Wedding
Planning: As Long as the Last Bite
by Melissa Williams
My wedding was one of those small-budget productions.
You know, like a B movie, complete with bad camera
angles and lighting. Not that I don't cherish
my day; there's just a lot of things I would have
changed to make my memories more fond and vivid.
With a budget of $5,000, we had to skimp on a
few things so that we could have certain aspects
that were important to either my husband or me.
Our ceremony was simple, short, and on the beach.
It cost us the marriage license, the rental fee
for twelve chairs, and some tulle. My gown was
a repurposed prom dress, and my husband wore a
shirt and tie. We were on the beach, after all,
and a tuxedo and oversized gown felt out of place.
The minister was a friend of the family, and did
the ceremony for free.
Where we skimped on the ceremony, we splurged
on the reception. We spent hundreds of dollars
on a fancy cake. While we kept the catering simple,
with sandwiches and salads, it still cost us nearly
$1,500 to feed 250 people. We spent somewhere
around $250 on the reception hall, not including
the bartender's fees, the single keg or the unlimited
soda that we supplied our guests.
Of all of the money we spent, our keepsakes from
the event were photos taken by friends and family.
While their photos catch most of the important
moments, and some in stunning detail, we lack
the mementoes that a professional would have been
able to provide. There are no posed shots of my
husband and me cutting the cake, nor are there
any good videos that captured our first dance
together.
While none of this seemed important to him or
me at the time, we now look back with regret that
those memories are lost to us forever. All of
the details, that we spent months and months planning,
won't matter when we forget them years down the
road. The extra money that we would have spent
would have captured the effort and funds that
we invested into one of the most important days
of our lives. Instead of looking at photos and
videos taken by friends and family, complete with
bad lighting, bad camera angles, and overexposure
from developing, we would have professional memories
taken with quality equipment.
Looking back on it now, I think that instead
of spending $800 on our cake, I should have split
that money in half. A $400 cake that I can remember
and see in quality photos is worth more than an
$800 cake that I only remember through my mind's
eye. After all, my wedding was one of the most
important days of my life, and photographs can
tell stories of that event for a lifetime. The
cake only lasted as long as the last bite.
About the Author
Melissa Williams is a wife and mother of a beautiful
baby boy. She is an avid scrapbooker, card maker,
crocheter, and all around creative person. She
lives in Michigan, and aspires to start her own
business selling handmade cards and scrapbooking
services. Melissa has submitted this article in
affiliation with a site for Wedding Invitations
(
http://www.Prye.Com/ ).
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