Sunday, November 8, 2009

Fiery Wedding


Autumn in Florida is the time for weddings, good news for those of us in the making-the-fairy-tale-come-true business. Actually, most of the weddings I see are not about the fairy-tale. They're often pragmatic affairs, almost to the point of appearing to be an exercise in going through the motions. Maybe that reflects more down-to-earth brides, but whatever it is, the emotional energy is often wound way down.

Saturday I drove a stretched limousine for a wedding, one of the most happy I have seen. A clue that both the wedding and the marriage will work out okay is when I knock at the door (to let the client know that I'm there, ahead of time) and the bride is still in civilian clothes. With a veil. Normally, it might be a red flag, an indication that everything is running behind. But I was early, and when she emerged with her bridesmaids right on time, smiling and calm, I knew everything was fine. A low maintenance bride who takes time to say hello (after my obligatory compliment about how beautiful she looks) is a gift.

Absence of a photographer at this point is a bonus. Photographers often run weddings, which is a pity, because the spontaneity of the day is lost when you have a martinet with a Nikon bossing everyone around. Word of advice to prospective brides: you'll have a much happier day, and get much more interesting wedding photos if you instruct your photographer to simply follow, snap, and refrain from interfering. He or she is there to record the day, not organize it.

During the church ceremony, a fire truck rolled up. Turns out that the groom was a firefighter, and his (on duty) colleagues were there to say hello. Nice touch. A photographer was present by this time, and everyone had great fun having their picture taken with newly married couple all over the truck. See, weddings don't need to be stuffy and formal. It's about celebration, just like these folks demonstrated.

We did head off for formal photos, but by that time the alcohol was flowing, and everyone (read: groomsmen) was pretty loose. That makes a difference. The wedding party participants who forget about themselves and simply keep the newly-weds smiling and laughing, doing the little jobs willingly, truly make a difference. Selfless and humorous groomsmen can literally make a wedding.

The last item for most weddings is dropping everyone at the reception. I was kinda bummed not to be able to spend more time with both the bride (a doll) and the groom (who was polite and relaxed). Good people, great (simple) wedding, and, I am predicting, fantastic marriage.


Also published here. [Link]

5 comments:

savannah said...

i'd bet that these are the kind of events that sort of keep you doing what y'all do, sugar! y'all have snapped a picture of a very memorable day that i, too, would have liked to have shared! xoxoxo

nitebyrd said...

Definitely sounds like a good start to a marriage. Not that I endorse the whole thing, you know? ;)

Wombat said...

Pretty much, Sugar.

It's funny, but I could sell tickets to events like this, they really are heartwarming.

I would take more photos myself, but it looks odd when the limo driver starts taking pics of his customers. It's a bit random.

I sure do, Nitebyrd, but at least they're giving it a shot in the right spirit. That's worth supporting, I think.

Don said...

They sound like great people.

Maybe you should start a marriage planning service in your spare time?

Wombat said...

Yep, great and just ordinary at the same time, Don. It was really quite refreshing.

Setting up as a wedding planner is one of those ideas I keep coming back to. I think the current bunch around the place here are women who have been in a wedding and think they know how to do it. Or they've seen a wedding and think they know how to do it!

My mind returns to Frank, the wedding planner from 'Father of the Bride'...a movie I recommend (if you haven't seen it already) if only because of Martin Short's rendition of (fairly gay) Frank.

Perhaps what this world needs is some military-style wedding organization.