Surrey Weddings

Planning a wedding in Surrey is easy when you know where to find your local wedding suppliers

Name: Roger Mayne
Location: Redhill, Surrey, United Kingdom

Thursday, March 29, 2007

Surrey Wedding Exhibition 25th March 2007

Just a quick message today.

I have been alerted that there is a wedding exhibition in Surrey on Sunday 25th March 2007.

The exhibition is being held at the Sofitel Hotel, Desoutter Suite in the North Terminal at Gatwick Airport.

Doors open at 11am and close at 4pm.

Admission fee is just £2 and 50% of all funds raised will go to Raising Money for Breat Cancer Care.

You even get a complimentary glass of wine or fruit juice!!

Definitely an event not to be missed.

For more details, email to info@weddingswithoutworry.co.uk, or visit their web site at www.weddingswithoutworry.co.uk. Their telephone number is 01444 469007.

See you there.

Regards
Roger Mayne
Surrey Weddings

Friday, March 23, 2007

Avoiding Headaches On Your Wedding Day

By Eric Hartwell

Planning your wedding can be fraught with all sorts of difficulties and blind alleys. There are so many things to consider, so many things to do, and so many people to share the burden with. At the end of the day, you have your special day to consider and nothing should come between you and this aim. Yet as you start to plan and you get further into the planning process, it can sometimes become very burdensome. In fact, some brides and grooms-to-be find the whole process so difficult and stressful that they feel like throwing the towel in at the very last moment. The secret to avoiding stress and having a smooth and bump-free process is to plan in advance.

You have some questions to ask yourselves and some questions to answer. How are you going to fund the wedding? Are you going to use your own money either singly or jointly? Or perhaps other people are chipping in with their contributions? How will you deal with your family, relations, and friends? Will you designate special roles for certain people and allow them to do these roles unhindered, or do you feel as though you need complete control of the process?
Sometimes you will have to deal with conflict within the group of people who you have designated responsibility in organizing or helping to organize your wedding. You may need to openly discuss with people what their remit is in the planning process and what things you and your partner wish to sort out for yourselves.

Therefore, communication with others is very important. But don’t forget that your wedding is not only your special day but can be special for other people, especially close friends and close relatives. They will wish to ensure that your day is the best it can possibly be and they will, or should, go out of their way to ensure that they can help you through this process without giving you extra headaches.

Eric Hartwell oversees "The World's Best Homepage" intended to be a user-generated resource where YOUR opinion counts. Anybody can contribute and all are welcomed. Visit us to read, comment upon or share opinions at the worlds best homepage or submit or use content at free content resource.

Regards
Roger Mayne
Surrey Weddings

Thursday, March 15, 2007

Wedding Anniversary Scrapbooking Ideas

Wedding Anniversary Scrapbooking Ideas
By Ifiok Ekon

Are you looking for wedding anniversary scrapbooking ideas to help you create a unique gift for a special couple for their anniversary? This article has many simple ideas that you can use to create a wonderful and lasting wedding anniversary gift.

One of the most important wedding anniversary scrapbooking ideas you can use for an anniversary scrapbook is to have the couple’s wedding picture on either the first or last page of the scrapbook.

A copy of the wedding invitation makes a really great introduction to the scrapbook. A scrapbook makes a creative anniversary gift for any anniversary year, but it is particularly effective for milestones such as; first anniversary, silver, diamond or golden anniversaries. For the 25th, 50th or 60th wedding anniversaries, you can start the scrapbook with the wedding photo.

Other scrapbooking ideas you can use are:
  • Photos of the couple during each year of their marriage
  • Photos of the couple’s family at various stages of growth
  • Photos of memorable occasions, such as weddings of the children
  • Photos of the couple with their grandchildren
  • Photos of trips and vacations

Wedding scrapbooking ideas, for the first year of marriage could include:

  • Photos of the planning done for the wedding
  • Copy of the wedding service
  • Place cards
  • Bridal registry
  • List of gifts received
  • Ribbons to represent colors used in the wedding
  • Wedding favors that was used
  • Notes about planning mishaps

You can also include the following in the Wedding anniversary scrapbook:

  • Pressed flowers
  • Napkins
  • Christmas pictures of the couple together
  • Letters and notes that the couple has written funny scenes from their lives together
  • Invitation to the anniversary party
  • Photos of the party

The colors you choose for embellishing the scrapbook should represent the year of the anniversary. For example, 25th anniversary is silver, 50th is gold and 60th is diamond. The colors used in other wedding anniversary scrapbooking ideas could be the colors the couple chose to have at their wedding or their own favorite colors.

About The Author

Ifiok Ekon is the author of wedding anniversary scrapbooking ideas, visit his site, http://www.allscrapbookingideas.com/ to get all the exciting scrapbooking ideas,suggestions,tips and techniques for your Baby,wedding,Military Personnel and Lots More.

Feel free to use the above article on your web site or ezine. Provided that it is published in it’s entirety, including my resource box above and a “live” clickable link to: allscrapbookingideas.com

Regards
Roger Mayne
Surrey Weddings

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Wedding Guest Book Activities

Traditional brides don't have to have traditional guest books. Certainly you can purchase a standard guest book and ask your guests to sign it, but there are so many more guest book-like activities that are more unique.

Let's move from the popular to the less well known. One very popular option allows guests to sign a picture of the bride and groom. Simply take a picture of the bride and groom and have it matted in a mat several inches larger than the photo itself. Place a frame around this, but don't include the glass or Plexiglas frame. You'll add this later. Some people prefer to use "bulldog" clips to keep the mat together instead of putting the picture in the frame. The picture can be framed after the wedding.

Most couples choose a nice photo of themselves for this picture/guestbook option, although if there's a formal engagement photo, this is an excellent way to preserve that photo and show it off to friends and family. If photos are taken before the wedding with the bride and groom in their wedding attire, you can certainly use this photo. Many couples opt to either leave the mat empty or they place a temporary picture in the mat and add a wedding picture later.
Be sure to have a nice marker pen handy and place the picture on either a sturdy easel or on a table where guests are sure to see it.

Another option is instead of providing a picture of the bride and groom to sign, the guests are provided with a picture of themselves! Simply provide a Polaroid camera and assign someone the job of taking pictures of the guests as they arrive at the reception. Once the picture is dry, provide a pen and they can sign the picture, make a note to the bride and groom or hand draw a silly picture. It can be whatever the guest wants it to be. This is a unique, and personal, way for guests to "sign in" at the wedding.

Whoever handles the taking of the pictures should also handle putting them in an album of some sort. A scrap booker might provide a special memory book with the Polaroid pictures in it, or the pictures can simply be placed in a nice album and presented later to the bride and groom.
Many guests don't give a great deal of thought to the guest book. They whiz by the guest book table more concerned with getting their cocktail and hitting the dance floor. If this is a concern, provide a "traveling" guest book. Send each guest something either to sign or decorate before the wedding.

In this "traveling" guest book scenario, there are several options. One of the easiest is to send each guest a small piece of paper and ask them to write something meaningful or thoughtful for the bride and groom on it. The pieces of paper are returned prior to the wedding (to ensure a better response, provide a self-addressed stamped envelope with the paper) and can be compiled in some meaningful way for the bride and groom and presented to them on their wedding day.

If the guest list is a creative or particularly close group, there is one other option that is even more meaningful. Again, in a scrapbook fashion, send each guest a piece of paper to sign or decorate. The paper should be the size of a photo album, so it might be a 6 x 6 piece of paper, an 8 x 8 piece of paper, or even 12 x 12, if the guests are up to that larger size.

In a letter that arrives with the paper, the guests are instructed to create a memory page for the bride and groom. They might include photos, quotes, little anecdotal stories, or combine all of these with stickers or embellishments. It's thoughtful, meaningful and personal and it's an excellent way to include guests who might not be able to attend the wedding, but would still like to be a part of it.

Regards
Roger Mayne
Surrey Weddings