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Wedding Wednesday

Introducing Life’s Flix

A Pierce County company wants to make your friends and relatives into stars on YouTube.

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Depending on the creativity and talent of your circle of friends and the disposition of your family, the idea of handing a select five or ten of them a video camera and letting the fate of your wedding-day movie rest in their hands might seem really crazy. Especially if you’re thinking you’d then get a pile of digital footage in return, along with maybe a well-intended, ‘Have fun with that!’

Wedding videos, whether professionally created or some Uncle Jack job, are all about the editing. A lot will happen during your approximately eight-hour big day, and a lot will need to happen in order to elegantly cram it into anything that anyone (including you) will want to sit down and watch.

If hiring a professional videographer isn’t in your budget, a couple of dudes in Steilacoom (that’s southwest of Tacoma, pardner) have a solution, and it’s called Life’s Flix.

The newly launched company sends you five or ten cameras, depending on the package you select. You bestow a special honor/duty on a few friends and family members, and then return the cameras to Life’s Flix later.

In other words, you wash your hands of the whole editing process. The company’s storytelling and digital tech pros cull the best scenes into something akin to the footage of this destination event on Life Flix’s YouTube channel. (Don’t have 35 minutes on your hands? Check out the abbreviated version above.)

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Photography, Seattle Wedding Planning, Seattle Wedding Vendors

Wedding Wednesday

Review: Wedding Cake for Breakfast

A collection of essays about that thing that happens after the big day.

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The problem with weddings is that they’re over too soon.

Both in the sense that the afternoon or evening celebration itself seems to speed by, and in the sense that after a year or so of doing nothing but eat, sleep, and plan, plan, plan, you wake up after the last dance feeling a little bit what now?

I’ve seen it happen to all kinds of brides and grooms, and it certainly happened to many of the writers/newlyweds in Wedding Cake for Breakfast. The just-released collection of essays about the first year of marriage includes stories from army wives (one who was living in Tacoma when it dawned on her that being married to one army Ranger was essentially the same thing as being married to the entire army), a green-card wife (spoiler alert: she married her gay best friend), and a honeymooner—stranded in Italy without her luggage.

The stories are fraught with fear—“I worried Keith would change,” “brides scare me,” “makes you wonder why anybody ever got married or stayed that way,”—and horror stories—there’s the gal who got married two days before 9/11, and the pregnant one whose “husband spent our wedding night slung around the commode like a collar.” And the stories are also silly, upbeat, and yeah, sure, of course, wrapped up and bow-tied with neat, clean, tidy, happy endings.

But I dare you not to stay up later than you thought you would to read them. Marriage is a process often overshadowed by the event of a wedding. We talk endlessly about peonies and color palettes, but hardly at all about the complexities of sharing a life together. You might find it’s kind of nice to have the opportunity to mull it over awhile, or for 272 pages.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Cake

Wedding Wednesday

Ruffles and Rust Vintage Market

Shop for wedding decor and get inspired at this beloved Snohomish County vintage mart.

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Click the slideshow line below to see this flyer in a larger format.

View Slideshow » Illustration:

Click the slideshow line below to see this flyer in a larger format.

WHERE: Evergreen County Fairgrounds

WHAT: Ruffles and Rust Vintage Market is Snohomish County’s collaborative celebration of all things perfectly old and charming. You might call Timi Weathers-Bottorff a curator, maybe an organizer, but either way, she’s the gal behind corralling her favorite area bloggers, creators, and collectors for this episodic antique and vintage shopping weekend.

You’re invited to wear some crazy old bridesmaid dress or grand ballroom getup as you wander the some 47 vendors set up at Monroe’s fairgrounds. Or not. Come as you are, just know that Weathers-Bottorff and company welcome you to approach your attendance at this shopping and inspiration opportunity with creativity.

Even if you’re most comfortable in jeans and a sweater, do bring plenty of cash. Organizers warn that last year, the fairground’s ATMs actually ran out of cash.

WHEN: Friday, May 11 from 5 to 9 (pre-shopping event) and Saturday, May 12 from 9 to 4; tickets are available online. online ticket sales are sold out; tickets will be available at the event.

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Tags: Seattle Vintage, Seattle Wedding Details

Wedding Wednesday

J. Rankin Jewellers Bridal Event

Save on jewelry purchases all weekend long.

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Bands

Ring, ring. Save 20 percent on all jewelry at J. Rankin on May 5 and 6.

WHERE: J. Rankin Jewellers

WHAT: The only thing more special than the perfect engagement or wedding band? A nice chunk of savings on the perfect engagement or wedding band. Each year this jewelry shop in Edmonds hosts a great sale along with some trunk show action; this year you’ll get 20 percent off all purchases while you browse a wide selection of beautiful accessories from Allison Kaufman, Diana, and Crown Ring Bridal.

WHEN: Saturday and Sunday May 5 and 6 during normal business hours

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding and Engagement Rings

Wedding Wednesday

Road Test: Bar Method

Lessons from a session of the ballet-based interval training that’s big with brides.

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Bar

Step up to the Bar Method. Black pants not totally required, but strongly suggested.

Among the many fitness options available to folks who are on her way down the aisle is ballet-based interval training—you’ve heard of this. Most options have the word bar or barre in the title.

At the Bar Method (there’s one in South Lake Union in Seattle and one in Redmond), they offer a special bridal package: $150 per month for six months of unlimited classes. It’s a great deal in terms of fees—for those of us who cannot provide proof of an upcoming 250-person celebration, an all-you-can-take 30-day period is $250.

What would it be like to throw yourself into muscle carving and body shaping for 180 days? Bar Method co-owner and instructor Bev Currier says it’s transformative. “We strongly encourage before and after pictures from the brides-to-be,” she says.

Me, I can only tell you what it’s like to throw yourself into the Bar Method for an hour. I visited the SLU studio—an exceedingly tidy Tiffany-blue and modern white chandelier-lit space that feels more like a spa than a gym—to see what all the bride-to-be buzz is about. (Apparently, some gals are even making these training sessions into parties.)

Here’s what I learned:

-That window that faces Westlake Ave? It’s indeed a window into the workout room. You might drive past Whole Foods and then the studio while looking for a parking spot and think to yourself, ’There’s no way we’re working out in that room’ but, yeah, you are. Neighbors with dogs on leashes and kids in carts stroll by. Not oblivious. More like interested, and by turns, impressed, intimidated, or amused. Sure lots of gyms have giant street-facing windows, but here, there’s no spin bike to hide inside of.

-You should probably wear black yoga pants. I wasn’t the only person not wearing calf-length black stretchies and a solid-colored tank top, but I was definitely the only one in short stripped leggings and a day-glo pink screen-printed v-neck tee. I suppose it’s the ballet thing; a uniform feels right, and you will feel a little stupid for not anticipating that.

-Bar Method classes move along at a fast pace, and it begins immediately. One of your first clues is the music: Bruno Mars and electro-dance buzz. Forget what you know about a gentle warm-up and some easy stretching. With the Bar Method, stretching comes at intervals, and getting or staying warm, well, it isn’t a problem.

-You’re an individual here. Throughout the class, as Currier calls out quick clips of instructions, she slips personal posture notes to people around the room. She seems to know the names of all 30 or so women in the class, and maybe even their fitness goals, too. “Emily, bend your knees more.” “When’s the wedding, Sarah?” That last isn’t, like, a random curiosity, it’s a clearly stated motivation tool.

-But you won’t be babied. This isn’t one of those feel-good mind/body things. No one will encourage you to work at your own pace or adjust the instruction if you’re new. This is a serious workout, for people who are serious about challenging—and perhaps changing—their bodies. Instructors are intent on you getting your money’s worth. In fact, they’ll make sure you get your money’s worth, even if, halfway through, you start thinking you’d happily pay double the class rate to quit right then and go get a cheeseburger around the corner.

-You will reflect on Natalie Portman in Black Swan. During the actual barre portion of the class, when at least there is something to hold on to, you will say to yourself, ‘No wonder she went nuts. This sh%# is crazy.’

-Your body will do some weird stuff. Like shake. Sort of violently. It’s supposed to. If it doesn’t, you’re not doing it right. “I love to see that shake,” Currier says as you balance on the balls of our feet (or try to) with knees bent (hopefully at just the right precise angle). “It’s beautiful. That’s how I know you’re changing your body.”

-You will have a lot of respect for the other people in the room. They will be 62 and 23 and 116 pounds and 180 pounds. They will seem like former dancers, they will seem like new moms. As their legs shake furiously and they blow out sharp, flexor-muscle breaths and Currier encourages them with a “This is how you taper your legs,” you will want to tap into their determination and their success.

-Around this time you will stop looking at the clock and worrying about whether or not someone you know is going to happen by those big picture windows. And, as the class ends, you will put the mats and weights away, and you will find yourself wanting to do it again.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Gown, Seattle Wedding Details, Health and Beauty Road Test

Wedding Wednesday

Road Test: Wink Lash Extensions

Learning to love my eyelashes.

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Wink

A before and after example from Xtreme Lashes, the product used at Wink Lashes in Bellevue.

I might be one of the most unfussy, ungirly wedding or style editors in the history of wedding and style editors. I rarely get around to putting makeup on, and I prefer high tops to high heels. Don’t get me wrong: I totally admire and enjoy other women who are flawlessly put together on top of our four-inch heels, but I guess I just have other stuff to do. Still, I’m not immune to being bummed out by my short, blonde eyelashes and how hard it is to find a mascara that doesn’t goo and clump and sit on top of them like a ton of tar.

So when a woman whom I perceive as similarly unfussy told me one night at an event that if by chance I ever wanted to try eyelash extensions to let her know, because she goes to the best place around and the woman who does hers is really amazing and does a lot of brides and (this is the part that got me) having them doesn’t mean you’re going to look like you’ve got tarantula legs on the end of your eyeballs. Wink off Main Street in old Bellevue, she told me, and I filed it away for another day.

You and I are here right now because I eventually made my way to Tova Edwards at Wink and I want to share what I learned about extending your lashes—for the big day or for, you know, whenever.

1. The first thing to know is that it’s important to set a common vocabulary. In fact, tear images out of magazines if you’d like—we do it with haircuts, after all. When I first went to see Edwards I took it for granted, because of my conversation with our mutual contact, that she knew that I did not want that super long, super thick Kim Kardashian thing. We talked about my look and what I’d like to build on, and I mentioned that I often go all day without a lick of foundation or anything else, and she mentioned that several of her clients are professional women who really sort of need a subtle look. Very good, then, I figured. But two hours later—lashes are applied one by one to your natural set; Edwards works quickly and efficiently but it’s not something you can rush—I realized that people who see people with eyelash extensions all the time start to develop a different idea about what ‘natural’ looks like. My first set of eyelash extensions were way too long, way too thick, way too black, and way too curly for me.

2. Which leads me to another important lesson: you have options. Lashes come in different sizes and colors. In fact, they come in different materials, too. Mink, silk, synthetic. Wink’s are the latter. Ask to look at them, or to look at before and after images of different styles, and then be really clear about what it is you’re hoping to achieve.

3. If you’re not happy with the results, speak up about it. Any aesthetician worth her tweezers wants you to be beautiful and happy. Obviously, it’s not a genius use of anyone’s time to have to redo a set of eyelash extensions, but Edwards was happy to do it when I indicated that I wasn’t comfortable with what I was winking with.

4. Clearly, who you know is as important as what you know. Eyelash extensions have become super popular in the last two years and lash extension parlors are practically as ubiquitous as Starbucks. Edwards and her crew are extremely proud of the extensive training required of them by Xtreme Lashes. When you’re looking for someone to glue tiny appendages to surfaces that surround your eyeballs, you want to be really picky about who you end up with. I have no qualms about recommending Wink, not just because Edwards is completely professional and meticulous and way beyond pleasant, but because …

5. Two weeks into my lighter, softer, more subtle set of lashes, I’m feeling somewhat addicted. My makeup passivity is awesomely balanced by the fact that I wake up in the morning looking like I found the secret to clump-free, lash-extending mascara, and I go to bed without having to scrub some weird product off my eyes. It’s pretty wonderful.

6. But it’s not going to last forever. Once you get the initial set of lashes, you’re then beholden to a maintenance schedule (unless you want to get them all removed once they start to fall off with your natural lashes). Most women are in and out of Wink about every two or three weeks getting fills. This process takes about half as long as the initial application, and costs about one-third as much.

7. In addition to working periodic lash procedures into your schedule, you’ll have to make a few other adjustments. After the initial application, you have to keep your lashes dry for 48 hours, and for the duration of your eyelash upgrade you need to use oil-free products on your face. You’ll also need to watch out for sideways lashes and random wanderers, but running an eyelash comb or brush over your lashes every few days is no big deal, especially when you consider the codependent relationship that some women have with their DiorShow applicator. (Is there a tube in your purse right now? Just wondering.)

8. You might get addicted to Wink’s other services as well. While you’re there on the table having your eyelashes done, you can also arrange for a simultaneous manicure, pedicure, waxing, or bronzing. Time management, friends. These days, it’s the way the game is played.

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Tags: Eastside, Health and Beauty, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Vendors, Health and Beauty Road Test

Wedding Wednesday

DIY at Marigold and Mint

Flower arranging and bouquets, 101, on Capitol Hill.

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Katherine_anderson

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

Health and Beauty

Age-Defying at the Four Seasons Spa

A non-surgical face lift and pilates for your mug.

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This isn’t me, but this was done to my face. It’s part of the Ultra Age-Defying Facial at the Four Seasons Spa.

I was about ten days shy of my 40th birthday when I had my first facial. This was about a week ago, at the Four Seasons Spa. I felt like I needed to admit my inexperience and my age right away when Christine Domenden, the spa’s lead esthetician, came to get me after my pre-treatment warm-up in the steam room and cedar sauna.

I’m not concerned with denouncing the years I’ve spent on this planet but when the downtown spa told me they wanted me to check out their Ultra Age Defying Facial it occurred to me that it is indeed about time to get on with some preventative measures.

I knew going into the treatment room that the Ultra was not about relaxation and pampering. We were there to get some work done.

Step one was a light exfoliation cleanse, the most hands-on, let-me-just-lie-here-while-you-take-care-of-things aspect of the treatment. Domenden says this process (which doesn’t differ greatly than what you do in the shower with a product like Kate Sommerville’s Exfolikate) helps prepare the skin for resurfacing, extractions, ultrasound. If those things sound intense, consider the manual lead-in a mental preparation, too. Domenden was warm and professional, and super informative. She let me know what she was seeing without making me feel like a 40 year-old getting her first facial. If you know what I mean, and certain among you will.

From there, the remaining components center on the Ultra Machine, also known as CACI or Computer Aided Cosmetology Instrument. First, ultrasonic resurfacing feels a little bit like a light, airy shave with a gentle electric razor. It’s actually a deeper exfoliation process that uses sound vibration to get rid of dead cells and dirt. Domenden says the results are similar to microdermabrasion’s, but there is no abrasiveness. Because of the sound vibration, changes happen “topically and deep within the skin,” with positive affects on “collagen and elastin, nutrient absorption, oxygenation, and cellular metabolism and renewal.”

Next up: a delivery of microcurrents that teach muscles to firm and lift—like pilates for the face. The technology used is based on treatments developed for stroke victims who experience falling of their facial muscles. From my point of view, stretched out on a warm and comfortable table, it seemed like a choreographed dance with two wands gently pushing, pulling, and shaping. Domenden says estheticians have been borrowing the technology from the medical world since 1992—you might have heard it described as a non-surgical face lift. There’s obviously a lot to understand about how this kind of thing accomplishes a facial workout, but in short, in the Four Season’s lead’s words, “the two wands are working in the origin, insertion, and belly of each muscle. They work together to help either shorten or lengthen the muscle, and to re-educate and remind the muscle to ‘lift’ as opposed to whatever our habits or tendencies have [taught] our muscles to do.”

It was then time to address the fine lines that tell stories about my smiling and frowning habits. Domenden searches out the most visible offenders and gently zaps them with a LED and microcurrent … well, let’s just call it a gun. It definitely didn’t hurt, at all, but the word ‘zap’ did come to mind. Even Domenden uses the ‘z’ word: “this essentially zaps the deepest part of the wrinkle to help stimulate collagen and elastin production in the area, which will in turn plump that area,” she says.

The Ultra facial ends with an ultrasound infusion; estheticians customize serum for your skin and use sound vibration to penetrate cells and get ingredients in deep. This delivery system is said to be 4,000 times more effective than a manual application, which makes me feel a little like ‘oh why bother’ before I climb into bed each night. But only a little.

Overall, the experience was a great reminder that there’s stuff going on in and on my face that I need to pay attention to. Obviously, science has been paying attention to it—and women all over Seattle are, too. The Four Season’s Ultra Age-Defying Facial goes for about $300 a pop (buying packages of multiples helps the bottom line). A lot has been invested on both sides.

Domenden says the best way to see long-term results is to get the treatment once a week (I’m amazed that people do this; if you’re doing it, call me, let’s have lunch), or to go through a series of intensive treatments and then stagger your visits after that. But if you’re about to say, get married or go away for a special vacation or … I don’t know, get on a paparazzi-lined red carpet (again, if that’s you: call me, we’ll have lunch), singular treatments are reported to have immediate short-term results. Domenden says the improvements are visible on the day of the facial and for three to five days later.

Over the weekend that followed I polled all my girlfriends to gauge their facial experience and decided that my newness wasn’t altogether abnormal. Although there’s a certain woman who starts early—say, 28 or so—most of us start thinking about wrinkles and extractions around the time that such things threaten to become in-your-face problems. In talking with friends about all this, we addressed ideas about visible aging, too. Does any treatment actually defy age? I think that’s probably a strong word. And I don’t think that modern women are interested in holding back the proverbial hands of time. I think we’re interested in working with them, not against them, though. And when the partnership includes steaming and sauna-ing in a highrise on the edge of Elliott Bay? Yeah, I think we’re pretty into that.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Health and Beauty Road Test

Wedding Wednesday

Feel the Love

The cure for a Valentine’s Day hangover? Three opportunities to feel the love from Seattle-area wedding vendors who want to do right by your big day.

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Head to Pottery Barn in Bellevue on Thursday, February 16 for inspiration and information.

Offer: Spend $250 at Silberman Brown Stationers (downtown or at the Bravern) on any variety of printed matter for your big event—invites, save-the-dates, napkins, menus, programs—and you and your mom, maid-of-honor or other lucky guest will get a facial, make-over, and other treats at the Neiman Marcus beauty vendor of your choice. What’ll it be? Chanel? Bobbi Brown? Laura Mercier?

Offer: Check out Pottery Barn in Bellevue Square on Thursday, February 16 between 6:30 and 8:30 to meet with vendors from New Creations Wedding Design, Paper Passionista, Foodz Catering, Pinka Bella Cupcakes, and more, and register for kitchen and home goods, and get ten percent off anything in the store.

Offer: Feel like getting out of town—just a little? Check out Tacoma’s Wedding Walk on Sunday, February 26 from noon to 5. Stroll around the city and stop in at participating venues—including The Museum of Glass, Courtyard Marriott Tacoma, and more—to get a feel for their talents and treasures. Why don’t they have this in Seattle? I don’t know. Why don’t they have this in Seattle?

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Invitations, Seattle Wedding Vendors

Wedding Wednesday

Cedarbrook Wedding Showcase

You won’t even know you’re in South Seattle.

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Where: Cedarbrook Lodge

What: A wedding open house showing off the gorgeous, lush, and modern setting that is this hidden experience in South Seattle. You really have to see it to believe it. Preferred vendor presentations from Celebrity Cake Studios, Mode Photography, Affairs to Remember, and Marine View Floral set you up to experience the local but worldly cuisine from the truly phenomenal in-house caterers at Copperleaf Restaurant.

When: Sunday, February 19 from 2 to 5; register online at cedarbrooklodgeweddings.com or RSVP to weddings @ cedarbrooklodge.com

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Catering, Seattle Wedding Catering, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Venues, Seattle Wedding Photography

Wedding Wednesday

Introducing Rebecca Cairelli

Vera Wang has competition; she lives in Bellingham, has a gorgeous Australian accent, and can make you the dress of your dreams.

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Perhaps, when flipping through the new issue of Seattle Met Bride & Groom, you noticed a knee-length wedding shift by a dressmaker whose name was not Vera Wang or Elizabeth Fillmore or Monique Lluillier. Her name is Rebecca Cairelli, she lives in Bellingham, and her style couldn’t be better suited for the current bridal market—easy but romantic, sweet but sophisticated, and aware of ready-to-wear fashion silhouettes and traditional bridal shapes but not beholden to either one.

Having held several of her pieces in my hands, I can tell you her work is meticulous, and her fabric choices are impeccable. Event designer Steve Moore, he of the highest taste and greatest standards, introduced me to her work, and that says a lot, too. Birds of a feather flocking together and whatnot …

For the time being, Cairelli’s dresses are available directly from the designer herself. The best way to familiarize yourself with her shapes and ideas is to head to Moore’s Bellingham design studio, or click through our slideshow of wedding day looks and read the following Q&A. The best way to see her full collection and talk to her about custom work is to ring her up and talk to her about an appointment. Can’t say that about Ms. Wang.

WWW: You started making wedding dresses at a very early age; where do you think that came from? Who inspired your earliest notions of romance and grand elegance?
Cairelli: I think it’s just in my blood. I come from a long line of artists. My grandfather was accepted into the same art school as Salvador Dalí in Spain; he is an amazing painter. I have always created. I think though, it started as a need. My Barbie needed to get married and she absolutely needed a dress to do it in. Actually I don’t even think I had a Ken at the time, I’m not sure who it was that she was to marry. But as for first inspirations I think the Givenchy dress Audrey Hepburn wore in Sabrina was, in my eyes, the most fabulous thing I had ever seen—at least at the age of five. I probably watched that movie 100 times while growing up just for that scene.

You’re from Australia but you’re now living in Bellingham; does geography and place play into your perspective as a designer? I know Australia has a really vibrant fashion scene, and Bellingham seems to really support the idea of a small independent artisan. But beyond that, getting into style, are you influenced or informed by your outer environment?
Yes and no. I have lived all over: Australia, Argentina, Singapore, and now the Pacific Northwest, so my outside influence has been very broad. A lot of who I am as a designer today is because of my life, my whole life and all of the experiences that encompass that; geography, my faith, who my parents are, and my husband have all been key in shaping my philosophy to design. But when talking style, Australia has played the major role in my aesthetics. It is an extremely creative culture and with that, artists who are not afraid to push the boundaries of beauty.

You were married yourself not long ago. What was your dress like and how on earth did you manage to distill all your skills and ideas to create your own perfect dress?
Is ironic the right word? Lets just say love was the only perfect thing about that day… oh and maybe the weather. Because of all of the immigration laws my husband Henry and I decided that we would have what they refer to as a ‘spontaneous wedding’. I created my wedding gown ‘Project Runway–style’ the night before. I struggled with deciding on a design, so instead I let our environment dictate the direction. We had a beach wedding down at Ballard’s Golden Gardens. It was super casual. So in the end I walked down the isle in a dove gray high-waisted mermaid skirt with horizontally stripped panel inserts. My top was also gray, billowing over where the skirt met. It was far from perfect, but when I look back I love how well it went with the overall feel of the day.

Your style takes classic, traditional wedding fashion into account, but adds fashion detailing and modern shapes. Is it a conscious decision to keep that balance or is it a natural result of your ideas about what’s beautiful and current? Do you look at current ready-to-wear lines and think about incorporating those silhouettes? If so, who are some of your favorite designers?
I think it is an unconscious decision. I have always been drawn to the unconventional shapes and fashion detailing of ready-to-wear lines, there is a freshness to them that the traditional bridal fare is absolutely missing. But really I think it just lands on personal aesthetics and how I feel when I look at a gown. For me what dictates the balance is movement. How my eyes move across the gown, how the gown itself moves. One of my favorite designers at the moment is Australian Designer Alice McCall. Her clothes are really urban and relaxed. They make me think of flowy dresses.

Okay, Kate Middleton already had her wedding. Who—anyone in the world, really, don’t bother thinking about if they’re actually married or engaged or whatever—would you love to design a wedding gown for?
Hmmmm, this is a tough one. Maybe top model Miranda Kerr. I met her several years back at Australian Fashion week. She is a really genuine person.

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Tags: Seattle Wedding Gown, Seattle Wedding Details, Seattle Wedding Vendors

Wedding Wednesday

Preorder: Elizabeth Messina’s The Luminous Portrait

Some ideas about getting the most out of your wedding day photographs.

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Messina’s book focuses on capturing natural light to create the most engagingly gorgeous portraits.

Part of what makes folks fall in love with weddings—theirs and others—is the imagery. They scroll through blogs and flip through magazines looking for dress ideas or flower inspiration, and they’re struck again and again with these almost impossibly beautiful photographs. I don’t know if science has a name for it but there’s little room to refute the notion that women are about four thousand times as lovely on their wedding day, and men equally as handsome. Grandmothers glow, nieces and nephews become ridiculously cute.

And sure, that beauty comes from within. Without a doubt. But it also comes from the hand and eye of a skilled photographer. No doubt about that, either.

Many readers and colleagues have asked me about the fashion spread in the current issue of Seattle Met Bride & Groom, shot by LA-based photographer Elizabeth Messina. It is, indeed, a thing of beauty and we’re excited to have it in our magazine. Messina’s first book, The Luminous Portrait is available for preorder on Amazon now (it ships on April 24), and it strikes me that it’s as good a recommendation for soon-to-be-married types as it is for up and coming photographers.

The glow will come naturally, but will the ability to hold your body gracefully? Not all of us are completely at home in front of the camera, but in studying the portrait work of the best wedding shooters, couples should be able to glean angles that will work for them on the big day, and even ideas about what kinds of lighting they like best.

Of course, there are other ways to prepare. Go back through all those award-show images and watch how Rooney Mara holds her arms not in a triangle shape at her waist, but softly in front of her in a sort of relaxed air hug. And how about that grip and grin between Madonna and Andrea Riseborough? Their bodies make a slight V, not a straight plane. And even though Evan Rachel Wood is doing that hand-on-hip thing, she’s also making a pretty sweet S-curve with her body. If there’s one thing the red carpet can teach you, it’s that you really don’t even want to lock your knees and go stiff.

The photographer you hire can teach you a lot, too. Consider booking an engagement session if for no other reason than to practice your moves and work with him or her (or them; many top shooters are husband-and-wife teams) to learn how to meld your styles and come together as a team.

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