Showing posts with label budget wedding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label budget wedding. Show all posts

Friday, July 25, 2008

Handmade Wedding Invitations


We wanted to make every aspect of our little green wedding as meaningful as possible, so we decided to handmake our own wedding invitations.
I turned our used paper into a slurry, which I proceeded to turn into handmade sheets (for instructions on how to make handmade paper, the best resource is the Arnold Grummer website). The leaves and flowers are from bouquets we've given each other over the years, or picked at various places we've been to.

I did the calligraphy myself. (At the Catholic school that I attended from kindergarten through high school, I didn't see why they were such sticklers about having perfect penmanship. I remember spending hours in grade school doing page after page of loops and swirls. Looking back, I'm thankful for the experience, because being able to do the calligraphy myself has not only saved me tons of money, I've been able to do the calligraphy for my friends' weddings as a unique gift.)

With no two invitations being similar due to the variations in the paper, as well as the florals and leaves that we used on each invitation, we came up with beautiful pieces of artwork that truly represented who we were as a couple. Best of all, something that would have cost us hundreds of dollars only cost us several hours of hobby time.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Wedding Seals Made of Salt Dough


We like the idea of having a seal on the wedding invites but rather than buy the wax seals, I decided to experiment with salt dough instead, which is an extremely inexpensive alternative, given that it’s basically just salt, flour and water.

I simply took a stamp (we found one a couple years ago with our initials - ‘A’ for ‘Ascalon’ and ‘M’ for ‘Marshall’-when we were down at the Hollywood Toy and Costume Store and had to buy it), pressed it into a piece of salt dough that I had rolled out into a thin sheet, let it air-dry, and painted it with black and metallic gold acrylic. I waited for it to dry before painting on a layer of varnish.

For the salt dough recipe and more cheap chic tips, go to http://www.thecheapchiccouple.com/

L.A. Fashion District: A Treasure Trove for the Bride On A Budget

If you're a bride living in Los Angeles, you simply must go down to the Los Angeles Fashion District and check out the huge selection of wedding items down there.

I feel like a kid in a candy store everytime I go down there. Of course, there's horrendous, low quality, tacky stuff everywhere (but there's horrendous, tacky stuff at the higher-end retail stores as well) but when you find a good deal, it's enough to make you feel like you just found hidden treasure.

Parking can be as high as $8-15 for all day parking but I found a parking lot on 8th Street, near the bead stores and Michael Levine's, that has $3 all day parking. Be sure to read the signs before you park though. Some of them have the big ol' $3 sign on them but in tiny letters underneath, it says 'per hour'. Sneaky!

Monday, January 7, 2008

Cheap Chic Wedding Tip: Get A Gifted Friend To Make Your Wedding Cake


If you're on a tight wedding budget, consider having a gifted friend or family member bake your wedding cake.

Perhaps it's because we're big fans of Ace Of Cakes on The Food Network, but it's no surprise that when it came to our wedding cake, we wanted it fun and quirky, so we decided on a madhatter cake.

When we were doing our cake sampling, a lot of the bids we were getting for a madhatter cake to feed 80 guests was in the high $600 range. While we have a reverence for the artistry that goes into making a wedding cake, and respect for the fact that these bakeries do have a sizable overhead, that price range would throw our $7,000 Cheap Chic Wedding Challenge budget out of whack.

We were pretty lucky that over the Christmas holidays, I bumped into an old friend, Debbie Cordova. Years ago, she had baked a beautifully simple yet elegant wedding cake for someone at work, and it had been absolutely delicious. We had even commented on the fact that she should have her own bakery instead of doing property management.

Debbie still hasn't opened her own bakery liked we urged her to do way back then, but from the pictures she sent me, it looks like she's kept honing her craft all this time. We can't wait to try her cake samples, and have her do our wedding cake because we know it's going to be fantastic.

If you're not lucky enough to have a Debbie of your own, here are a few more tips to consider:

  • I've heard that Albertsons actually makes a pretty decent wedding cake (although you're probably going to be limited to what designs they have available, design-wise).
  • You may also want to consider getting a small cake just for the cake-cutting, and get sheet cake (in the same flavor as your smaller cake, of course) to serve guests.