Our Last Christmas Before Mr and Mrs

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

I think all couples, especially those who’ve waited through a long engagement, enjoy noting various “last” milestones and playing the this-time-next-year game in anticipation of the major life-change that is a wedding.

Todd and I are no different in that respect.

This year’s holiday was spent, on Christmas Eve, with my family and then just the two of us for the sleepy, rainy, grey Christmas Day. We exchanged gifts and spent the day in our pjs and, honestly, I hope we’re doing the very same next year. But maybe without the rain.

jwalker_christmasfire

Todd was kind enough to build a toasty fire for us and we both camped out on the couch with our laptops. I got caught up with my feed reader and then started to catch up my Project Wedding Project Life album:

Week 1 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 1 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 2 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 2 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 3 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 3 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 4 of our 52-Week Countdown

Week 4 of our 52-Week Countdown

I’ve been pretty good about taking notes, slightly less good at taking pictures in the craziness of December holidays, and a little behind on pages, but I’m looking forward to a speedy catch-up in the new year.

And that’s the other little piece of news: Third Time Bride and the rest of the sites in the Helper Monkey Network will be taking a bit of a breather for the month of January, posting-wise. Instead of posting I’ll be doing some behind-the-scenes work, spiffing things up a bit for what’s promising to be a very full, very busy, very awesome 2013.

So happiest of new year’s to you all, and we’ll chat again in February!

11 Months and The Big List

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

To-Do List graphic

December 2nd marked 11 months until the wedding and things haven’t progressed much since last month.

Oh, wait, I take that back!

I sat down and made The Big List of all things wedding left to do and it took 8 pages in my little notebook. I’m in the process of putting it all into a spreadsheet so I can do all my sorting and shuffling and happy little OCD-ish organizing stuff. So far I’m 2 written pages in and on line 36. It’s gonna be a long one, folks!

But what’s fun about the whole list-making process is you can make it any way you want.

I set up my list with these headings:

  • Category (decor, logistics, papers, etc.)
  • What (that actual thing to do)
  • Who (me, Todd, both of us, a vendor, etc.)
  • Where (venue, home, “global” for those pesky things that could come from anywhere)
  • When (due dates, meeting dates, appointments, etc.)
  • Why (useful when you question your sanity–“so the tables won’t be nekkid” and “because it’s cool” are totally valid answers for why)
  • How (we’re not talking step by step, it’s more like “shopping,” “crafting,” and “think, think, think” for decision-making things)

Did you know you can insert pictures into spreadsheet cells? Sure, Pinterest and bookmarks work, but why sift through the 150 things you pinned last Saturday once you’ve narrowed your faves down to 2 or 3? Just pop a thumbnail in a cell and you’ve got it all in once place.

Generally speaking, one list leads to more lists but you can’t get to List 2 without List 1.

We managed to book our engagement photo shoot for January–might be a little chilly but that could work for us (I like sleeves, you know). It could also be a freak hot snap and we’ll melt. Either way it’ll be caught on film!

Also, I’ve been working on the beaded trim for my cropped cardigan. I’ll do a more in-depth look at the hows and stuff once I get this part of it fully done. But here’s a sneak peak of it in process:

Beaded trim in progress

Pretty Book and Flower Icon

 

What’s the longest list you’ve ever tackled?

Creating The List

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

Into every wedding, a list must fall.

Most weddings, several lists come into play. If you have a wedding planner, he or she will have a list for you. If you’re planning it yourself, every bridal book and magazine and website has lists for you to follow.

The thing about those lists, is that it’s hard for 1 person to come up with a list that’s going to fit your wedding perfectly. So you’re either skipping over the things that don’t apply, or writing more stuff into the margins. And that’s no good.

Instead, I suggest you take your top 3 lists, from whatever source they came from, and create your own master list.

Sounds scary, and like a lot of work, but once this bad boy is put together you’re going to feel really good about what’s ahead.

Right now I’m a couple weeks out from our big, mostly-annual Halloween party. Now, considering how many times I’ve thrown this party, you might think everything gets done in my sleep by now.

No

In fact, each party I throw is always a little different because I tweak things here, add things there, ditch stuff that didn’t work, and so on. And even if it was a cookie-cutter operation, there are still things that need to get done each year and if I don’t have them written down, there’s a good chance I’m going to forget something until the last moment and have to scramble.

As a hostess, I prefer not to be scrambling when the guests arrive.

Granted, this is a party for 20 or so friends and family, not exactly the scope of a wedding, right?

Think about it this way: my parties include mailed invitations, a menu, decorations, seating, activities management, and even party favors. The difference between one of my usual parties and a wedding is only a matter of scale.

And there have been plenty of small, backyard weddings that took less than the planning and prep for my average Pumpkin Party or Fairy Fest.

Back when I was planning on becoming a professional event planner (end of high school, early college; pre-Culinary School, obviously), one of the best tips I ever learned was to do a mental walk-through of the event as a guest. In your head, your imaginary guest is going to do everything you’ve planned for them to do, and it’ll point out things you might have missed like making sure there’s a trash can nearby.

To build on that, for a wedding list, I’d say go through each part of the event–starting with the rehearsal dinner–and mentally attend it, asking yourself the big questions.

Who‘s in charge of it?
What do you see? hear? taste? feel? smell?
Where‘s it gonna be?
When is it?
How will be people know about it? get there?
Why is this important?

We’re incorporating the “reporter questions” with the 5 senses and filling in the blanks. Not all questions will be applicable to all settings, but it’s good to run through them in case something jogs your memory. As you think through those items, write down or type everything that comes to mind.

Thinking about our rehearsal dinner, my answers would look something like this

*bride & groom
*People–family and out of town guests, music–supplied by site, food–small group, off the menu?
*restaurant (make reservations)
*November 1, time tba, depending on venue schedule
*Guest list for the rehearsal, send out with invitations, arrange shuttle or carpool for guests in from out of town
*So that we can relax with our friends before the frenzy of the next morning.

So, from thinking this through, I know that I need to add the following to my Event Master List

  • Create rehearsal dinner enclosure for select guests, include with invitations
  • Get count for rehearsal dinner
  • Firm up rehearsal time with ceremony site
  • Make reservation at La Fiesta
  • Ask about fee for resort shuttle for guests staying on property
  • Alternately figure out how many people will need transport and how many cars will be available
  • Ask about limited menu vs a la carte at the restaurant
  • Decide if we’re presenting any gifts at rehearsal dinner
  • Make/purchase gifts (optional)
  • Decide on payment method (credit/debit/cash, etc.) for dinner
  • Make sure to have cash on hand for tips

Because my goal is to relax at the dinner, I’m not going to worry about decorations (the restaurant we’re planning on reserving has lots of natural decor anyway, it’s not a blank slate by any means).

Then you just keep going through your event, working with whatever rough (or specific) timeline you’ve got.

When I get to the walk down the aisle, I’ll “see” the decorations that I want, so they go on the list as something to make, along with the flowers (or whatever) in my hand, and so on and so forth.

Once you’ve got the Master List compiled, then you get to play jigsaw puzzle with it (because different things get done at different times), arrange things in the order that makes sense to you, and it’ll start to look like one of those lists you see in the magazines. And speaking of those lists, use them as a template as far as distance from the event staging, transfer over the things from those lists that apply to you along with your own mental walk-through list, and what you’ll end up with is an Event Master List that is perfect for your event, and not cookie-cutter to the average wedding, etc.

If you make your list in a spreadsheet program, you can color code your text and fields to make it easy to glance at. Or, if you prefer lots of mini-lists, feel free to make sub-lists (like a Packing List, a DIY Project list, a Payments to Make list, etc.) from your master list so you avoid overwhelming yourself with 1 big list.

And if you absolutely hate lists, find a friend willing to channel their inner Monica and send up a flare.

Engagiversary!

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

Engagement ring on the cork of a bottle of San Sebastian port, with a digital candle

As of this past Monday, September 30, it’s been a year since Todd & I made our engagement official! What did we do to mark the occasion?

Spent 8 hours in the car, on the way home from a comics show in Mississippi, then grabbed Chinese take-out as we got back to town.

I know, not very romantic, but we’re not really the super-romantic type. At least we spent the day together–despite the rain that made driving that much more tense, and the exhaustion as we’d just made the drive to Mississippi on Friday.

In the past year we’ve gotten quite a bit accomplished. We:

  • Started saving for the wedding
  • Picked our venue (which came with a caterer, accommodations, and a Day-Of Coordinator)
  • Created our preliminary menu
  • Decided on a honeymoon
  • Found our officiant (more on that one, soon)
  • And I bought my dress!

Not bad for 12 months, and we’ve still got 13 months to go!

These days it’s not uncommon for a couple to be engaged for a year or more. It is, however, a little outside the norm to have an engagement longer than 18 months. If you count when we actually decided to get married (in June of last year), a few months before there was a ring and telling our families, our engagement is 27 months long.

And speaking of the ring…

After having all 4 prongs reset (which was a bit of a trial in and of itself), the setting was starting to loosen again when I went to the mall to pick up a Clinique order, but I had the store clean it and inspect it that Saturday.

Just 2 days later, on a Monday, I’m sitting at my desk, I look down, and one of the #$%^&* prongs is missing. Unlike the first missing prong (where the fridge shelf caught it and snapped it off in front of my eyes), I have no idea how this one came off. I’d been at work 2 hours and the most strenuous thing I’d done was file some papers. I had no time to take it in that day to make that week’s repair shipment, so it sat in my jewelry box for a week until I could make it back by the mall.

And while the repair is not only visible to the naked eye (it’s like he dumped some extra metal into that corner and just didn’t bother to clean it up, so it’s “clogging” the corner on either side of the prong and behind it, backing up to the halo stones), I’ll be damned if I haven’t had the ring back a month (maybe more) and it hasn’t rattled once! Every other time it’s been 2 days or less before it’d start to loosen again, so maybe–as inelegant a repair as it was–this’ll actually hold!

*knocking wood that I didn’t just jinx myself or my ring*

I would imagine things are going to start heating up a bit, now. We’re still on the photographer hunt (though an end may be in sight on that score), and I’ve yet to design our cocktail or start on the rest of the DIY goodness I have planned.

Pretty Book and Flower Icon

Did you have an engagiversary?
Did you do anything special or was it just another day in the countdown to the wedding?

So Now What?!

Third Time Wife, Wedding Planning

Booking our venue also meant we checked off booking our caterer, lodging, and even our Day of Coordinator since they all came part and parcel with the location.

But now what am I supposed to do?

The other week our venue sent us a handy schedule that went over when we would meet (starting 6 months out) and what we would discuss and decide on at those meetings. Now, with 11 months until our next scheduled anything, I might have to nudge that first meeting a little earlier. After all, making so much myself means needing a better picture of pretty much everything a bit farther in advance.

Until then, there are a few things I can get started on:

  • Save the Date design. They don’t have to go out for another 5 months, at the earliest, but I have a very specific design in mind and getting started on it certainly won’t hurt, especially now that we have our location.
  • Wedding Wed-site. Yes, we have this blog, but I think a general info site, away from all the sneak previews and such, might be a good idea for some of our less-curious guests.
  • The Dress. I’ve gone dress shopping twice, already, just to get a feel for what I liked and what looked good, but I’m still not set on one design versus another. There’s also the exploration into making my own that bears consideration.
  • The Flowers. Even though our florals will be faux, I can still figure out what styles and looks might work for us and start making the components so they can be assembled after we have that first planning meeting and I know just how many centerpieces, etc. we’ll need.
  • The Rings. We’ve decided to go in a different direction than originally planned for my wedding band, so the hunt is on to find something that suits me to a tee.

Hmmm, lots of planning and research involved in most of the above. Good thing I have stacks of wedding magazines I’ve barely even flipped through to help me narrow down my choices!

Pretty Book and Flower Icon

 

Did you have some decision downtime during your preparations?
If so, what did you do to keep yourself busy?