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Contemporary Chic Chicago Wedding at Fulton Street Collective

Kate and Tom’s intimate Fulton Street Collective wedding was planned with sincerity and intention to create an unforgettable celebration for their guests to enjoy. The hardwood floors and exposed brick made for a seriously romantic backdrop for their wedding ceremony, which embodied love, fidelity, trust, and growth in marriage. Their reception at Low-Res Studio was the perfect setting for their traditional baijiu toast, featuring creative street art, an incredibly hip stereo system, and an urban-cool aesthetic full of quirks and charm. Persephone Floral Atelier created the gorgeous design-focused floral arrangements in shades of coral, orange, and burgundy, paired with unexpected oversized foxgloves and wild greenery. We love the bride’s truly beautiful wedding day look, which included a champagne Tadashi Shoji bridal gown and gold leaf crown, reminiscent of an Italian Renaissance goddess, with dark red lips and nails seemingly inspired by a romantic Klimt painting. Allie Appel Photography captured every moment of this truly artistic wedding day, from the bride and groom’s first look at the Illinois Centennial Memorial to couple’s photos at the Off Site Bar, where Kate proposed to Tom.

The Couple:

Kate and Tom

The Wedding:

Fulton Street Collective, Chicago

When we sat down to start planning our wedding, we quickly realized that at the core of it, we cared about the same wedding “values”: having a sincere andmeaningful ceremony to mark our commitment to each other, hosting a fabulous celebration that our guests could genuinely enjoy, and doing both without making ourselves crazy, miserable, or broke in the process. The details — something contemporary, black tie, distinct, and Sino-American — flowed out of those intentions, and we think we mostly succeeded

We both have very strong (luckily congruent!) aesthetic opinions, and we needed our budget to stay *well* below the average, so that drove our decision to go about 80% DIY on the entire wedding. Kate did all the event planning and sourcing, Tomdid all the graphic design, we collaborated on the design of the non-printed decor and aesthetic materials, and we executed those designs with some truly amazing independent and new-to-the-industry vendors who were willing to work with our pretty persnickety specifications.

The moment when just the two of us had made it into the little back room from the wedding recessional; Tom picked me up and spun me around, laughing, before the rest of the wedding party could get in. It was suddenly *real* that we were married.

Don’t catch your home on fire two months before the wedding!! While our apartment did fortunately survive, a bunch of complications with repairs meant we (and our two cats) were trapped in a hotel room for the last two months of wedding planning, and had to move back home on the second-to-last day before the wedding. SERIOUSLY not a recommended strategy.

Having both of us make a list of our three biggest priorities and general thoughts about aesthetics *separately* before coming together to talk about them really gave us confidence that we were being honest with each other and on the same page about what we wanted. This was the solid bedrock under all kinds of decision-making later on.

DIY is not just a two-way trade-off between time and money, but a four-way balance between time, money, aesthetic control, and organizational complexity. We were able to achieve some very specific aesthetic visions for much less money than if we had gone non-DIY — but that meant not just expending more time, but also being ready to work with industrial printers and new-to-the-industry vendors, all of which is more complicated than an off-the-shelf vendor situation. Make sure you think carefully before taking on DIY projects more involved than just doing some crafting.

We spent a long time talking through how we wanted to embody commitment, love, fidelity, growth, andtrust in our marriage, and how to commemorate those values in our wedding ceremony and family tea ceremony. Although neither we nor our parents are religious, we borrowed from the general structure of Catholic ceremonies and vows (Kate’s family’s heritage) for our wedding. The result was a synthesis of personal, idiosyncratic details with existing words and customs that resonated with us.

We used a Renaissance madrigal (Apollo s’ancor vive il bel desio”) with personal meaning to Kate as our processional, included readings chosen from poets and jurists that reflected our beliefs about marriage, filled out our marriage license publicly, included traditional and personal vows, and heard an extraordinarily eloquent and thoughtful set of speeches on our chosen themes from our officiant, a family friend. Singing our hymn (Pete Seeger “How Can I Keep From Singing,” an important song for dark times) together with our guests brought us to tears, and our recessional (a live jazz trombone rendition by a friend of “I’ll Fly Away”) felt like the perfect triumph.

We also planned a quasi-traditional Chinese tea ceremony to be held at our rehearsal dinner. (Tom’s parents are not very traditional, so they actually thought it was really funny that we wanted to do it!) Kate’s maid of honor narrated our abbreviated ceremony as we bowed three times to mark our gratitude and respect for our ancestors, our parents, and each other, then formally served cups of tea to our new parents (and aunts and uncles) for the first time.

The Wedding Team:

Photography – Allie Appel Photography
Ceremony Venue – Fulton Street Collective
Reception Venue – Low Res Studio
Floral Design – Persephone Floral Atelier
Catering – Crying Onion
Cake – Bake Chicago
Live Music – Bryant Smith
Videography – Pine Street Pictures
Makeup Artist – Tyra Hosch
Wedding Dress – Tadashi Shoji
Groom’s Apparel – TopMan
Rentals – Tablescapes

 

Congratulations to Kate and Tom and special thanks to Allie Appel Photography for sharing this jaw-droopingly gorgeous wedding with Junebug! For more alternative wedding inspiration, check out this artistic industrial desert wedding at The Doyle Las Vegas!

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Utterly Elegant Oklahoma Wedding at Spain Ranch

December 2, 2017 | Junebug Weddings

Liz and Taylor’s elegant wedding reception took place at Spain Ranch, an all-white New England style barn venue with a modern interior and soaring ceilings. The venue served as the perfect blank slate for a wedding DIY’d from the ground up. Floral designer Ever Something created the cascading bouquet of white ranunculus, moody anemones, purple-toned thistles, and overflowing with ivy. The bride and her father made the hanging monogrammed wreaths, faux greenery wall, and laser cut quotes. More than 300 antique blue and white plates, silver pitchers and teapots were thrifted by family and created an elegant mismatched theme. Rachel Photographs captured so many authentic and heartfelt moments true to the bride and groom, including their post-ceremony bicycle getaway!

The Couple:

Liz and Taylor

The Wedding:

Spain Ranch, Oklahoma

There were several moments that come to mind – the priest announcing us as husband and wife at the end of our ceremony, our bicycle get away and being done with our first dance are a few. The bicycle get away was probably most memorable for me because it was unique and felt the most true to us out of all the various parts of our day.

We both wanted to create a day that felt like us and that allowed us to spend plenty of time with our family and friends.

Don’t get caught up in all the expectations and requests from friends and family and focus on what’s important to you and your future spouse. It’s easy to feel pressured to accommodate everyone, but in the grand scheme of things you want to be able to enjoy your day and feel yourselves at it.

We gave out homemade salsa to all of our guests. I spent the month leading up to the wedding canning salsa almost every night – Taylor helped as the taste tester. We wanted to give our guests something fun (we gave it a fun name and designed a custom label) and also personal to show how much their company meant to us.

I don’t know that the menu itself was unique, although it was very good, however, we chose to serve it family style and that was really fun! It was the usual mix of meat, veggies and starches and it all came served together in these huge oversized skillets that sat in the middle of each table. I wish we could take credit for the idea, but my mom had seen it at another wedding and so we decided to use the same caterer. The skillets were really unique and it was a fun way to get guests talking and mingling during dinner.

My dad surprised me during our father daughter dance. We were dancing to ‘Just Fishin’ by Trace Adkins and so he got a projector and put up a picture of him and I fishing together from when I was a little girl, it was a total surprise and it was a little thing that meant so much to me.

The Wedding Team:

Photography – Rachel Photographs
Event Planning – Kasey St. John
Ceremony Venue – Holy Family Cathedral
Reception Venue –  Spain Ranch
Floral Design – Ever Something
Catering – ExpoServe
Cake – Merrit’s Bakery
Invitations – Liz Brown
Wedding Dress – a&bé

 

Congratulations to Liz and Taylor and special thanks to Rachel Photographs for capturing this gorgeously elegant wedding! For more modern wedding inspiration, check out this lush industrial El Segundo wedding at Smoky Hollow Studios!

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Burgundy and Black Fall Wedding Inspiration at Papiermühle Homburg

December 1, 2017 | Junebug Weddings

Tired of classic wedding colors, Photographer Kira Stein and a team of talented German wedding professionals created a cozy and elegant color scheme for this black fall wedding inspiration. Papiermühle Homburg, a bare industrial studio space, looked perfectly intimate and welcoming with a minimal amount of specially selected décor: festoon lighting, vintage carpets, thoughtful floral design, and bright details. Geometric candleholders and lanterns with metallic accents of copper and rose gold added a warm and cozy touch of pure autumnal style inspiration. Blütenreich Florist created the exotic flower arrangements of deep purple orchids, delicate berries and blossoms with unexpected shades of greenery and pampas grass. I am Yours, a bridal concept boutique, created the bride’s unexpected three-piece wedding gown, featuring a silk mauve tank top, skirt with a full-length train, and long sleeve sheer lace crop top.

The Talented Team:

Photography – Kira Stein
Event Planning – Melissa Stamp Hochzeiten
Venue – Papiermühle Homburg
Floral Design – Blütenreich Florist
Cake – Elif Yurdaner
Videography – Agape Fotografie
Invitations – Zartmint Design
Hair & Makeup – Nelli Lanzinger
Wedding Dress – I am Yours
Bride’s Jewelry – Refined Bohemia
Groom’s Apparel – The Bloke
Rings – Juwelier Rubin
Macramé – Uttu Design
Rentals – Platzwerk

 

Special thanks to Kira Stein for sharing this inspirational fall styled shoot with Junebug! For more fall color palette inspiration, check out this unique fall elopement inspiration in a German quarry!

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