Lifestyle Magazine

A DIY Wedding in North Yorkshire

By Claire

The day turned out to be every­thing Emily and Joe had dreamed of: with a relaxed and cosy recep­tion venue (The Finch’s Arms) and plenty of home made details, it was per­fect for today’s gor­geous bride and groom to cel­e­brate their love in a very per­son­alised style. There are ideas here for all of you cre­ative brides and grooms — from hand-sewn tea bags as wed­ding favours to applique table num­bers and hand­made bunting.

All of the images used in this blog post have been kindly sub­mit­ted by wed­ding pho­tog­ra­pher Geoff Kirby. www.geoffkirbyphotography.co.uk

Emily has very kindly writ­ten a wed­ding report to share with you, which you’ll find at the end of the blog post. And I’d be delighted to hear your com­ments on this glo­ri­ous wed­ding blog post — use the com­ments box at the end to con­grat­u­late Emily and Joe, or to share your thoughts on their fan­tas­tic DIY wed­ding style!

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (2)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (3)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (5)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (6)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (7)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (8)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (9)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (10)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (11)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (12)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (13)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (14)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (15)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (16)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (17)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (18)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (19)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (20)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (21)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (22)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (23)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (24)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (25)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (1)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (26)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (27)

Beau­ti­ful bride Emily’s wed­ding report

When we started out on the long road of wed­ding plan­ning, we knew that we wanted the day to truly be ours and to be full of the things and peo­ple that we love. What bet­ter way to do this than to make most of it yourself?

Whilst Joe really isn’t the crafty type, one of my favorite parts of the plan­ning was sit­ting around out din­ing table the week before the big day with my brides­maids and my mom fill­ing home­made teabags, sewing tiny draw­string bags to put them in, hand-printing the labels, applique­ing the table num­bers, and arrang­ing flow­ers in the col­lec­tion of teacups and jugs that I had man­age to amass over the year. My maid of hon­our and I even iced the cake our­selves before Stu­art from Knighton Flow­ers dec­o­rated it with a beau­ti­ful cas­cade of roses.

The Dress & the Suit

Tabitha, by Char­lotte Bal­bier, was the sec­ond dress I tried on after my mom and I made a spon­ta­neous visit to Brides and Belles in Wigston. The cham­pagne coloured, vintage-inspired, lace dress was per­fect. Hav­ing been expect­ing to try on hun­dreds before I found ‘the one’, I was slightly appre­hen­sive about com­mit­ting to buy­ing it, but I took the plunge. Know­ing how inde­ci­sive I usu­ally am when it comes to shop­ping, to say that every­one was sur­prised with my impulse pur­chase would be an understatement!

Joe is not nor­mally a suit wearer so was a bit anx­ious about find­ing one. Unbe­liev­ably, it only took one trip to Next and less than an hour in the fit­ting rooms and he had a lovely slim fit char­coal gray suit and waist­coat. Quite a con­trast to his usual work clothes cov­ered in plaster!

The Shoes

Shoes were the one thing that I knew I would strug­gle to find. Despite hav­ing scoured the pages of many wed­ding mag­a­zines dur­ing the prepa­ra­tions, I had not found any inspi­ra­tion. So, after numer­ous shop­ping trips, and unwill­ing to com­pro­mise, I drove down to the south-west and headed to Swin­don out­let cen­tre with Char­lotte. The jour­ney paid off. In the first shop we entered sat a beau­ti­ful pair of turquoise silk heels, just the right height, unbe­liev­ably com­fort­able, and 75% off! I did take a lit­tle bit of con­vinc­ing (some­thing that Char­lotte is excel­lent at when it comes to shop­ping) as I was slightly con­cerned that they were a bit too ‘dif­fer­ent’. They cer­tainly proved to be a talk­ing point on the day.

Brides­maids

My four brides­maids were all for­mer house­mates from my time at uni­ver­sity, and I could not have cho­sen a more sup­port­ive, help­ful, and excitable group of girls! The only prob­lem was dis­tance. Two lived in Wilt­shire, one in South York­shire, and one in a min­ing town in the mid­dle of nowhere in West­ern Aus­tralia. This, together with work and other com­mit­ments, made get­ting together to go shop­ping rather problematic.

I knew from the begin­ning that they should all have dif­fer­ent dresses as we would never find a style that suited and pleased them all. So began the search that took them to Leices­ter, Sheffield, Bices­ter, and Lon­don. We had agreed to look for neu­tral colours in dif­fer­ent tones to suit them. Fran was the first to find hers — a beau­ti­ful, sim­ple, silk Ted Baker num­ber in white. After some reas­sur­ing words from my mom that the color would be fine, I gave her the go-ahead. We finally had a color to stick to!

Char­lotte found a lovely fit­ted dress in Mon­soon and, after any emails back and forth, I bought a pretty sum­mery dress for Han­nah in the same shop. Kayleigh was slightly more awk­ward. After many fruit­less shop­ping trips she decided that, being a dab-hand with a sewing machine, she would make her own. The result was stunning.

Shoes for the girls were also a dif­fi­culty. To tie every­thing together we decided that they should all have the same footwear and so the hunt began. Again, Swin­don out­let cen­tre came to the res­cue. Whilst enjoy­ing the sun and the Olympic marathon swim­ming in the Ser­pan­tine in Hyde Park, I received a phone call from an excitable Char­lotte in the LK Ben­nett store.

Due to bad phone sig­nal, I couldn’t load the pic­ture she had sent me on my phone, but I trusted their judge­ment and the pur­chase was made. Due to alter­ations to Charlotte’s dress and fin­ish­ing touches being made to Kayleigh’s, I only saw them all together in their out­fits on the morn­ing of the wed­ding. They hon­estly could not have made bet­ter choices.

The Cer­e­mony

Nor­man­ton Church Museum was the only venue we looked at and we both instantly new it was the place for us. Jut­ting out into Rut­land Water, the for­mer church was beau­ti­ful, idyl­lic, and the per­fect size for our 50 guests. On the day, my dad, the girls, and I had to get there before Joe and hide in a back room in order to be able to walk down the aisle. Being fash­ion­ably late wasn’t an option!

My dad and I trav­elled in a 1971 Mor­ris Minor cabri­o­let which, despite not being built for speed, got us there before Joe who hap­pened to be run­ning a bit late. I walked down the aisle to an acoustic instru­men­tal ver­sion of the Bea­t­les’ ‘Here Comes the Sun’ and we chose W. H. Auden’s ‘Fox­trot for a Play’ for Char­lotte to read dur­ing the cer­e­mony, which she did bril­liantly, despite her teary eyes.

The DIY wed­ding reception

We were equally as lucky with the recep­tion venue. The Finch’s Arms in Ham­ble­ton was just what we were look­ing for — relaxed, infor­mal, and cosy. Luck­ily, the sun shone on the day so were able to take full advan­tage of the large ter­race over­look­ing the reser­voir. Want­ing to keep things infor­mal, we opted for a hog roast which went down espe­cially well with our two young nephews, espe­cially when the chef gave them some ribs and ver­te­brae to play with!

We went for a wan­der into the vil­lage with Geoff and the build­ings pro­vided a beau­ti­ful back­drop to some of the pho­tographs. For the rest of the day, Geoff stayed in the back­ground and cap­tured so many amaz­ing and spon­ta­neous shots that will help us to remem­ber our day forever.

As most of our guests aren’t the disco type, we kept the music low and every­one was able to chat late into the evening. Some peo­ple might be hor­ri­fied at the idea of a wed­ding recep­tion with no danc­ing, but it was the right deci­sion for us.

In Con­clu­sion…

So, over­all, despite being one of the most dis­or­gan­ised brides ever, every­thing came together on the day. The glossy wed­ding mag­a­zines may tell you that you need numer­ous things for the per­fect day — a color scheme, huge cen­tre­pieces, a for­mal three course wed­ding break­fast, a groom wear­ing a suit which matches those of the best man and the father of the bride, and whose tie is co-ordinated with the brides­maids’ dresses. We had none of these, but our day reflected us.

I loved being able to look around the room and see table dec­o­ra­tions, bunting, table num­bers, and favours that had been hand­made by myself and my brides­maids. We ended the day sat around the top table with our clos­est fam­ily and friends, chat­ting, look­ing through pho­tographs on cam­eras, and fight­ing to keep our eyes open after such a long day.

Emily and Joe’s rec­om­mended wed­ding suppliers

  • Bride’s dress — Tabitha by Char­lotte Bal­bier from Brides and Belles, Wigston, Leices­ter (www.bridesandbelleswigston.co.uk)
  • Bride’s shoes — Hobbs
  • Groom’s suit — Next
  • Brides­maids’ dresses — Mon­soon, Ted Baker, and hand­made by Kayleigh
  • Brides­maids’ shoes — LK Ben­nett
  • Cer­e­mony venue — Nor­man­ton Church Museum, Rut­land Water (www.facebook.com/pages/Weddings-on-the-Water/227242894015519)
  • Recep­tion venue — The Finch’s Arms, Ham­ble­ton, Rut­land (www.finchsarms.co.uk)
  • Flow­ers — Knighton Flow­ers, Leices­ter (www.knightonflowers.co.uk)
  • Pho­tog­ra­phy — Geoff Kirby (www.geoffkirbyphotography.co.uk)
  • Cake — Baked by fam­ily friend Lorna Wil­son, iced by Emily and Char­lotte, flow­ers by Knighton Flowers
  • Trans­port — Mabel the Mor­ris Minor from Camper­van Wed­dinghire (www.campervan-weddinghire.co.uk)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (28)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (29)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (30)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (31)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (32)

wedding blog photo by Geoff Kirby (33)


Back to Featured Articles on Logo Paperblog

Magazines