and that our guests understood how grateful Aubree and I were for the role each has played in our lives.
Funniest moment? Our exit – we used dried jasmine flowers instead of rice to toss at the newlyweds upon exiting the ceremony. Some of the groomsmen (Ali’s former soccer teammates) found it an opportunity to “play” like they did on the field and were throwing (not gently tossing) the flowers at us – I think we were picking dried flowers out of our clothes for about an hour afterward.
The most unexpected event on our wedding day was: After we said our personal vows to each other, we looked around the room and people were crying (Aubree’s mother had let out a sob), and then, applause erupted followed by joyful laughter – it added some levity to a very heartfelt moment.
Three adjectives that describe the day are: The day was really beyond words for both of us, and way beyond expectation, so I guess we’d say: personal, humbling, incredible.
What advice would you give to someone planning their wedding? Don’t focus on the big elements – flowers, food, and entertainment. Focus on little touches that say something about you as a couple; those that speak to your family and friends. Those are the things that everyone remembers.
Best advice or most memorable comment someone made to you during the wedding celebration. First, find a beat to stop, look around, look in each other’s eyes, and soak in the moment – it goes by so fast. It’s a bit cliché, but it is absolutely the truth. Second, accept help when planning! Your friends and family love helping, participating, and ultimately, it makes things much more fun (and tolerable).
What’s next for you as a couple? What are you looking forward to in the future? We look forward to the little, mundane details of our new shared life as much as the bigger challenges. Of course, starting a family at some point is a big goal, but traveling, laughing and supporting one another are other key priorities.

Congrats to Aubree + Ali.  We wish you a lifetime of happiness and joy!

Written with love by Southern Weddings
4 Comments
  1. avatar chandra reply

    I would love to know how they made the "6 degrees" chart. Such a cute idea! Looks like a beautiful and loving wedding.

  2. avatar Sara reply

    I love the "Six degrees" chart. Do you know who made it?

  3. avatar Stephanie J Cooley reply

    Oooo, that six degrees chart is the cutest!!!

  4. avatar SomethingBluer reply

    Found it! http://www.etsy.com/view_listing.php?listing_id=17033514

Southern Weddings reserves the right to delete comments which contain profanity or personal attacks or seek to promote a business unrelated to the post.  And remember: a good attitude is like kudzu – it spreads.  We love hearing your kind thoughts!

Reply to:
close

Today Aubree + Ali and their two very cool wedding ceremonies.  Aubree is Catholic and Ali is Muslim.  Together the two fell head over heels for each other on graduation day at Duke University.  Although they met freshman year, it wasn’t until graduation and living far from each other that they fell in love.  When it came time to get married, the two planned a Muslim marriage ceremony and a Catholic ceremony.  Our first post highlights the first ceremony held at {The Old Well Room} at Guilford College in Greensboro, North Carolina. I will let Aubree + Ali tell you more about their weekend of celebrations. Photography by the fantastic {Abigail Seymour Photography}.

How did the two of you meet? Tell us your story: We met in college at Duke University. We had mutual friends, but did not become good friends ourselves until senior year of college. I remember seeing him freshman year, and thinking that he was absolutely handsome. We both finished college a semester early (I left to pursue my career in the entertainment industry in Los Angeles, and he got drafted to play professional soccer). When May graduation was approaching, I e-mailed him to find out if he would be flying back (for our graduation – knowing I wanted to see him), and he said he had a soccer game that weekend and might not be able to make it. He ultimately flew in, and (barely) made it in time for graduation, but we found each other again in our caps and gowns, and I’d like to say that was the moment at which we knew we were going to be a part of each others’ lives moving forward.
Describe the proposal: We had a long-distance love for many, many years. Ali was playing soccer (and had lived in 4 different cities), and I was living in Los Angeles. On one November night, I was sitting on my couch getting ready to go to bed when I heard the doorbell ring. I was a bit startled, especially because of the hour of night. Not knowing who it was, I peered out the window, and saw a surprise – he was on my doorstep! Of course, I flung open the door, as it had been quite a while since I had seen him. Apparently, he had gotten the ring the same day, and not being able to let the ring burn a hole in his pocket (ha!), he had flown all the way from New York City, ring in hand – and showed up on my doorstep at midnight to get down on one knee to propose. You know the rest… we were very, very happy.
What attracted me to my husband was: Initially, it was his magnetic energy, his unique style, his cute bald head and dimples! Once I got to know him, it was all about his gentle manner, his loyalty, his devotion to his family and his strength. He possesses the best combination of “something old and something new” – a traditional old-school values kind of guy, with the heart and humor of a kid.
Why do you love your husband? I love him for the partnership that we’re creating – loving, honest, hardworking and loyal, and for the family that we’ll one day create together. He’s someone who knows that everything in life worth having is something worth working hard for.
What attracted me to my wife was: I am attracted to Aubree for many reasons – her kind heart, beauty, humbleness and intelligence… Aubree and I have similar goals even though sometimes we have slightly different ways to go about achieving them. I love her for the person she is and aspires to be. I am fortunate to have her in my life.
A date we went on that we’ll always remember: We didn’t really have a lot of opportunity to “date” in the traditional sense. Being a long-distance couple had its ups-and-downs, and while not being able to “date” was certainly a down, getting to see each other on special occasions made everything very exciting and all of the distance and time very worthwhile! One of the most memorable times we spent together was in Big Sur, California – hiking and camping. That was one of those weekends where we felt so close to one another because it was about us enjoying each other’s company with no distractions.
Tell us about finding your wedding dress: I was moving from Los Angeles to New York City one month after I got engaged. Knowing I would be moving to a new city, and would be losing all of my local girlfriends’ help and advice once I moved, I rushed to go dress shopping in one weekend. On Saturday, I went with two friends, many stores, tried on a ton of dresses, and truly wore myself out! On Sunday, I decided I needed a day to quietly look alone – without a bunch of others’ opinions. I went into a small bridal shop in Santa Monica, California, and found a dress that was a one-of-a-kind Melissa Sweet gown that had been custom made from her runway collection, but ultimately was not worn. It was like finding a treasure that someone else left for me! I put it on, and I felt amazing in it (like it had been made for me to begin with). Of course, that was the day I decided to not bring any friends, and I really needed some final approval (you know the oohs and aahs you rely on your friends to give you)! So the next day, my friend came to the boutique during her lunch hour to see the dress. I knew in my heart, it was right, and she concurred. I never again had a second doubt about it!
Our favorite detail of the wedding was: We had two ceremonies – to honor both of our families’ traditions. Ali’s family is Muslim, and mine is Catholic, and we were able to have a ceremony on Friday and one on Saturday that allowed us to be able to share both sides with our loved ones. The Friday ceremony was very low-key, very familial, and put both Ali and I at ease for the ceremony on Saturday, which was the big dress, the tuxes, and the bigger reception. We really felt like we had a lot of time to spend with each other and friends and family, so doing two ceremonies was the best detail of our wedding.
Were there any special family traditions you included in the wedding? The fact that we had two ceremonies allowed us to be inclusive of both families’ traditions. We proudly displayed photographs of our grandparents, parents, and other relatives’ weddings at our reception – we felt our wedding was a real “come full circle” day for both families. Also, my brother is a violinist, and played me down the aisle. It was truly the most special thing he could have done for us. (And he did a great job!)
What was your most memorable moment about your wedding day? We chose to write our own vows. They were the centerpiece of our ceremony on Saturday, and we spent a long time thinking about the right words to express our love, devotion and gratitude for one another. When we were in front of everyone saying them, it was as if the moment became a beautiful memory instantaneously. Ali: When we said our vows. That particular moment was really something special. A sentence or even a paragraph to describe the moment seems so inadequate…One of those times where you had to be there.
Did you write your own vows? If so, what was your favorite phrase/verse/or line? Yes, we did. Ali’s focused on both of our individual lives and dreams becoming our family’s goals and dreams. Mine began with the notion that I was never the girl who dreamt of her wedding, but dreamt of finding a man like the one before me.

More to come from Aubree + Ali… 

Written with love by Katharine
0 Comments

Southern Weddings reserves the right to delete comments which contain profanity or personal attacks or seek to promote a business unrelated to the post.  And remember: a good attitude is like kudzu – it spreads.  We love hearing your kind thoughts!

Reply to:
close
Top