Showing posts with label purple. Show all posts
Showing posts with label purple. Show all posts

Saturday, October 15, 2011

Brittany and Jody

Had a wedding at the King's Daughter's Inn in Durham this weekend. The inn is a beautiful bed and breakfast that was built in 1925 as a home for ladies. A few years ago it was renovated into a gorgeous bed and breakfast. The bride wanted flowers in varying shades of dark purple. The bride's bouquet was made of white roses, purple caspia, purple stock, matsumoto asters, thistle, and trachelium.



She wanted to acknowledge fall but didn't want a wedding screaming halloween so I used branches, thistle, asters, and white pumpkins. Below is a picture of one of the white pumpkin aisle markers. It is resting on a bed of moss.


There were two large arrangements on the back tables. They were placed in lavender ewers that the bride owned. The flowers were fuji mums, purple liatris, roses, caspia, thistle, white statice, and trachelium. 



Each table also had a small bouquet of rose, ruscus, thistle, caspia, lisanthus, and matsumoto asters. 


The front of the ceremony was marked by two tables with a candlescape. I used different sizes of glass cylinders holding candles, candles with pecans, and water dyed purple. I also had a central large cylinder with dyed water and curly willow branches. Hopefully, I will have some pictures from evening ceremony soon.
UPDATE: I was able to get some photos from the photographer Adam Wamsley. He did a much better job than I did of capturing the beautiful colors.







So happy for them! So happy everything turned out so well. Still loving the purple water!

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Experimentation

I have a wedding in October and the bride wanted some ideas on vase fillers. That lead to an "evening of experimentation". Cue the Frankenstein laugh.

Water with floating candles and the "buttoned ribbon".
I glued a sequin over a folded ribbon to look as if it were
buttoned on. 


Pecans as a filler.

Branches in purple water. My favorite.

White rice, and in the back vase white and purple rice.

The rice ended up a little bluer than I wanted so...

back to the dying.