Wednesday, October 19, 2011

And One More Thing...

I have no regrets that I purchased the dress I did - it is glorious and perfect and I will feel while wearing it all of things that I am supposed to feel.

However, had I been just a little more patient, I would have learned that Brides Against Breast Cancer will be in Bellevue October 28-29 and I would have gone to them first to find my dress.

This organization is amazing.  I volunteered for a dress sale to benefit breast cancer research during high school and, although I believe that one was run by the local chapter of the American Cancer Society, the idea stuck with me.  After Brad and I started talking about marriage, I did some internet research and found Brides Against Breast Cancer.

Unfortunately, their closest scheduled show was in Portland.  I emailed, asking for more information about the Portland show and whether they might be coming to Seattle.  I got a lovely response indicating that they hoped to be in Seattle this fall, but didn't yet have dates or a space.  I vowed to go to the Portland show, thinking I would drag Alissa (maid of honor) with me and we would stay with Whitney (bridesmaid) for the weekend.  Then I checked my calendar and realized I was busy that weekend - attending another wedding.

I got nervous.  I couldn't make it to the Portland show (though I seriously considered calling in sick that Friday and driving down just for the day) and I didn't know if a Seattle show would happen.  David's Bridal was wrapping up their sale and I was in love with the dress I'd found.  So I didn't wait.  C'est la vie.

Still, I'm glad to know about the organization.  Now, rather than trashing my dress:


or storing it for some unknown period of time, in the hope that my daughter, who will undoubtedly be 4 inches taller and 60 lbs lighter than me will want to wear it, I know I can send it off to be used for a very good cause by people who will appreciate that I did so.



Dress Shopping

Dress shopping is supposed to be the most wonderful - and often most stressful (it hasn't been; more on that later this week)- part of wedding planning.  According the etiquette books, nearly everything about the feeling of the wedding is determined by the dress.  The formality, the location, the theme.  Scores of advice exist about finding and buying the dress, from "Make an appointment" to "Don't take your mother."

The goal, it is said, is that you should feel like a princess.  Or, if you're not into that, like a modern, chic, magazine cover.  The options are myriad, silhouettes and fabrics and necklines and trains and beading and straps and sashes and on and on.  Even colors - this is not your mother's wedding dress, ladies.

Some girls I know have spent years imagining their weddings - particularly THE DRESS.  I had friends in high school, no boyfriend, who kept wedding books full of photos of dream flowers, venues, honeymoons, and, especially, dresses.  I was not that girl by any means.  Playing catch-up after Brad's proposal, and trying to make up for not having spent the last 20-odd years dreaming about my big day, I started spending every spare moment looking at wedding dress styles. 

I knew I wanted to stick with traditional white or ivory, though I wasn't adverse to having a sash or some kind of color spot, if it added to the dress.  I liked the visual interest of ruching.  Sweetheart necklines were nice.  Embellishment should be minimal.  No strapless dress, because I'm not keen on spending the whole night making sure my neckline isn't around my waist.

So, the weekend after Brad's proposal, my mother (yes, I took her - my mother is great and has a consistent position of being on my side in just about any argument) and my maid of honor accompanied me dress shopping.  Our first stop - Alfred Angelo.

I had previewed dresses on their website and selected my favorites and was certain I knew the dress I wanted:


The ruching!  The straps!  The simplicity!  I was in love.  Until I put it on.  It was far from great.  So, we tried others, including this one, which I vetoed, explaining I would spent the whole night fiddling with the weird fabric draping hanging down the front.  I illustrated, giving the lovely shop assistant a case of hysterical giggles and, unintentionally turned the sash-y sort of thing into a halter top.  We agreed it was better that way.


After 6 or 7 dresses, we settled on this as the best of the shop, with the color in a darker blue.  Brad commented, when I later showed him this photo, that it looked like Barbie's Undersea wedding.  Glad this wasn't my choice, hm?


We stopped into a small, crowded independent shop, but spent most of our time there make jokes about the glittery, fluffy prom dresses.  I found a slinky, pink sequined number and told Alissa (in jest, obviously), that I'd decided to make it the bridesmaid dress.  We left shortly thereafter, realizing that our guffaws were probably not appreciated by the shop owner.

The next day, we visited David's Bridal. I'm actually not sure what compelled me to do so.  I guess I thought I'd rule out the big-name dress stores as having anything THE DRESS, while getting an idea of what I liked and what I didn't.

We didn't get much help at first.  David's Bridal has a policy of double-booking appointments and the other bride sharing my appointment was having a major dress crisis which occupied most of the shop assistant's time.  I was, quite honestly, almost ready to walk out.

By nature, though, I'm pretty easy-going and willing to wait rather than cause a scene.  So wait we did and, once the other bride left, we got excellent service.  I was a no-nonsense sort of shopper, particularly since I wasn't expecting to find THE DRESS.  I tried on dress after dress after dress, remarking on features I like and features I didn't.  About 20 dresses later, Mom and Alissa settled on this as just about the best dress they could imagine:


"It's very pretty," I kept repeating.  I wasn't sure, but also didn't want this to turn into a months-long search, particularly due to the short nature of our engagement and the fact that dresses can take four months to arrive and then still need to be altered.  I decided to keep looking, but with a set deadline that if we didn't find a better dress in the next week, I would come back and order "the chiffon," as we referred to it, before their sale was over.

I searched around, looked at some others, but didn't find anything better.  The next week I went back to David's Bridal, intending to order the chiffon.  It wasn't THE DRESS, but it was nice, certainly.  Just to be sure, though, I asked to try on a couple more.  I tried the chiffon on first.  It was definitely a pretty dress.  And a couple others, which were also alright.

In, out, in, out - I put on the last dress, stepped up on the platform, ready to look up and immediately identify what was wrong with it.  I looked up and...stopped.  Stared.  Stared some more.  Stroked the skirt.  Stared again.  "It's," I tried, "Wow."  This, this is what you're supposed to feel, I thought.  Breathless.  Beyond words.  Thinking not, "What a pretty dress," but rather, "I look so beautiful."

So I ordered it.  Right then and there, after a phone call to a friend who assured me that it was acceptable to spend a little more than your budget if it really and truly was THE DRESS.

That didn't stop my worrying, though, especially when Brad and I sat down a few nights later to really hammer out the budget for the wedding.  On seeing exactly what percentage attire was taking in the budget, I was washed with guilt, chiding myself for being so impulsive, for potentially making a crazy mistake.  What if I didn't even look good in the dress?  I'd been there by myself.  Sure, the shop assistant told me it was fantastic, but she's supposed to say that!

Two weeks later, though, I hauled my maid of honor, mother, future mother and sisters-in-law back to David's Bridal.  My grandmother, two aunts, and a couple cousins came along for the ride.  I slipped into the dress again, clipped the baggy spots so they could get the full effect of my Sopia Loren-esque curves (not usually, but in this dress, va-va-voom!), and stepped up on the platform.

They agreed - I wasn't crazy and didn't have to regret my impulse purchase.

It is THE DRESS.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Photographs & Tidalwaves

In the month we've had of an engagement, an increasingly greater share of my internet browsing has become, as you might imagine, focused on all things wedding - dresses and photographs and menus and venues and ideas - and there is so much out there.

I've started two different files for photographs. One is of "Ideas I Like," for inspiration as we're putting together invitations, decor, food, and such; the other is "Photographs I Like," to help give our photographer an idea of our style.

 How beautiful is this?!  Not that we're necessarily doing it...though I would like to incorporate lanterns/diffuse lights somehow. 


Speaking of photographers, they are presenting us a bit of a dilemma.  From, well, probably before our engagement, Brad and I both stated that photography was one of the things so important to us that we were willing to spend a good portion of our budget on that item.  However, we had a few very specific requirements:

1. Brad is quite a capable editor and dislikes the effects used in most wedding photography (over-use of all of the following, as dictated by him: false depth of field, soft focus, highlight diffusion, "punchy" dynamic range, shadow/highlights filter, over and under saturation, and color isolation).  He would much rather have a photographer take a thousand well-composed pictures of us and give them to us in RAW format so that he can do whatever editing he'd like.  Most photographers are uncomfortable with this.

2. One of the reasons that most photographers are uncomfortable with giving us unedited photos is that they sell themselves as a package.  "You're not just buying my time," one said, "You're buying my artistry and, especially, my storytelling."  And I get that.  Were I photographing weddings, I would probably feel the same way.  There's our trouble.  I fancy myself a storyteller and think I am particularly good at telling our story.  Having a photographer decide how our story should be told doesn't appeal to me; I would rather tell our story myself.

3. Professional photography packages come with albums and print credits, which is really great for some people.  We're not really interested.  Yes, we'll want an album at some point and, yes, our parents will want albums.  But we're pretty sure we can handle that ourselves. Several photographers have protested that, under no circumstances do you want to have anything printed that will go on your wall or your coffee table not printed by a professional.  But, to be perfectly honest, I've always been perfectly happy with the photos hanging on my wall that were printed at Kit's Camera.  So we would be paying extra for something we don't feel we need.  That's not to say that those tangibles don't make the photo packages fairly priced; however, "value" has to be determined by what something is worth to us and albums and print credits aren't worth as much as they cost.

All that said, we've got several friends and family members who, though not professionals, have shot weddings and know their way around the composition of a photo.  We're thinking of asking one of them.  Though this does have the advantage of being easier on our budget, we would be doing so primarily because we think we have a better chance of getting the experience and photos we want.

Feedback:
What are the risks of asking a friend or family member to be our photographer? 
Are we missing out on anything by not hiring a professional?

Wednesday, October 5, 2011

Meta (Blogging about Blogging)

Blogs make me think of this:

From: despair.com


Nonetheless, I'm giving it a shot.  I relate to Joan Didion, who rather famously stated, "I don't know what I think until I write it down."  Writing means something to me and I haven't done much in the way of writing for a while. 

I'm thrilled...excited...buzzing about this time in my life, about the man I'm going to marry, and about all our plans.  Even though I know, on an academic level, that I've been an adult for years, this step still feels like the final shedding of my childhood.  And this is one of those times when I very much want to have a clear idea of what I'm thinking and feeling and a record of those feelings to look back on.  And it is an excellent opportunity to tone my flabby writing muscles.

And I'd like to solicit input and advice.  Brad and I are going to be putting together a lot of this wedding on a small budget, with the help of talented friends and family; your thoughts about ways to save money and DIY are invaluable.

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

How it Began

Sometime in the next few months, I’ll tell you how it really began, with a boy I sort of remembered from high school as being quiet and kind and good with technology, and how our transpacific letters turned into friendship turned into love...
But not today.  Today, you can hear about how on Saturday, September 3, my dear friend Alissa asked me to join her for tea in Port Gamble, which led us to a trip aboard the Washington State ferry from Edmonds to Kingston.

How she was acting kind of weird, but not quite weird enough to not just be herself (rather like the time she was a part of an elaborate conspiracy that led to my first date with Brad).

How I heard music start up behind me and, when I turned to see a young man singing and dancing to Frank Sinatra's "You Make Me Feel So Young," I commented, "That's great!  If he had a girl near him, I would think he was proposing."  And how he was joined by several other couples and I thought, "Yes, it is totally normal for a flashmob to be happening right now."  How I spotted a guy who happened to be a friend of Brad's sisters and that didn't seem terribly strange either.  And how my clever, amazing, dashing boyfriend snuck up behind me, seranaded me, and then produced the most beautiful ring and proposed with, "Caitlyn McKinney, you are my favorite person in the world and I want to spend the rest of my life with you. Will you marry me?"

And, of course, I said yes.



You can read about the proposal from the photographer who happened to be sitting next to us here: http://captureslife.com/2011/09/21/witnessing-a-flash-mob-engagement/

You can also watch the video of my dashing fiance and his adorable sister leading the flashmob in practice before getting aboard the ferry here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d0v0E7typEA
And see me ramble on about exactly why I didn’t have a clue that this singing had anything to do with me here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fUiIyA2eF8g