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Wedding Wednesday

DIY at Marigold and Mint

Flower arranging and bouquets, 101, on Capitol Hill.

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She really knows how to pick ’em. Katherine Anderson at her massive local flower garden, which supplies her tiny Melrose Market shop.

Now they’ve really done it.

The cutest flower shop on Capitol Hill, Marigold and Mint, has been gathering folks for fun DIY sessions (Halloween masks, spring holiday craftings) for a couple of years now, but check out their next two offerings.

March 25: Flower arranging from 5 to 7. Owner and master flower gardner Katherine Anderson will guide participants through the basics, and then some. Since her store is born from and based on her nearby bloom ranch, you can bet she’ll be focusing on locally available flowers. Cost is $100.

June 7: DIY bridal bouquets from 7 to 9. Now it’s not every bride (or groom, hey, c’mon) who wants to wrangle her or his own dahlias on the big day, but for those who do, Anderson represents a pretty invaluable boon. We can tell you from experience that she’s a patient, low-key, well-humored teacher (check our current issue for a page that features her garland-making instructions), and she’s perfectly stylish and on top of all the best trends, too. Cost is $75.

These classes will fill up quickly. Call 206-682-3111 or email info(at)margioldandmint.com to reserve your spot.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, DIY Projects, Seattle Wedding Flowers, Seattle Wedding Vendors, Marigold and Mint

Wedding Wednesday

DIY Wedding Session at RE Store

Get crafty with fellow brides- and grooms-to-be and some of the most resourceful folks in town.

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Inspiring salvaged materials and hands-on advice about what to do with them at RE Store on July 16.

Where: RE Store in Ballard

What: A day of DIYing with folks who really know how to repurpose and reuse, and swing a hammer and turn a screw. Whether you’re looking for inspiration or someone who can help you put your inspiration to good use, this even should be carefully considered. The folks at Ballard’s salvage mart held an similar meeting of the decor-obsessed minds in their light-filled, stained glass window-strewn upstairs workroom a year or so ago; a good friend of mine who, engaged at the time and open to all manner of ideas, attended, said she learned a lot and had a really great time.

Rachel Levien led that workshop, and she’s returning for this one. She and the RE Store folks tell me would-be DIYers will learn how to “transform previously used materials into everything from cake stands to candelabras, whether you are going for vintage, rustic, or modern decor.”

Tea and cake will be served.

When: Saturday July 16 from 10 to noon. Cost is $10 which gets you a $5 coupon to use at The RE Store anytime. Contact brayh @ re-store.org to ask questions or reserve your spot.

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Tags: Sustainable Such and Such, Seattle Wedding Details, DIY Projects, Seattle DIY

Wedding Wednesday

Party Ideas I: Heather Christo

Local food and entertaining blogger shares some tips for couples showers, bachelor/bachelorette parties, and feeding mothers-in-law.

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Slideshow: DIY tips and recipes from Heather Christo of Heather Christo Cooks. Use berries and other fruit as part of your centerpiece, and when choosing flowers, make it easy on yourself by going with a single bloom or different blooms in a single shade, as Christo did here for a red-themed birthday party.

View Slideshow » Photo: Heather Christo Cooks blog; red summer tablescape

Slideshow: DIY tips and recipes from Heather Christo of Heather Christo Cooks. Use berries and other fruit as part of your centerpiece, and when choosing flowers, make it easy on yourself by going with a single bloom or different blooms in a single shade, as Christo did here for a red-themed birthday party.

View Slideshow » Photo: Heather Christo Cooks blog; Nicoise recipe

Christo’s advice to keep it light is spot-on for summer. I love the look of this nicoise salad. You could make it even easier on yourself by using one of the great locally canned, fresh caught tuna-in-a-can products sold at upscale grocers and farmers markets. This would be a great one for mothers-in-law.

View Slideshow » Photo: Heather Christo Cooks blog; bruschetta recipe

Tomato and mozzarella bruschetta

View Slideshow » Photo: Heather Christo Cooks blog; ideas for casual entertaining

Summer entertaining? Keep it casual. Go for graphic-looking food presentation and let efficient clean-up methods be part of the party.

Girl at a Party: Oh, a wedding magazine, how fun! Actually, I can’t believe I just said that; I’m in two weddings this fall and planning all the parties is stressing me out. I’m not having very much fun.

Me: Hm, yeah, that’s a problem. Parties planned in the absence of fun can sometimes equal parties that aren’t any fun to be at. Let me see if I can bring in some help.

Our first party helper is local blogger Heather Christo of Heather Cooks and Heather Entertains.

Here are the native Seattleite’s tips for a number of pre-celebration fests.

The Bridal Shower

Christo gets this one; she says she’s been “gridlocked with wedding showers the last few summers.” If one thing can keep a girl moving, however, it’s the season. “We’ve got such great access to fresh flowers!” Christo says, advising you head to your local farmers market, select one bloom—peonies are never wrong—and go with it. Alternately, go with a single color—yellow sounds fun—and pick a number of blooms in that shade. This less is more approach yields centerpieces and arrangements that are basically impossible to screw up.

Christo also likes decorating with fresh fruit, either in place of flowers or in addition to them. Think berries and nectarines, placed in bowls or piled at base of botanical arrangements. “They’re pretty and also interactive,” Christo says. “Guests make it a scavenger hunt out of it, like, ‘Who ate all the cherries?’”

Budget Summit Dinner Party with the In-Laws

Not many parties start with the word “Budget,” and for good reason. But can you think of a better way to couch the unavoidable discussion?

Christo suggests taking difficult subjects outside and utilizing a casual environment for heavy topics. In other words, fire up the grill. The mother of two (makes her an expert on families, I’m thinking) suggests keeping the menu light and seasonal, and serving everything family style.

The Couples Shower

The former pastry chef was married herself just five years ago, and she recalls that get-togethers with friends were the best part of the pre-wedding ramp up. If you’re set to host a couple’s shower (so modern) and dinner seems like too much, do a cocktail hour. Serve a specialty cocktail (eliminating the need for a full bar) and appetizers.

When more than 20 people are expected, Christo recommends a thoughtful, luxed up cheese platter and crudite. Don’t groan or call it a cliche; the entertainer says presentation and sourcing makes it new. In other words, no toothpicks in bland cheddar. If you have a kitchen island or a large table, start by picking glossy green leaves from your yard or a nearby park, arranging them on the surface, and placing the cheese directly on top. Christo suggests making a mosaic-like arrangement of dips, nuts, and cheese (think graphic, quilt-like patterns), and then just walking away from it. Folks will graze, and you can enjoy yourself. Check the slideshow here for more inspiration and instruction.

The Bachelor Party

Huh? Yeah, I asked Christo what a bunch of good-time yet enlightened dudes could do for a food-centric party. “Do men eat at bachelor parties?,” she asked me. It was a good question, and I had to admit to never attending one, but still, I want to believe that in a world where Anthony Bourdain is a guru and a sex symbol, some guys somewhere might be willing to skip billiards and bad bars for a manly feast.

Christo conceded, recalling that all she wanted at her bachelorette affair was “an all-girl dinner party with tons of champagne—even if it was potluck-style, I just wanted to be with friends.” She suggests that like-minded fellows grill up T-bone steaks and prawns and serve them with a variety of compound butters. Can I interest you in some blue cheese butter, sir? Why, yes, the chef does have a recipe for that on Heather Christo Cooks.

Dudes might also go for gourmet bar snacks: Handcut potato chips, homemade dips, olives. Add a rooftop deck and red wine—or splurge on a bartender or card dealer— and you’re in business.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Bridal Party, DIY Projects

Retail Spotlight

Meet the Shopkeeper: Scenic Drive Factory

Set aside your notions of retail for a moment. (Grab your sewing notions though, if you’d like.) Meet the operators of a creative endeavor.

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Rachel Ravitch, one half of Scenic Drive Factory in Capitol Hill, can help you fix your jeans, buy and sell stuff, and, maybe, meet a DIY mate.

What do you get when you take a fleet of rent-by-the-hour recommissioned sewing machines, a neighborhood full of empowered projecteers, a monthly-or-so art show, and some market-style happenings here and there in which the products of all of the above, and others, are bought and sold? Why, a Scenic Drive of course. Nikki Mazzei and Rachel Ravitch’s Factory fosters community among Seattle designers and stuff-makers, and those who are interested in handmade art and style.

What song or album is playing on your store’s sound system right now?
Ravitch: The Cure: Standing on a Beach; The Singles (And Unavailable B-Sides), on cassette tape.

What was your first job in retail? What did you love or hate about it and how does it compare to what you do now?
Neither of us have really worked in retail. What we do is more of a creative endeavor than a retail atmosphere, in any case. We invite people in to create and are forming a network of independent designers. Later this spring, we will launch a mini-collection of ready-to-wear made from salvaged fabrics.

What’s your favorite thing in the store right now?
We just found a new-to-us-sewing machine at the Goodwill: a Viking Husqvarna from the 70s. It’s a tank! It just needed a tiny bit of elbow grease and it runs like a dream! We now have three in the shop available for rent (among a plethora of other home sewing machines as well). We also just got an industrial serger machine that is super cute! It is from the 60s and is bright avocado green. It’s called a “Baby Lock.”

Where do you shop when you’re not at your store?
We love a good thrift. We won’t reveal our secrets, but we find a lot of our treasures at the Goodwill. All of the clothing and accessories we make are “remade from salvaged parts.”

What do you love about your store’s neighborhood? What nearby restaurants, coffee shops, etc do you recommend?
Our local Stumptown on Pine is a daily morning (and often afternoon) haunt for us. Sometimes we embroider or work on computer stuff before the shop opens. We also love lunching and snacking at Travelers Tea Co.

What’s the weirdest thing that’s ever happened in your store?
Wayne Coyne walked through in a giant clear plastic bubble rolled along by woodland elves! Yeah right, but that would be awesome. Men are sewing! Lots of men are sewing. They want to fix their own things and have ideas about how their clothing could fit better. It’s great! We are thinking of starting a sewing singles group…we’ll keep you posted!

NOTE: Scenic Drive’s next indoor marketplace goes down on Saturday May 28 from 2 to 9. See the store’s event page for more information.

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Tags: Meet the Shopkeeper, DIY Projects, Seattle DIY

Wedding Wednesday

DIY at SoDo Park

Tonight! Herban Feast’s SoDo Park unveils Herban Design Studio, where do-it-yourself wedding projects aren’t lonely endeavors.

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Slideshow: Get a sneak peek at Herban Design Studio at SoDo Park.

View Slideshow » Photo: All images courtesy Herban Design Studio

Slideshow: Get a sneak peek at Herban Design Studio at SoDo Park.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Resident design expert Chad Burnworth presides over the studio. He’s like a naturalist with a flair for high drama; check out his bouquet in the current edition of Seattle Met Bride & Groom by using this link to download a free digital version of the magazine for your iPad, iPhone, or PC.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

The venue experts at SoDo Park converted 1,800 square feet of storage in creating their new event design studio; the space is being used to show off and generate ideas on handcrafted favors, centerpiece botanicals, dessert presentations, and more.

The do-it-yourself thing has never struck me as a particularly well-branded experience when it comes to weddings. It works for like, jilted songwriters recording sour ballads in their bedrooms, but for someone who’s about to celebrate the rest of his/her life with all the people he/she loves? The notion of spending late nights muttering to yourself as you solo through a ballroom full of table numbers just doesn’t quite jive. Which is probably why savvy vendors here and there are starting to offer do-it-together services.

Welcome Herban Design Studio at SoDo Park to that particular party.

Welcome them tonight, that is.

Sorry for the late notice (it’s my fault, not theirs), but you might not want to miss this. Tonight between 5 and 8 you’re invited to the First Ave S venue and catering company’s spring tasting event, where bites from the brand new 2011 menu will be offered inside a design studio that’s been concepted to give couples fun, inspiring, useful access to artisan guidance, vintage decor rentals, and full-service floral and event styling (in case your idea of rolling your sleeves up and getting to work means simply signing a check).

Why build a design studio inside an award-winning celebration space? Eliott Peacock, the company’s marketing brain, says, ‘Our clients inspired us to provide a space for them to create their event styling and help them tell their story. Over the past few years, we’ve seen a sort of rebirth in people putting themselves into their event through doing their own styling and décor. We’re grateful and honored to be a part of it.’

The company witnessed one such example of personalized decor when Barb Whipple decked the joint out for her daughter’s wedding last summer. The experience led her to launch Plume Wedding Concepts, which in turn led Peacock to invite her to the studio tonight so that you could meet her and talk about your ideas and hers.

‘We want to nurture creative energy and we feel it’s important to provide a space that people can use. We’re excited to see what people do with it!’ says Peacock. I’m excited to see what you do with it, too. Stay tuned for updates and workshop dates; we’ll share what we know about designers and couples doing it together at Herban Design Studio.

Check the slideshow here for more information about the space and tonight’s event.

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Tags: Seattle Real Weddings, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Venues, Seattle Reception Venues, DIY Projects

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