Happiness is... Putting on that wedding dress on your big day!
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Happiness is... Putting on that wedding dress on your big day!

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Like mom, like daughter
A great idea for your wedding guests' return-gift/party-favour goodie bags.
Set up a fun kids table to keep children busy while parents are dancing, eating, etc, or set up little ‘kid packages’ that are on display if you don’t want to have a separate table!
Love is not destiny but a journey of a lifetime. It is not how much love we have in the beginning, but how much love we build until the end. - Nishan Panwar

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A wedding cake that's so beautiful that you won't want to eat it!
Photography: Kismet Jewell Nakai
12 Love Songs from 2014 You Can Use
You'll find plenty of song selections for your wedding events online. However, if you're looking for songs from 2014 that can be played at pre-wedding events and parties, here's your list.
PS: These songs will also cut a great mixed-tape style CD you can include in goodie bags and gifting sets.
"All of Me" by John Legend
"Safe and Sound" by Capital Cities
"XO" by Beyonce Knowles
"Treasure" by Bruno Mars
"Somebody Loves You" by Betty Who
"Happy" by Pharrell Williams
"Who You Love" by John Mayer feat. Katy Perry
"Same Love" by Macklemore
"Closer" by Tegan and Sara
"I Don't Dance" by Lee Brice
"Mirrors" by Justin Timberlake
"The Moon Song" by Karen O
Source: The Knot
4 Tips for Choosing a Wedding Date
Take the weather into account. The most popular months to get married are June, September, and October and it's no surprise why — the weather is absolutely beautiful in early summer and fall. In general, you can plan for weather based on past records and standards, but always remember to continue to track it throughout your planning process as well.
Consider all the factors of an off-season date. Getting married in January or March might help cut your rental venue fee down but you have to be prepared to make sacrifices in other areas. Depending on the time of year, it may be hard for your florist to find them at a price that fits your budget.
The same concept applies for Friday versus Saturday weddings. Although a venue might be able to give you a break on their minimums for a Friday reception, be aware that the rest of your wedding vendors might not be able to.
Lead the date selection process by creating a list of what you envision for your wedding day. A lush rose garden as the backdrop for your ceremony? Vineyards dripping with grapes ready for harvest? Snow-covered mountaintops? By narrowing down your potential wedding date to one season (or two), you can cut down your options in half.
Think twice before getting married on a major holiday. Although holiday weddings can be super fun and festive, your wedding date is something you want to celebrate for years to come because of the meaning behind it — not because it was also New Year's Eve.
Focus on what you want your wedding day to be and how to portray that in a date. Within the months that made it to the final round, are there any dates that are meaningful to you as a couple or as individuals?
Source: Huffingtonpost.com

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7 Great Apps for a Bride-to-be
Here are some great apps for brides from around the world.
1. THE KNOT WEDDING DRESS LOOK BOOK: Browse hundreds of dresses; Free, iTunes
2. GIFT REGISTRY 360: Allows couples to add items to their registry from an online store; Free, iTunes
3. POSTABLE: Brides can send out one email to family and friends for them to fill out an address form to send out invitations; Free, Postable.com
4. TOPTABLEPLANNER: Allows you to import guest lists and drag and drop names onto a table diagram; Free, iTunes
5. PRO WEDDING PLANNER: A seating-plan utility, creates an augmented reality of the reception site, decoration tool, and more; iTunes
6. VYCLONE: Aggregates guests' wedding videos into one video; Free, iTunes, Google Play, Windows Store
7. WEDDING PARTY: Photo-caching app for guests to upload images to a single site viewable on MyWedding.com; Free, iTunes.
8 Economics Tips that Reveal the Perfect Location for Your Wedding
Summer is wedding season: a time of joy and celebration, but also a time when people spend huge amounts of money in a way that makes them go insane with stress and worry. Fortunately, a few basic principles of economics can help you get not just a cheaper wedding but as more cost-effective one at all different price points.
1) Set a budget
This is the hardest piece of advice to follow, but also the most important. One reason weddings get expensive is that people end up paying high prices for the components of the wedding. But another reason is that there is simply no natural ceiling to what a wedding might be or how expensive it could become. No amount of bargain hunting could possibly change the fact that Kim Kardashian's Versailles wedding was expensive. To keep costs contained you need to decide — in advance — how much you are willing to spend and then commit to staying within that ceiling.
Because the point of the budget is to cap total expenditures, it's important to make this number a true maximum. Your budget shouldn't be a guess about how much you will probably spend — a number that you are as likely to exceed as to undershoot. It's a maximum amount that you absolutely cannot and will not go over.
2) Avoid costly signaling with a fun & romantic plan
Having a fun day is not the point of spending the money" on a wedding. Instead, an expensive wedding is about what's known as signaling: you're spending the money to make a point. Rolex watches aren't expensive because they are so much better at telling time than Timex watches. They're expensive, in part, because part of the point of owning one is to show off that you own an expensive watch. With a wedding, brides and grooms often increase spending as a way of demonstrating their commitment to each other, and to their relationship: they want to make each other happy so they don't want to say no to anything.
Demonstrations of commitment are great, but since the signal only means something if it's genuinely costly to the signaler, the tendency is for signaling motives to push couples into overspending relative to their financial resources. In other words, if you're not spending more than would be prudent you're not really making the point. That's a great dynamic for wedding vendors, but it's a poor use of your hard-earned money.
So once you have a budget, consider making a fun and romantic plan for what to do with any money you save by coming in under budget. Make it a bonus that lets you do something extravagant on your honeymoon that would otherwise be impossible. Treat yourselves to some fancy dinners out. Add it to a new car fund. Of course in an ideal world you might do something boring like use the money to bolster your retirement savings. But a boring alternative to wedding spending will leave you prey to the signaling trap. A great plan should ensure that whether you spend the cash on the wedding or not, you'll be spending on yourselves as a loving couple. That way you can consider the value propositions offered by various vendors in a cold and rational way without feeling like you're evaluating your relationship in a cold and rational way.
3) Don't buy a wedding dress
Markups are everywhere in life but wedding dresses are particularly egregious but a lot of that extra cost comes down to the word 'wedding.'
Because of all the signaling involved in weddings, dress-makers deploy a pricing tactic known as price discrimination. If you're selling a dress to a woman who's looking to buy a dress, you know you're probably looking at a price-sensitive shopper. Even if the woman has the funds and inclination to spend a lot on clothing, she'll prefer a great deal to a bad one. A woman looking to buy a wedding dress is likely much less price-sensitive. There's signaling involved. And limited time. And the feeling that this day is special.
The way out of this is simple — skip the wedding dress. Just buy a dress that you like at a price that seems reasonable. Even if you, personally, really are less price-sensitive when it comes to the dress you'll get married in, the designer and retailer don't know that. The dresses you're looking at aren't "wedding dresses" so they're priced to be competitive.
4) Don't buy a "wedding" anything
What goes for dresses goes for everything else. Anytime a product is segmented into "wedding" and "not a wedding" categories, price discrimination is almost certainly at work and almost certainly not in your favor. Cake is cheaper than wedding cake. Event planning is cheaper than wedding planning. Renting some space is cheaper than renting a wedding venue.
People sometimes misunderstand this advice and believe that avoiding the wedding price premium requires you to actually trick the vendor into not realizing that you're planning a wedding. But that isn't really how price discrimination works. Airlines typically charge less for round trip flights that extend over a weekend because they believe leisure travelers are more price-sensitive than business travelers. To take advantage of this fact you don't need to actually persuade anyone that you're not a business traveler, you just need to buy a ticket that extends the trip across a weekend.
Pricing strategy just isn't made at the individual customer level. Across the board, products that are intended to be sold as "wedding" products are targeted at customers who are believed to be ripe for the gouging whereas normal products are priced more competitively. To whatever extent you can avoid "wedding" products, you'll get a better deal.
5) Remember the mediocrity principle
The biologist PZ Myers nominated this as the scientific principle that would improve everyone's cognitive toolkit, and it's very useful for wedding economics. "The mediocrity principle simply states that you aren't special," he writes, "the universe does not revolve around you, this planet isn't privileged in any unique way, your country is not the perfect product of divine destiny, your existence isn't the product of directed, intentional fate, and that tuna sandwich you had for lunch was not plotting to give you indigestion."
In other words, while your wedding is a really big deal for you (and for your parents, and maybe a few very dear friends and family members), to most of your guests it is, sadly, just another wedding. Which isn't to say they don't love you and aren't thrilled for you and won't have a great time. They will! Just like you have at the various weddings you've attended. But for them it will be just like that and nothing you do is going to change that.
Read in the wrong spirit, that can be depressing. But in terms of the bottom line, it should be liberating. Vendors will try to prey on your sense of specialness to convince you that every little detail matters and relentlessly upsell you. Don't buy it. Barring a giant obvious fiasco (food poisoning, roof collapse), everyone's going to have fun regardless and no amount of sweating the small stuff is going to make the day as special for everyone else as it is for you. The cheaper dishes or centerpieces or more restricted booze selection or slightly less-tasty food or whatever isn't going to ruin anyone's good time and they probably won't even remember. And what makes it special for you, presumably, is that you're making a lifelong commitment to a person you love, not that the centerpieces are particularly ornate.
6) Repeat business is your friend
Even if your wedding is really really great, odds are you're not going to want to stage a second one that's just like it. This is a problem in economic terms. An idealized perfect market features perfect information between buyers and sellers so nobody gets ripped off. No real world market is like that, but we can get the same approximate effect through repeated interactions and branding. The knowledge that the customer might come back to the same store is a powerful incentive to provide good service.
Thus, while of course your wedding should be special you probably don't want to make it too special if you're looking for a good deal.
Ideally you want to work with people you'll plausibly buy stuff from again in the future. People whose business interest is in making you feel happy about the transaction so you come back again, rather than people whose business interest is in bleeding you dry in the short-term.
7) Consider an integrated vendor
If instead of a wedding you were just planning on hanging out with some friends, it's unlikely that you would be looking separately at locations, decorations, and catering. You'd head out to a restaurant or a bar where location, refreshment, decor, and even music are all sold together in a single bundle.
This is how things come together because it's a way of usefully exploiting the division of labor. The bundles are created by full-time professionals — owners and managers of bars and restaurants — who have nothing better to do all day than focus on optimizing the various price/quality tradeoffs available. They are much better at this than you are.
One reason people tend to deviate from this program for their wedding is for the sake of ultra-customization. You may have a favorite restaurant, but it's unlikely that it's your favorite down to every single detail. By putting things together à la carte, you get to make everything as special as possible. And fair enough! But remember the mediocrity principle — your extra effort isn't going to impress anybody. To your guests, it's just another wedding. And unless all the staff you're working with are people you're plausibly going to provide repeat business to, the odds of you personally coming away as a fully satisfied customer are low anyway.
So ideally, you want to use an integrated provider who knows they might receive business from you (and your guests) in the future.
8) Rent out a restaurant you like
The upshot of all of these principles, really, is that you should find a restaurant that you like and that does events and look into renting it out. Restaurants are great integrated service providers — a location, food, beverages, staff, and decor all in one nice package. And the great thing about restaurants is that people eat in them all the time.
Of course the restaurant wants to pluck your wallet for as much cash as possible. But they'd also like you to come back for dinner. And they'd like your friends to come back for dinner. Compared to most weddings, it's a much more natural, normal business arrangement in which the incentives are aligned correctly. Money is made by providing good service at a reasonable cost. And the great thing about restaurants is that they exist at all kinds of different price points. Set your budget. Find a place you like that fits it. Take the savings with you on honeymoon. Live happily ever after.
Source: VOX
“But I was beginning to believe that a very few times in your life, if you were lucky, you might meet someone who was exactly right for you. Not because he was perfect, or because you were, but because your combined flaws were arranged in a way that allowed two separate beings to hinge together.”
― Lisa Kleypas, Blue-Eyed Devil
Photography: Asaad Images
These Harry Potter Fans Spent £20,000 On A Wizard-Themed Wedding And It Looked Awesome
Everyone even got their own wand.
Zoe and Alex Pitas are huge Harry Potter fans; so huge they styled their entire wedding around the fantasy series.
The pair turned The Wroxeter Hotel near Shrewsbury into their very own Hogwarts for their special day.
They had six tables named after the Hogwarts houses and two others called Deatheaters and The Order Of The Phoenix.
They scattered homemade potions around the room and had a special Sorting Hat wedding cake.
They even made 100 wands for the guests.
Commenting on her unique wedding, Zoe said: “It was just the perfect day.
“Neither of us had done anything like this before so we were unsure what it would look like overall, but I am so pleased with how everything turned out - it wasn’t tacky and felt magical.”
She revealed she hadn’t actually read any of J.K. Rowling’s books until her son Max was born.
“Alex had always been a massive fan after reading the books as a child. But I had never read them before Max was born,” she said.
“Alex said that the Harry Potter books were such a big part of his life, we needed to introduce our son to them. So I started reading them to Max and I couldn’t put them down.”
She revealed the pair couldn’t decided on a theme for their wedding as they “didn’t like butterflies or flowers” so decided to go with the Harry Potter theme as the books meant so much to them.
“We decided, if we were going to spend money on a wedding it should be super personal and one that is memorable,” Zoe said.
The pair created many of the props for their big day and saved up for two years. However they still spent just under £20,000 and as a result weren’t immediately able to go on a honeymoon.
But they have no regrets.
“We had a fantastic time, and Max loved playing with the wands as well,” Zoe said.
“We ended up with the wedding party having a duel on the lawn outside, and everyone got into the spirit of things.
“It was a truly memorable day.”
Source: Buzzfeed

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4 Questions to Mull about Before Meeting a Wedding Cinematographer/Photographer
Wedding photos and videos commemorate and celebrate the tangibles as well as the intangibles that people invest in weddings. Indeed, for something that will eventually turn into the only real reminder of that memorable day, or a family treasure that will be passed down through the generations, it is only natural that wedding photographs and videos assume great significance in wedding planning.
So, as a bride-to-be, take a minute; think things through. Ask yourself how and what you want to document in the many events of the wedding. A multitude of concerns go into choosing a good wedding photographer. Being clear about a number of core details can ensure that you aren’t badgered when you are face-to-face with a prospective cinematographer/photographer (C/P). Here is our check-list of questions you must ask yourself before actually meeting up with them.
How do you want to use your pictures/wedding videos?
The first step is deciding what you want and why. Do you require the C/P to shoot-and-burn your photographs, or will you insist on post-shoot edits and prints? Shoot-and-burn works if you simply intend to frame a handful of favourites or desire a regular photo album. Photo books, coffee-table style photo albums are the new rage; and require polished images (cropped, colour corrected, etc), adding cost (since it involves editing several hundred pictures). Why are you creating the video? Should it be a full-length movie that you can watch later, or should it be a capsule for your NRI friends and relatives? For additional offerings like memorabilia, the number of copies you need will determine cost; which brings us to…
What’s your budget?
Once you know the budget you have to work around, it will be easier to determine which services you need. Obviously, your budget will help you eliminate all those C/Ps you cannot afford. Shoot-and-burn is affordable if you don’t mind developing the prints yourself, particularly if you need to create several copies. So, the next parameter for selection is how many events/hours you need them for. Several C/Ps offer packages for covering all events.
What services do you need from your C/P?
Determine what style of photography you prefer – for the photos and videos. Do you want to take the traditional approach that is staged/posed or do you prefer a style that will realistically document the event/s? The candid or documentary style is the newest trend. It can cost upwards of Rs 30k a day, but its results are incomparable. A good C/P will ensure he has beautiful, artistic shots that don’t require post-shoot editing; thus reducing cost by providing you with minimally-edited results.
If you need to have several events covered, ask for relevant packages. Several new C/Ps don’t put a price on photo quantity, thereby allowing you to have tons of (unpolished) footage of your big day. Since such policies vary among professionals, the next step would be to question…
What does the C/P bring to the table?
Obviously, you need to research your choices. Ask friends, bridal shops, check out online reviews and seek samples of their work. Find out if they will be free for your shoots. Meet them face-to-face to check out how comfortable they will make you feel on D-day. You want to have someone who visualises the end-product like you do, and avoid those who are inclined to make you pose excessively, and make the process uninspired, obtrusive and annoying.
Be sure to inquire about their back-up systems, whether it is for a back-up assistant, a file management system or back-up gear. They must be well-equipped and mentally agile to deal with any unpredictability the wedding may throw up. Finally, discuss your choice with your significant other and confirm your C/P before he is bagged by someone else. Such disappointments can be avoided by kicking off this process well in advance of the wedding season.