Planning A Winter Wedding




I’d like very much to start my article about planning a winter wedding with a short but beautiful story about this romantic season. What it’s my goal? Well, considering that not many couples plan their wedding in winter, I’d like to convince you about the beauty of a winter wedding. And here it starts my fairy tale about bride and groom, snow and love.




This story comes from far, from a frozen, shiny, covered in silver flakes land. It’s a winter story about princes and queens. Imagine a huge forest covered in romantic flakes and two lovers walking through the snow; it’s snowing with huge immaculate flakes. She becomes his bride and they have a beautiful wedding that last three days and three nights and nobody gets bored, and nobody wants to go home because everything around it’s perfect: the most delicious cakes on every table, arrangements with white flowers which emphasize even more the white season’s magic, pine cones and blue little ribbons, flakes from the sky and big candles which diffuse their warmly light. She wears silvery shoes, a wonderful bouquet with blue and white roses, and he wears a white immaculate tux. It’s their perfect wedding in winter time.

Maybe my little story convinced you in planning your wedding in winter time that’s the reason I’d like to write here some pieces of advice regarding planning a winter wedding. What are the advantages and the disadvantages choosing a winter day for celebrating your love story?

-The bridal dress: Brides-to-be must choose between a vaporous white dress and a silvery satiny dress. You can accessorize your array wearing long gloves and an endless mantle. You also can opt for a fur mantle or for a warmly cape.
-The bridesmaids: they will wear something satiny, flourished with shiny sequins, fur cape and long white gloves. They won’t wear a bouquet of flowers but a single white rose or a rose with blue shades and long shank.
-The groom and the best man: they must choose between white tie, black tie and a tux (darkly colors are the best options for a simple tux). I recommend you black, blue, white shirt and a tie or a blue polar bow tie. If you’ll opt for a tie, this must be assorted with the bridal dress. You, as groom, must discuss with the bride about this aspect but don’t forget about tradition that say you must not see the bridal dress until the wedding day.
-Wedding’s invitations: they will be created on a white or silvery base and the short text it will be written with golden letters. The colors must be chosen between winter colors. A golden text will offer a drop of elegance to the invitations.

Written by , date May 03, 2010 in Certified wedding planner
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