
Isa and Andrew’s Chicago Firehouse wedding came together the same way their relationship did: quickly, instinctively, and without much second-guessing. After meeting at work, what started as “hours of loitering at each other’s desks and dodging HR’s watchful eye” turned into something immediate. “This wasn’t a slow burn office romance,” they shared. “It was a ‘when you know, you know’ kind of connection, and we both immediately knew.”
That certainty carried straight into their wedding plans. “The week after our engagement, we were already touring Firehouse Chicago and mentally mapping out our wedding there,” Isa said. “We didn’t even bother touring any other locations. It was perfect.” From there, they focused on building a space filled with things they genuinely loved: antiques, handmade details, and objects that felt personal rather than purely decorative.
What We Love About This Chicago Firehouse Wedding:
- Centerpieces that felt more like personal collections than decor
- Handmade stars, garlands, and dried citrus layered throughout the space
- A ceremony built around a one-of-a-kind, hand-collaged grimoire
- Fashion that fully leaned into an old-world, slightly theatrical feel
- A setting that revealed more the longer you looked at it









Featured Vendor:
Teri B Photography



Planning a Wedding Without a Planner (and Making It Work)
Planning stayed surprisingly straightforward. They made quick decisions early on and trusted their instincts from there. “We hit the ground running,” Isa shared. Without a planner, she and her mom took on the process themselves. “My mother and I are both Virgos, which meant we had it handled.”
They leaned on Chicago Firehouse’s vendor recommendations for most of their team, keeping things intentionally simple. “We kept that list minimal by handling all of the decor ourselves,” they explained. That approach gave them more time and energy to focus on the details that mattered most to them.










Incorporating Meaningful Objects Into Their Ceremony
The ceremony came together in the same way. Isa created a hand-collaged grimoire filled with polaroids, fabric from her dress and veil, and meaningful readings. “Watching them flip through the leatherbound tome, felt like breathing magic into it,” she said. “Imbuing the book with the power of the day.”
As friends and family read from its pages, the moment unfolded in a way that felt personal without needing explanation, grounded in the objects and words they had chosen together.







Mixing Heirloom and Found Pieces For Their Wedding Day Style
Their approach to fashion followed that same mindset. “We wanted to look old-fashioned,” Isa said. She found her dress on Etsy, a vintage Laura Ashley gown from the 1980s, and layered pearl and silver jewelry—some borrowed from her mother, some handmade, and some found in antique shops.
She completed the look with crocheted fingerless Edwardian gloves and stacked bracelets, while Andrew matched her in a custom suit with thoughtful vintage details. “We weren’t chasing the myth of a ‘timeless’ wedding look,” they shared. “We wanted to feel as though we belonged to another era entirely.”







Using Personal Collections as Wedding Decor
There’s something different about a wedding that’s assembled piece by piece. Isa and Andrew filled their Chicago Firehouse venue with antique silver, clothbound books, candelabras, and small objects they had gathered over time. “We’re lovers of antiques and the handmade,” they shared. “We collected antique silver, old clothbound books, baubles, trinkets and candelabras aplenty with the intent to create a space that was a feast for the eyes.”
They spent hours making decor by hand, cutting tin stars, painting paper ones, and drying orange slices in the oven. “It all came together in a collection of lovingly crafted I-Spy-like centerpieces and a whole host of celestial garlands,” Isa said. “It was truly a labor of love.” No two tables were exactly alike, and that sense of variation made the entire room feel more personal.










Why Personal Choices Matter More Than Wedding Trends
Isa and Andrew’s Chicago Firehouse wedding is a reminder that the most memorable celebrations often come from following your own instincts. Their advice says it best: “Your wedding is your own. Take the leap, defy the trends, do the strange thing that will make it a night you’ll always remember.”








The Wedding Team:
Photography – Teri B Photography
Venue – Firehouse Chicago
Catering – The Caterist
Cake – ECBG Cake Studio
