Monday, November 17, 2014

NEW ADDRESS!!!




PLEASE FOLLOW ME TO MY NEW LOCATION:


ALL NEW, ALL WEDDINGS!!!

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Do You Know How to Cut A Wedding Cake? Do You Need To??

image475x475

Do you know how to cut a wedding cake?  Do you need to know?  Probably not…but one NEVER knows...It is quite an art.  Even if you never have to cut your own wedding cake, or that of another bride's, it's interesting.  The top layer of a wedding cake is never counted in the "number of pieces" that a cake will serve.  At least in American, the top layer of the wedding cake is taken down as soon as the bridal couple "Cut the Cake" and feed each other a bite.  It is then kept in a safe place until it can be preserved and stored for the newlyweds to enjoy on their first anniversary.  I posted an earlier blog post: "Preserving the Top Layer of Your Wedding Cake" on the process.  If you would like to read it, just click on the title. Wedding cake slices are much smaller portions that one would receive when ordering 'off the dessert menu' at a restaurant.  It is more tradition and a work of art, than anything else.  The wedding cake also ties in your color scheme, and can set the tone, or theme of your wedding, A scary story, and one to heed… The friend of an acquaintance recently got married in California.  The brides' family chose to hire a wedding planner.  When it was time to cut the cake, no one was doing it. The bride's mother approached the caterer and asked him to please get his team started on the process.  "Well, the cutting of the cake was not in MY contract, so we are under no obligation to do it!"  And he refused.  (I'm thinking this would GREATLY affect his tip…)  So the mother of the bride and the wedding planner, (who let this huge hole in the contact with the caterer be overlooked), cut the cake.  According to a friend of friend who witnessed the massacre…it was NOT pretty…and as they didn't know proper portion size, they ran out of cake!
Top Photo: the knot.com
round-cake-example     above diagram: www.artisancakecompany.com
cutting_roundimage475x475-2


above photo: theknot.com
The following YouTube video is great!  http://www.youtube.com/watch?  It explains how to cut a wedding cake better than I.  Click on the link to watch.
Please visit my website: http://my.bookbaby.com/book/simply-the-best to read about my new cozy mystery, "Simply the Best" by Mary P Karnes.  It's available on e-book format from amazon, Gardners, Barnes and Noble and Apple iBooks.  Other venders offer it as well.  It's all about a wedding planner in Santa Barbara, CA! (Just click on the link)

Monday, November 10, 2014

Wedding on a Time Budget??







You just got engaged!  What's the date?  People ask.

Well, if you want a big, grand affair, you better allow at least a year of preparation; if you want a Saturday night, at the venue of your choice, you should allow at least 18 months!

Some do not want to wait that long.  That is one reason Maggie and Rob, KK and Tyler chose to be married on a Friday night.  There are more options on Friday.

But what if you don't want to wait even a year?
Well, you don't have to…you just have to be flexible, open to compromise, and keep what's really important in perspective…joining for life the love of your life.

I was talking to a friend of long acquaintance the other day.  She shared her wedding story, and what a story it was!  The wedding was put together with a limited timeframe.  An outdoor ceremony was presided over by a justice of the peace at a remodeled abbey.  A family brunch followed.  It was heart-felt and meaningful.  It was not a matter of concern…at that moment in time... that the bride's condo had just burned down due to a neighbor's faulty fan hookup…or that the bride had to wedge  her size "10's" into size nine shoes…or even that the bride, (a district sales rep for the famous West Coast candy company, "See's"), was robbed of her candy stock by her two dogs - who became sick, in a most undignified fashion, in front of visiting wedding guests… the important fact... the bride and groom's dearer friends and family were present, the focus on what was truly important - their joyful union.



































I hope you enjoyed the painting/photos.  A brief description is below.

Image #1 - Painting by Marcia Hackelman Van Dyke, Olympia, WA - an old college acquaintance.

Image #2 - Maggie and Rob's wedding with friends, photo creds, wedding guests

Image #3 - KK, the bride to be
http://my.bookbaby.com/book/simply-the-best  My new e-book mystery!

Sunday, November 9, 2014

The Roman Catholic Wedding Ceremony






Our family is Roman Catholic.  It is not easy to be married "in the church."  There is more work involved than a protestant ceremony.  I can speak from experience, as Kenny and I were married first in the Presbyterian Church, (my church growing up), then we had a second wedding in the Catholic Church after I converted to Roman Catholicism.

I think if religion is important to both the bride and groom, it is not to everyone, it's easier if a couple is untied.  Kenny and I made the decision before we married that we would first get married in my "hometown church," then I would convert.  I didn't realize, however, that it would take me TWO years to complete the process, and that it would require getting married all over again.  I don't think any parish requires that today.  This was 30 years ago, remember.

Maggie and Rob, KK and Tyler are lucky.  All four are Roman Catholics.  They didn't have to jump through the hoops that Kenny and I did.  There is a lengthy process, though.
















In order to be married in the Catholic Church, either the bride or the groom must be a confirmed Catholic.  One can not become a confirmed Catholic unless he/she is baptized, attends 9 years of CCD - religious education, received his/her First Holy Communion, and First Reconciliation (you may think of this as "Confession").  Then the candidate is eligible to attend between one and two years of "Confirmation Classes."  Finally after all this, the candidate is accepted into the Church as a full member.

Now you want to receive the Sacrament of marriage?  One must be a registered member of a parish, or his/her parents are.  All sacraments, (listed above), must be documented.  Then the bride and groom meet, on average, three times with a priest, and attend a "pre-cana" marriage workshop.  This is at least a five hour class.  The class addresses everything from children, to in-laws to finance.  A lot of work?  You bet.  But so is marriage.  The Catholic Church has struggled in the recent past, but I think this is one thing they're doing right...





Image # 1 - abt-unk.blogspot.com
Image # 2 - www.oldsaintmarys.org
Image # 3 - alleneoccasions.com

http://my.bookbaby.com/book/simply-the-best   My e-book mystery about a wedding planner!