Saturday, July 23, 2011

What to do when your Mother-in-law to be turns into MOMZILLA



Guest Post {The Broke Ass Bride... To Momzilla, With Love}
What to do, what to do? Well, I’m not going to tell you to not take money from your parents, because a lot of times that’s unavoidable if you’re trying to have the wedding you actually want. And, I’m not so much of a Pollyanna that I’m going to suggest that you keep repeating, “ItcomesfromloveitcomesfromloveITCOMESFROMLOVE!!!” over over and over in your head, either, while your Grandmother is insisting on bedazzled tablecloth overlays. We all know that isn’t going to work, right? We need strategies, for them and for you.

Okay. First thing: Zoning. Decide, right now, what you’re okay with them having input into. Is it the number of guests, for whatever reason? Is it the food, for whatever reason? What is least important to you? For instance, one of my chiclets doesn’t really care about the cake (I know), so her fiance and her Mom are taking care of it. Ask for “Momzilla”’s help with that stuff, and thank her for it, because it is a load off your mind.

Second thing: Limit their involvement, so that they’re not in on the final decision, or even at the first meeting. They can’t drive you crazy if they’re not there. If they ask to see to whatever you picked, show it to them, tell them how happy you are with your choice, and move on.

Well, What Do You Think? (Courtesy of Sun-Dance Photography)

Third of all: Do not get into it with them, especially in public. If you start to feel increasingly frustrated, and you know that you’re going sound like a 5-year old who needs her nap, bail. Whatever it is doesn’t need to be decided today. Everyone has seen what’s available, walk away and go back to Step #2. Because we both know that the parental units are not going to change. Walk away and live to not fight another day.

Fourth thing: If you can’t do the third thing, do what I do when I see this stuff happening – remember that it’s not that they’re not listening, they just can’t hear you. “Andrea, what do you think?” I ask her, so she can be heard. What DO you think? Do you like/not like such and such? Say it. Say why. No petulance necessary. It’s your wedding. If they come back with a rebuttal, repeat that you really don’t like it, that you prefer this other thing over here with less stuff, that you really don’t want this big whosit at your wedding. Emphasize that’s it’s not personal. Seriously, Andrea, what do you think?

Friday, July 22, 2011

Go BOGO for Orchid World a MUST see garden of Eden



A MUST DO for Awesome Weddings



On behalf of my wife and myself we are eternally grateful for the opportunity afforded us by the Orchid World Management and the Staff to staged our special event our wedding at this aesthetic picturesque breath taking locale. A case in point the breeze, the smell of the orchids, the defused sunlight that evenly pervaded the stage where our wedding ceremony was performed have created a indelible memory which has been etched into our hearts, minds, and souls as a consequence this occasion has become a continuum because my wife and I are reliving this phenomenal experience at intervals in our quite moments.


Our staged wedding ceremony reminded Magnola and myself of the days that first man Adam and the first woman Eve traversed the garden of Eden. We believe that God in his providence had strategically earmarked our wedding ceremony, and this locale as he joined us together as husband and wife.


Magnola and William

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Offer of a Lifetime NOW Extended!!!!!!!!!!!


Now through September 3oth 2011, bookings made on our Lifetime Tables get the offer of a lifetime.
$10 for the 6 ft and $15 for our 8 ft tables.
Offer good for events dated to December 31st 2011 subject to 50% deposit paid on or before July 31th 2011.Delivery and collection charges NOT included.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

NO body likes a BRIDEZILLA



Call me old fashioned but I believe they are select times you ABSOLUTELY NEED TO BE A LADY.
1- When you're giving birth
2- On your wedding day especially in your wedding dress.

Granted these are probably two of the most stressful times in a woman's life, HOWEVER, being a bitch especially on your wedding day is totally inexcusable.

Don’t be a poorly organized control freak
Frankly if you are poorly organized, you need to delegate. Face it there is no S on your chest so you aren't super woman. Forget trying to control every aspect of your wedding. Believe me it's a recipe for disaster. If you are using a variety of suppliers ensure that they are at all meetings to ensure everyone is on the same page and understand clearly their installation guidelines. It’s always best to use one company to over see these elements. Too many cooks make for a nasty pasta salad. The last thing you need is some egomaniac supplier not showing for a briefing meeting, and is totally clueless about the venue guidelines and as a result and ends up making a total mess of your wedding. Take it from me I’ve seen this happen twice.

Don’t be an unrealistic drama queen…. NO Body likes a BRAT.
Approach wedding planning with a sound mind and realistic expectations. Try to keep a realistic vision for your big day and be prepared for setbacks and disappointments

NO you aren’t some rock star with a back stage entourage

Avoid the Bridezilla mantra, "this is your day." Despite what decorators,ographers, magazines and other industry types tell you; this is NOT just your day. The day also belongs to friends, family and your fiance.

Focus on your marriage and not just the wedding
AH yes your fiance, the worst way to start off your nuptials is being uncouth and ungracefully ordering your fiance about and being nasty to your guest. This is a TOTAL NO! NO!
Remember what is sacred about this event. On your 25th anniversary, you're going to be celebrating what a wonderful spouse you have; not lamenting the fact that he didn’t cut the cake just right, or that his side of the family sat closer to your head table than your girl friends did.

Tips & Warnings

• Know that some things are beyond your control. Your wedding gown may turn out more ivory than off white, your bridesmaids may not all look great in strapless dresses and finally, it can always rain on your wedding day. Hope for the best, but be prepared for the worst. Once it's all said and done, you'll realize how little these small setbacks mattered.
• Remember you aren't the only girl planning her wedding. For every bride choosing her menu and wedding linens, there are fifty more out there doing the same thing. While this is a very special time in your life, don't expect the world to stop in honour of your impending nuptials.
• Keep in mind that the more time you spend planning your wedding, the more obsessive you tend to become. Try to keep your engagement period at a year or less.

Read more: How to Avoid Being a Bridezilla | eHow.com http://www.ehow.com/how_2063284_avoid-being-bridezilla.html#ixzz1RhslkLVY

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Happy Anniversary Sanojah's



Celebrate with our team NOW through July 31st and take advantage of our 3 for 7 deal. That's right we're giving away a premium bistro chair + a bistro chair cover (your choice of white or off white) + our in stock selection of chair ties for just $7 Bds.
Offer good for events dated to Dec 31st 2011, subject to 50% deposit paid on or before July 31st. Delivery and collection charges NOT included.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

How to PO your Mother-in-law


A bride-to-be has been given a very public etiquette lesson after an email from her future mother-in-law, attacking her "uncouthness", went viral over the internet.
Carolyn Bourne, 60, wrote the message after her stepson Freddie took Heidi Withers to meet his family in Devon - and made it clear they had not got off on the right foot.

Mrs Bourne slammed the 29-year-old's "lack of grace" and branded her "an ideal candidate for the Ladette to Lady television series".

The situation got out of hand when a stunned Miss Withers, a PA, forwarded the stern email to some of her friends who, astonished by the tone, decided to forward it on.

The email has since gone viral on the internet, reaching tens of thousands of readers.

Mrs Bourne said Miss Withers' behaviour had been so rude it had left the family dog, Bomber, traumatised, depressed and anxious.

And in a stinging pay-off, she remarked: "One could be accused of thinking that Heidi Withers must be patting herself on the back for having caught a most eligible young man. I pity Freddie."

Mrs Bourne, who runs Whetman Pinks nursery near Dawlish in Devon, has refused to comment.

Etiquette teacher Liz Brewer, who has featured on Ladette to Lady, told Sky News it was a "catastrophic situation".

But she said both women involved are at fault, adding that Miss Withers should have known better than to email the letter off to her friends and that Mrs Bourne should have approached her son's girlfriend face-to-face.

This is the full email from Mrs Bourne to Miss Withers:

It is high time someone explained to you about good manners. Yours are obvious by their absence and I feel sorry for you.

Unfortunately for Freddie, he has fallen in love with you and Freddie being Freddie, I gather it is not easy to reason with him or yet encourage him to consider how he might be able to help you.

It may just be possible to get through to you though. I do hope so.

Your behaviour on your visit to Devon during April was staggering in its uncouthness and lack of grace.

Unfortunately, this was not the first example of bad manners I have experienced from you.

If you want to be accepted by the wider Bourne family I suggest you take some guidance from experts with utmost haste.

There are plenty of finishing schools around. You would be an ideal candidate for the Ladette to Lady television series.

Please, for your own good, for Freddie's sake and for your future involvement with the Bourne family, do something as soon as possible.

Here are a few examples of your lack of manners:

When you are a guest in another's house, you do not declare what you will and will not eat - unless you are positively allergic to something.

You do not remark that you do not have enough food.

You do not start before everyone else.

You do not take additional helpings without being invited to by your host.

When a guest in another's house, you do not lie in bed until late morning in households that rise early - you fall in line with house norms.


There are plenty of finishing schools around. You would be an ideal candidate for the Ladette to Lady television series.

Carolyn Bourne

You should never ever insult the family you are about to join at any time and most definitely not in public. I gather you passed this off as a joke but the reaction in the pub was one of shock, not laughter.

I have no idea whether you wrote to thank [your future sister-in-law] for the weekend but you should have hand-written a card to her.

You should have hand-written a card to me. You have never written to thank me when you have stayed at Houndspool.

[Your future sister-in-law] has quite the most exquisite manners of anyone I have ever come across. You would do well to follow her example.

You regularly draw attention to yourself. Perhaps you should ask yourself why.

It is tragic that you have diabetes. However, you aren't the only young person in the world who is a diabetic.

I know quite a few young people who have this condition, one of whom is getting married in June. I have never heard her discuss her condition.

She quietly gets on with it. She doesn't like being diabetic. Who would? You do not need to regale everyone with the details of your condition or use it as an excuse to draw attention to yourself. It is vulgar.

As a diabetic of long standing you must be acutely aware of the need to prepare yourself for extraordinary eventualities, the walk to Mothecombe beach being an example.

You are experienced enough to have prepared yourself appropriately.

No-one gets married in a castle unless they own it. It is brash, celebrity style behaviour.

I understand your parents are unable to contribute very much towards the cost of your wedding. (There is nothing wrong with that except that convention is such that one might presume they would have saved over the years for their daughters' marriages.)

If this is the case, it would be most ladylike and gracious to lower your sights and have a modest wedding as befits both your incomes.

One could be accused of thinking that Heidi Withers must be patting herself on the back for having caught a most eligible young man. I pity Freddie.