bouquet fostoria sugar

Transcription

bouquet fostoria sugar
T18
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
Barely
offer options for sexy without revealing anything at all.
“Try sheer sleeves if you want to be
a little risque but worry about going
Continued from page T17
over the top,” Winikka said. “Sheer
“Brides are becoming more daring with lace, that’s sexy.”
Strauss suggested going sheer at
for their wedding-day looks and opting
the
bottom if legs are your best asset
for seductive silhouettes,” she said.
and
you’re uncomfortable with reveals
“Keren and I like to balance these
elsewhere.
bold shapes with
Cutouts are also
romantic details
“You should dress for
happening in bridal
such as soft tulle,
gowns. Winikka
floral appliques and
yourself. You shouldn’t
s a id pl acement
embroidered lace.”
is everything for
be
worrying
about
S ome br ides
body type when
now buy two
Uncle Harry. This is
it comes to those
dresses or more.
little slices.
your red carpet day.”
Those who worry
“Cutouts can
a b o ut we a r i n g
create that hourbarely-there during
ELLE STRAUSS,
glass shape if you
the ceremony may
“BRIDES” MAGAZINE
don’t have it,” she
want to consider a
said. “Make sure
more modest look
for the “I Dos” and then change for they’re placed at the natural waist if
you want to achieve that.”
fun, fun, fun at the reception.
Sexy is one thing, Winikka said, but
Convertible gowns are more plentiful. They include “infinity” looks with surveys done by TheKnot.com show
attached wraps and sashes that can that more brides respond to questions
be tied and twisted in different ways, about their dresses with: “I just want
offering more coverage for church and to look like me.”
Ultimately, Strauss said, a bride has
sexier scenarios for later. Other convertibles have detachable trains and to be true to herself when choosing a
gown.
transform into minis.
“You should dress for yourself,”
Since Kate Middleton’s grand nuptials with Prince William in 2011, she added. “You shouldn’t be worrysleeves on bridal gowns have picked ing about Uncle Harry. This is your
up steam. A gown with sleeves can red carpet day.”
Photos by the Associated Press
BIG CELEBRITY names like Beyonce Knowles (right)
and Kim Kardashian (above) helped jump start the trend
of sexy gowns leaping from the red carpet to the bride.
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THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
T19
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Photo provided to the Associated Press
JENNIFER PAIK (third from left) poses with her best friend and bride Joo Cha and the rest of
the bridesmaids in Newport Beach, California.
Maid
Continued from page T11
Elizabeth Brandon, owner of the Los Angelesbased Wink! Weddings. “Try to take everything
with a grain of salt. This day is about her.”
Be a buffer
Being head bridesmaid means running interference between the bride and her other bridesmaids or any meddling family members.
“Be kind to your bride and help with internal
squabbles among the bridesmaids,” said Yolanda
Crous, features and travel director of Brides
Magazine.
Get together with the other bridesmaids
and let everyone vent, she says. “Feel free to
let loose.”
On the day of the wedding, ask the bride for
a list of the people with whom she’d like to interact, since she’ll be bombarded all day. If her new
mother-in-law ticked her off during the week,
steer her away from the bride, said Brandon.
“You can take the mother-in-law over to that
amazing cookie bar while the bride stays on the
dance floor with her champagne and is happy,”
she said.
Don’t go overboard
“It can be super-easy to get carried away and
plan a bridal shower that you think is perfect
and would make Martha Stewart proud. But if
it’s one the bride doesn’t want, you would be in
a world of trouble,” Brandon said.
She warned against any out-of-left-field “tadah!” moments, such as a surprise dance that
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could make a bride want to sprint for the hills.
And don’t be afraid to ask the bride for help
if your schedule is packed.
“You might say, ‘Can I have a couple of bridesmaids co-host with me?’” said Brandon, who
planned her own LA wedding 11 months ago.
She chose her then 20-year-old sister as her maid
of honor, and asked one of her best friends to
organize the shower.
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On the day of the wedding, the bridal suite
is home base for the bride and her bridesmaids
to get ready.
Have an emergency kit on hand in case she
spills something, loses a button or needs a bobby
pin, said Crous.
“Bring some snacks,” and keep the bride and
bridesmaids from drinking too much, she added.
Brandon suggested making “the best gettingready music playlist ever.” And tidy up afterward.
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Finally, when it comes time to hoist the champagne and toast the bride, keep it short, said
Crous, and don’t embarrass her.
“Don’t do the thing where you dredge up
things from the bride’s past to be funny,” she
said. “Humor is great! But be funny and kind.
You’re better off doing something simple and
emotional and from the heart.”
For Paik, being there for her friend of 25
years was more than worth the effort.
“Though she would be the first to describe
herself as neurotic and demanding, she was the
ideal bride — decisive, mindful of everyone’s
time and money, and flexible,” Paik said.
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T20
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
Make your special day more succulent
Dainty, hardy
flowers lend
rustic, elegant
chic to modern
weddings
Courtesy of Malcolmweddings.com
A RECEPTION TABLE
centerpiece with flowers
and succulents can cheer
up any wedding guest.
Most wedding florists
recommend sprinkling
succulents among
traditional flowers, rather
than an all-succulent
bouquet, which can get
heavy and bulky-looking.
By SARAH WOLFE
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Succulents are showing up everywhere in the world of weddings, from
bouquets and boutonnieres to centerpieces and even take-home favors.
They’re dainty yet hardy, and come
in a surprising array of colors and textures. Best of all, they’re eco-friendly
and can be replanted at home after
your nuptials as a reminder of the
special day.
“Succulents add a modern look,”
says Viva Max Kaley, a New Yorkbased wedding planner. “Instead of
pretty petals, it’s a cool geometric use
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1-800-568-3345 œ WSLife.com
The Western and Southern Life Insurance Company
Western-Southern Life Assurance Company Cincinnati, Ohio
of lines. My clients tend to gravitate
toward that aesthetic, so it’s been a
really popular choice.”
Robbin Watson, a 27-year-old
living in Boston who is getting married in Connecticut next July, is using
succulents to add a pop of dusty blue
and mint green to her cream-colored
bridal and bridesmaid bouquets.
But while she loves their aesthetic,
succulents are more of a sentimental
choice for her.
“I lived on the West Coast for a
few years with my fiance, where succulents are very prevalent. Not so
much in the New England region,
where I live now,” Watson says. “To
bring a little West Coast into my wedding ceremony, I thought succulents
would be a great way to incorporate
my memories of living in San Diego.”
Bridal bouquets
Bouquets like Watson’s are the
most obvious and popular way to use
succulents in weddings.
Debra Prinzing, Seattle-based
author and founder of the eco-conscious floral directory site SlowFlowSee SUCCULENTS, Page T21
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
T21
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CHRIS SCHMITT / for the Associated Press
SUCCULENTS ARE shown here in a tea cup being used as a wedding favor. More and more
couples are using succulents as favors — an eco-friendly parting gift that’s far less likely to be
tossed in the trash when guests get home.
Succulents
Continued from page T20
ers.com, says the trend has been popular among
California brides for years but has really taken
off thanks to social media sites like Pinterest
and Instagram.
Demand for drought-hardy succulents in the
gardening world has also made these once hardto-find plants readily available year-round across
the U.S., and at a cheaper price than more traditional wedding flowers like roses and peonies.
Taylor Cassard, a 27-year-old nursing student
in Montana, used a variety of light green rosetteshaped succulents from the Echeveria family in
her bouquet for a rustic yet modern look when
she got married at a guest ranch in Big Sky this
summer.
“They were absolutely gorgeous and mixed
so nicely with the other flowers to create a soft
natural look,” says Cassard, who planted some
of the succulents post-ceremony in metal buckets
used by her flower children.
Many wedding florists recommend sprinkling
succulents among traditional flowers rather than
creating an all-succulent bouquet, which can get
heavy and bulky-looking. The plants’ vibrant
green and sometimes purple colors pair especially well with jewel tones, burgundy and apricot shades. According to Prinzing, succulents
are a particularly nice complement to dahlias,
hydrangeas, lilies, orchids, roses and spring bulb
flowers.
Boutonnieres and centerpieces
Succulents can feel like a more “masculine”
See SUCCULENTS, Page T25
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Our thoroughness and attention to detail
guarantee great results...
 Free Evaluation: Free consultation and estimate for the care of any fabric, new or old.
 Environmentally-Pure, Lasting Protection: We use only acid free materials. Your
gown will be nestled in acid free tissue paper then placed in our Museum quality-wedding
chest that features an acid free window for viewing.
 Anti-Sugar Stain Treatment: Our unique anti-sugar treatment featured in Modern
Bride and Bride’s ensures that all sugar and acid stains seen and unseen are removed.
 Personal Inspection Available: Our brides are encouraged to inspect their gown before
the preservation process is completed.
 Hand cleaning: We hand treat and clean each gown individually~Never in combination
with other dresses. We take every precaution to protect delicate beads, embroidery and lace
during the cleaning process.
T22
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
Traditions
Honoring
Continued from page T7
Continued from page T16
incorporated into part of the reception
without dominating the event: think
small bites during cocktail hour, on
a dessert table or even as a midnight
snack to keep the party going.
“My grandmother, who I was
incredibly close to, was a major
chocoholic. So we had nice chocolates on all the tables and served a
chocolate cake,” says Julia Moss, who
got married last month in southern
California.
To honor her grandfather, a
baker who “made the world’s best
banana cream pie, we gave little jars
of banana cream pudding to all our
guests.”
She explained the connections
in short paragraphs in the wedding
program.
day. The tributes, silent or overt or
somewhere in between, are a good
idea for those who are missing somebody important that day, said San
Francisco wedding planner Kathryn
Kalabokes.
“A wedding is the one time that
everyone would be there, and when
you’ve lost someone, especially during
the planning process, it can be very
devastating,” she said. “The best thing
to do is to honor them because you
know that person would have been
there and been a significant part of
the wedding.”
A tribute, though, should feel right
for a celebratory day, nothing too
somber or serious.
“It is important to honor that
person who is close to you, but maintain the positivity and look ahead
to the life change and union of two
people,” said Jamie Miles, managing
editor of TheKnot.com.
To come up with a fitting tribute,
consider your relationship with the
person. What did he enjoy? What are
your memories of her? “It’s all about
making it a personalized remembrance and what feels right to you,”
Honoring lost loved ones
There are many ways to honor
loved ones who have died: pictures
set in empty chairs, charms of
remembrance on the bouquet, poetry
readings.
Rebecca Bridge chose a venue in
the Smokey Mountains to honor her
deceased mother, who loved the area.
Her ceremony, while not traditionally
religious, included the Lord’s Prayer
Photo provided to the Associated Press
BRIDESMAIDS SHANTI Markstrom (left) and Angela Bennett pass out “angel wings” to guests as they arrive
for Serena Markstrom Nugent’s wedding in Oregon. The wings had the names of the deceased loved ones they
represented written on them. They were designed to rest over the backs of chairs and pews in order to “save a
seat” for that person.
to honor her mom and fiance Mike
Pantoliano’s deceased grandparents.
Serena Markstrom Nugent’s creative approach to honoring deceased
loved ones at her wedding in Eugene,
Oregon: “We made angel wings and
wrote the names of the people they
represented on them,” she says. “We
gave the wings to people who were
closest to the departed and asked
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them to save a seat for them. The
wings were designed to rest over
the back of the chairs and pews as
though someone with wings were
sitting there.”
See HONORING, Page T24
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BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
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MARY ALTAFFER / The Associated Press
NICOLE AND Anthony DePinto check their GoFundMe page on an iPad to see how much
money their family and friends have gifted them for their honeymoon. The DePintos raised
$2,900 for their Icelandic trip with crowdfunding.
Honeymoon
Continued from page T14
They loved the natural beauty of the icy
island in winter, and besides: “They’re all places
we wanted to go eventually.”
Most guests gave the couple cash-stuffed
envelopes at the wedding, but the 14 donations
they got online covered their hotel and airline
tickets, even after GoFundMe kept more than
$230 in fees. The Union City, New Jersey, couple
also had a registry at Target, but asked for just
a few things there since they had lived together
for three years.
“In that time we’ve acquired tons of pots,
plates, towels, throw pillows and bedding,” they
explained on their GoFundMe page.
Asking for cash in the invitation is a wedding
faux pas, says Kristen Maxwell Cooper, deputy
editor at The Knot. But passing around a link
to a honeymoon registry works, because couples
can explain to guests exactly where the money
will be spent, she says.
Couples have a few options to turn to.
Crowdfunding site GoFundMe has collected
$2 billion to date for all sorts of personal campaigns, raising money for medical emergencies,
crime victims and other local causes. But the
site does have a weddings and honeymoons section where users have raised $4 million since
GoFundMe was launched six years ago, says
media director Kelsea Little.
Anyone can see a GoFundMe campaign, but
don’t expect strangers to hand over cash — only
friends and family will likely donate, says Little.
“It’s a common misconception,” she says.
Honeyfund, meanwhile, is more focused on
honeymoons. Couples can list exactly what the
cash will pay for, from hotel rooms to sightseeing
tours to massages.
Major resorts and cruise lines are jumping in,
using Honeymoon Wishes to power honeymoon
registries built into their sites.
At Carnival Cruise Line, for example, couples
can ask wedding guests to pay for scuba diving
excursions or horseback rides. The money goes
straight to Carnival and couples can redeem
the gifts on board, says Nancy Williams, the
business development director at Honeymoon
Wishes. Couples can also go to Honeymoon
Wishes and build their own honeymoon, without
being attached to a certain resort.
“It’s now socially acceptable,” says Williams.
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Amy Scott
419-819-8867
Email:[email protected]
www.mytupperware.com/amyscott
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T24
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
Honoring
Courtesy of Barattini Productions
LAUREN CHERTOK displayed a photograph at her wedding of her and her Aunt Rosie taken at Chertok’s Sweet
16 party. Aunt Rosie passed away two weeks before the big day. Tributes for loved ones who have died can be very
important for the couple to have on their wedding day.
out as a favor. Or, couples can make
a charitable donation in the person’s
honor instead of a favor.
For a more subtle tribute, a bride
Continued from page T22
may stitch a memento under her
gown, such as a piece of her mother’s
Miles said.
Kalabokes said many couples are wedding gown, or wear a loved one’s
worried about bringing their guests garter. Wearing keepsake jewelry or
down on what is supposed to be a cuff links from departed relatives
happy day. She recommends talk- keeps them close. Or include a beloved
ing with each other and with family flower, even a favorite color, in the
members to see what everyone is com- bridal bouquet.
One bride who lost her mom about
fortable with, so nobody is caught off
18 months before
guard.
her wedding
There are
released butter“She did so much for
many ways to
flies after the cerremember a
me growing up and for
emony, and used
loved one, from
a butterfly motif
my
family
that
doing
traditiona l to
on printed items
creative and persomething
to
honor
her
and the cake,
sonal.
said Kalabokes,
For a tradimeant a lot to me.”
owner of Dream
tional approach,
a Little Dream
list the person’s
LAUREN CHERTOK
Events.
name in the pro“Everyone
gram, or dedicate
a poem or reading. Light a candle in knew the mother loved butterflies,”
his or her honor, or have a moment of she said. “It was her thing.”
Weddings are already emotional
silence during the ceremony. Couples
sometimes leave an empty chair, often days, and thinking about someone
in the front row with a flower on top, who died may not be right for everyone. For Chertok, the tributes were
as a tribute.
A popular reception tribute is the a comfort.
“She did so much for me growing
display of photos of departed relatives. A loved one’s special cooking up and for my family,” Chertok said,
creation, say chocolate chip cookies, “that doing something to honor her
can be served with dessert or handed meant a lot to me.”
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BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
T25
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BLUE OWL PHOTO / for the Associated Press
SUCCULENTS CAN make for breathtaking bridal bouquets, especially when mixed with other
flowers such as roses (above) and lilies.
Succulents
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they can grow up to a foot in diameter, according to Prinzing.
Other uses
Continued from page T21
floral accent and have become a popular choice
for boutonnieres as a result, says Anastasia Stevenson, a wedding planner and founder of the
website How to DIY Wedding.
They’re sturdy and can stand up to the
rigors of being pinned to a jacket that’s tossed
about all day. Succulents make good corsages
for the same reason.
Cassard used a mix of small, rosette-shaped
succulents and wild grasses for rustic-yetelegant boutonnieres, sprinkling the plants
throughout her reception area that night as
table centerpieces and cake accents.
Rosette-shaped Echeverias like those Cassard used work well as centerpieces because
How about succulents as jewelry? Wiring and
flower glue are keys to this recent bridal trend,
which includes everything from rings and necklaces to bracelets and headpieces, says Prinzing.
Other couples have said their vows before a
wall of succulents or used them as eco-friendly
wedding favors — a parting gift that’s “unlikely
to be tossed in the trash when the guests arrive
home,” says New York-based wedding-trends
expert and editor Anne Chertoff.
And succulents aren’t just for people.
“I know of one creative designer who offers
floral dog collars for her wedding parties,” Prinzing says. “Succulents are ideal for this situation
because they withstand canine activities that
are probably more lively than a groom or bride’s
movements during a ceremony.”
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422 E. Sandusky St., Findlay
419-419-9338
Hours:
Tues. & Thurs. 10am-7pm
Wed. & Fri. 9am-5pm
Sat. 9am-Noon
Formal Wear by Appointments
[email protected]
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T26
BR IDA L EX PO 2016
THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
Love and marriage at the cemetery
Death business expands into
hosting weddings, other events
By TOM MURPHY
AP BUSINESS WRITER
DARRON CUMMINGS / The Associated Press
DANESSA MOLINDER and Billy Castrodale (above left) got married last June in the open air courtyard at the
Community Life Center in Indianapolis. While funerals and cremations make up a bulk of the death business,
proprietors are finding new life in the industry by hosting other events such as weddings.
We are your one stop shop for all of your wedding needs!
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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Danessa
Molinder entered the courtyard wearing a white dress and matching veil.
Her groom waited at the other end, in
front of decorative doors and lattice
work that blocked the view of a nearby
cemetery with 73,000 graves.
Molinder’s June wedding was one
of more than 50 that will be hosted
this year at a $10 million events center
run by the Washington Park East
Cemetery Association in Indianapolis.
The somewhat ironically named Community Life Center sits on cemetery
land near a funeral home and also has
hosted a prom, community banquets
and even breakfasts with Santa.
“It’s such a beautiful building,”
Molinder said. “That’s what really
drew us to it.”
Funeral homes aren’t just for funerals anymore. Businesses that once
focused almost entirely on honoring
the dead are now open to an array of
events as they seek to add revenue.
Cemetery and funeral home operators say they’re being squeezed as
more people favor simpler, less expensive funeral services. Their businesses
also are being pressured by the growing popularity of cremations, which
can bring in less than half the revenue
of a traditional casket burial.
Cremations are expected to
become the most common form of
body disposition nationally in a few
years, according to the Cremation
Association of North America.
Funeral home operators also say
there’s a need in their communities
for locations that can host weddings
or other big events, and people are no
longer hung up on their main business.
Declining membership in churches
and civic organizations also may be
See CEMETERY, Page T27
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THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016
BR IDA L EX PO 2015
Cemetery
executives say they haven’t replaced their main
business.
Matt Linn built a multi-use facility in 2008
after a flood damaged his funeral home. His
Continued from page T26
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, business now runs three
boosting demand for nontraditional venues for wedding venues and two locations that can host
weddings and funerals. It also manages a golf
weddings and receptions.
As a result, funeral homes and cemeteries course and runs a farmer’s market.
But the versatility helps with his main line of
nationwide have been marketing their properties for an array of uses. Nearly 10 percent of work. Even when people are looking into hold280 respondents to a National Funeral Directors ing services for a deceased loved one, they’re
Association survey last year said they built a opting more for celebrations of life filled with
community center to host other events. That’s slide shows, food and alcohol, instead of a traditional viewing and service that stretches out
up from 6 percent in 2011.
“As a business, we need to find ways to keep over a few days.
“I don’t think I’ve coordinated a (traditional)
growing,” said Bruce Buchanan, a member of the
funeral in a long
Indianapolis cemetery
time because they’re
association’s board
“Funeral homes were seen for one
and owner of a funeral
depressing things,”
home business.
he said.
reason: to have a funeral. Now
Younger generaEvents at the Comtions are growing
munity Life Center in
they’re being used for all kinds of
up without the same
Indianapolis account
things.”
stigma toward death
for only about 5 perthat their parents and
cent of the WashingMIKE NICODEMUS,
grandparents had,
ton Park Cemetery
NATIONAL FUNERAL
said Mike Nicodemus,
Association’s total
DIRECTORS ASSOCIATION
a vice president with
revenue.
the National Funeral
The center’s wedDirectors Association.
ding business didn’t really take off until four
“People aren’t as religious as they once were or five years ago. Now, it’s booked nearly every
... and their attitudes toward death are chang- weekend during the summer for weddings and
ing,” he said. “Funeral homes were seen for one is taking reservations far in advance.
reason: to have a funeral. Now they’re being used
Molinder, the Indianpolis, bride, said the
for all kinds of things.”
center’s rates were comparable to other venues
That versatility might be appealing to couples they considered.
who need a place to host their big day but aren’t
The center grabbed her attention in part
affiliated with a religion, said Stephen Prothero,
because it was easy for her guests to reach and
a Boston University religion professor.
He said that theory comes with a caveat: The could host both the ceremony and reception.
site should have some separation between the That convenience helped the 250 people who
wedding and funeral businesses, because there’s attended her wedding dodge rain that had been
a cultural taboo against mixing death too closely brewing in the gray clouds overhead.
Guests were able to take a short walk from
with weddings, which often are about birth and
the
courtyard into the center after the ceremony.
the starting of families.
Chelsey Lesnick picked a suburban Cleveland Once inside, they sipped drinks and mingled
funeral home that her grandparents opened in around a fountain in the center’s rotunda, which
is laid out in Italian marble, while they waited
1949 as the site for her nuptials last March.
The home’s second-floor reception center — for the reception in a nearby ballroom.
That fountain sat a short walk away from a
not the funeral site downstairs — hosted the
service and the party afterward for about 50 darkened office where customers for the cempeople. Lesnick, 24, said the site didn’t feel like etery’s main business can view casket samples.
In the end, that main business never bothered
a “house of death or a place of mourning.”
“It felt like a place of love and just bright Molinder, 26. Her only concern was to make sure
the photographer avoided getting gravestones
happy joy on that day, it really did,” she said.
Despite their growing openness to holding in the pictures
“Everything turned out perfectly,” she said.
various events, funeral directors and cemetery
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T27
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Whether it’s a simple exchanging of vows
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THE COURIER
FRIDAY, APRIL 1, 2016