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Meet our design team

12 Mar

Meet our design team
Meet the I Do Events Whitsundays team
Meet the I Do Events Whitsundays team. Clockwise from left: Jess, Nikki, Joyce, Belinda, Christina, Katrina, Vanessa (centre).

Vanessa Bye is the creative director of I Do Events Whitsundays. Originally a photographer and wedding co-ordinator on Hamilton Island, Vanessa started I Do Events when she saw an opportunity to create a new decoration and co-ordination service for couples who were getting married in Airlie Beach and the Whitsunday Islands. From humble beginnings in her garage at home with her dog Mishka, to a thriving office with extravagant showroom and half a dozen staff, Vanessa loves what she does, and loves making every individual couples’ wedding day, just perfect. And Mishka sometimes visits the office too. 

Jess is the Wedding Co-Ordinator specialising in Déjà vu and eloping wedding co-ordination. Jess is likely to be your first point of contact and is the one to talk to regarding the styling of your day. From America, Jess fell in love with a Kiwi sailor while working on the Great Barrier Reef (a typical Airlie Beach story) and has taken to the wedding co-ordination role like a duck to water. While you won’t ever see Jess stressed, you can’t miss her 1000 watt smile.

Belinda takes on roles of both office manager and stylist. Belinda is the busy bee who ensures your decorations get to where they need to be, that staff are trained in all aspects of your set-up, and who controls the banking at the end of the week (we are all VERY nice to Belinda).

Katrina and Joyce look after the decoration warehouse and set up weddings on location. Katrina loves pink and is getting married soon herself, so keep an eye out for some hot pink wedding heels for her! Joyce is our sweet Dutch girl who loves animals. When she’s not setting up weddings in all corners of the Whitsundays (something she never would have believed she was doing if you’d asked her 2 years ago!) she’s at home in Bowen with her menagerie of animals.

Nikki and Christina are location decorators, slightly obsessive compulsive, and with a keen eye for detail. Nikki was a bride of I Do Events Whitsundays and loved it so much that she became the unofficial wedding planner for her entire circle of family and friends until she realised she’d better start doing it for a living. Christina sometimes posts on our Facebook page and spends a lot of time poring over our website and blog posts and drooling over all the dreamy wedding photos on there.

We look forward to meeting you!

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Timing for your Wedding Day

10 Jan

Timing for your Wedding Day

Something a lot of brides don’t think about until quite late, is the timing of their wedding day. There are some important questions to answer. How early do you want your ceremony to take place? When do you want to arrive at your reception? How long do you need for photos? These questions should really be thought about and a rough timing plan made before sending out your invitations; this will ensure you have the most suitable times listed for ceremony and reception start times.

To help you determine the times for your ceremony and reception, the first person to chat to should be your wedding co-ordinator, or the venue’s event planner. You can’t just pull times out of a hat, there are many factors to consider. You can work backwards – find out if your venue has a curfew for noise or music, and what time the event has to conclude. You’ll want to allow yourself at least 1-2 hours for dancing and catching up with all your guests, up to an hour for speeches and formalities like cutting the cake, and 1-2 hours for food. Working backwards from the reception curfew, and in liaison with your wedding coordinator, allocate time to these elements to come up with your ideal reception start time.

Make sure you allow enough time for all the elements of your reception

A second factor to consider is how much time your photographer recommends, particularly for your bridal party photo tour and how many photographic locations you wish to visit. Again work backwards, from your ideal reception start time allowing ample time for photos and half an hour for your ceremony, to come up with the perfect ceremony start time.

Before setting these times in stone (or in writing :) ), there are a few other factors to consider;

Should you wish to get sunset photos, you’ll have to work out what time the sun is forecast to set on your wedding day. You can find sun set times for many years in advance from Willy Weather. You’ll have to work out if you have enough time to get your sunset photos, and get to your reception in plenty of time. One idea to get the best of both worlds is to arrive back at your venue before sunset and get your sunset photos at your venue.

Plan enough time for your photo tour with your co-ordinator and photographer

If your arrival is going to be quite late, you might like to keep your guests entertained with music, while enjoying canapes and drinks as they wait for your grand entrance.

Do you like the idea of a morning ceremony? Remember you will need at least 3 hours for hair, make-up and getting ready, depending on the numbers in your bridal party, so don’t plan on a 10am ceremony unless you are an early riser!

If you are having a beachfront ceremony or reception, you will also need to take the tide times into consideration. Each location is different, but some work best at low tide, others at high tide. Ask your wedding co-ordinator or venue for guidance about the best tide position at your selected location, and how the tides will affect the timing of your wedding day.

Finally, it’s your special day, so think about what is most important to you. Talk to your photographer, your wedding planner or venue, and unite all of this information to finalise a ceremony and reception time that suits you well.

And don’t forget to invite guests to arrive half an hour before your ceremony arrival, and plenty of time before the reception grand entrance, to ensure no late arrivals!

If you would like some advice on the timing of your wedding, please contact us.

Midweek Wedding Specials at Deja Vu Restaurant, Airlie Beach

4 Oct

Midweek Wedding Specials at Deja Vu Restaurant, Airlie Beach

There are only 52 Saturdays in a year. Saturday weddings are so popular that Saturdays book up quite far in advance, sometimes you can’t get your chosen venue within 2 years of your engagement! There are 208 Mondays, Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays in a year. Why not get married on one of those? You’ll save lots on a midweek wedding, and that money could be put towards your honeymoon, your home, or a really nice eternity ring down the track. Whatever your heart desires.

So if your heart desires a beautiful wedding at a beautiful venue, maybe a midweek wedding on one of those 208 days is the answer.

This fabulous midweek wedding special is perfect for your Airlie Beach destination wedding

Whitsunday wedding venue Déjà Vu Restaurant have partnered up with Water’s Edge Resort and I Do Events Whitsundays to create a fabulous wedding package for midweek weddings (Monday – Thursday).

If you book a midweek wedding at Déjà Vu Restaurant in Airlie Beach, we’ve got three wedding gifts to give you*.

Gift number one: FREE WEDDING CEREMONY DECORATIONS. The Bali hut under which you will be pronounced man and wife, will be draped with white chiffon, to create the perfect frame for your intimate destination wedding ceremony. Gift number two: A COMPLIMENTARY DELICIOUS WEDDING CAKE provided for you to put the icing on the cake (pun intended!) of your gourmet wedding feast. Gift number three: enjoy COMPLIMENTARY WEDDING NIGHT ACCOMMODATION on-site at luxurious Water’s Edge Resort.

Your Whitsunday wedding with decorations, wedding cake and wedding night accommodation at no cost to you!

To help your guests plan and arrange time off to come to beautiful Airlie Beach for your midweek wedding, send out a save the date card as soon as you book. Midweek flight and accommodation specials pop up regularly throughout the year, so the more notice you give your guests, the more chance they have of finding great flights and accommodation to come and celebrate with you at your Whitsunday wedding.

Did you have a midweek wedding? Have you ever been to one? What tips can you give midweek brides to help plan their wedding? Please share with us in the comments below.

 

*Limited availability of special, for weddings held from Monday to Thursday. Terms and conditions apply. Please CONTACT US for more information about this special offer and availability.

Want to get married on a weekend instead? Find out more about other wedding options at Déjà Vu Restaurant.

Wedding traditions

3 Sep

Wedding traditions

There are so many traditions tied up in weddings, that it’d simply be impossible to follow them all. But do you know the origins of some of the more popular traditions?

Many wedding traditions come from the idea that nasty spirits would try to disrupt the wedding and bring bad luck to the bride and groom. This is where the tradition of wearing a veil comes from, the veil was to hide the bride from the spirits. Likewise, the reason why bridesmaids and groomsmen became part of a wedding party was so that the spirits would be confused as to who exactly the bride and groom were! Originally, bridesmaids were dressed the same as the bride. Perhaps that’s why Pippa Middleton wore ivory, the same shade as her sister Kate’s dress, at Kate’s wedding to Prince William!

Whitsunday white weddings and Pippa and Kate Middleton

Have you heard of the phrase “three times a bridesmaid, never a bride”? That’s linked in with this too, as the thought was that if a woman had been a bridesmaid, and therefore an evil spirit decoy, three times, she would have attracted enough spirits to herself that she would never marry.

There are a couple of sweet traditions that are easily done today, whether intentionally or not. It is good luck for the bride to be woken by birdsong. So maybe that cacophony of cockatoos one sometimes wakes up to in the Whitsundays is a good omen! It’s also considered lucky for the bride to travel over water on her way to the wedding. If you elope to Whitehaven by seaplane, it’s not only an amazing location for your ceremony, it’s also good luck.

Elope to Whitehaven Beach. Enjoy the work of wonderfully talented Whitsunday wedding cake makers

There are also a couple of traditions we can probably do without. It is said to be good luck for the bride to find a spider in her wedding gown! No thank you! In the common theme of bridesmaids also trying to “land husbands”, old wives tales say that the chief bridesmaid should carry around a piece of the wedding cake in her pocket, for the entire duration of the honeymoon, if she hopes to marry soon. Imagine what that would be like after a 3-month-long European honeymoon! In this day and age, our local Whitsunday wedding cake makers are so fabulous, that we doubt there’d be any of the cake left!

What other traditions have you heard of? Do you have any special family traditions? Are you going to do something completely untraditional? We’d love you to share your thoughts with us below.

 

Something old, something new

1 Aug

Something old, something new

When thinking of wedding traditions, what’s the first thing that comes to mind for you? For me, it’s “Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue” Even if you don’t consider yourself traditional, you’ve probably considered following this tradition and it is one of the most widely recognised and most popular wedding traditions.
The four elements are said to bring different positive aspects to the marriage.

Something Old

What it represents: continuity and a link to the bride’s past and family.
Traditional: many brides choose to wear a piece of antique family jewellery or a mother’s or grandmother’s wedding gown. Other idea is to incorporate e a piece of your mother’s or grandmother’s wedding gown or veil, such as a piece of lace, or some of the original beading. Ask us about vintage table décor ideas.
lace and pearls compliment a vintage wedding theme beautifully

Something New

What it represents: optimism and hope for a long and happy marriage with a bright future.
Traditional: the wedding gown is often chosen as the new item, but jewellery or a purse is also a fun way to have something new. New things could also be the flowers or the rings.

Something Borrowed

What it represents: to remind the bride that friends and family will be there for her when help is needed. Borrowing an item from a happily married woman is considered important, as it symbolises sharing some of the happiness from the friend’s own happy marriage. Of course, whatever you borrow, must be returned after the wedding!
Traditional: the borrowed object might be something such as a lace handkerchief or a piece of jewellery.
something new represented by the shoes, bouquet, jewellery or wedding dress

Something Blue

What it represents: blue is the ancient colour representing faithfulness, loyalty and purity.
Traditional: brides often opt for a blue garter. If you don’t want to wear a garter, you could put a blue pin in your hair, wear blue earrings, blue shoes or toenail polish, choose underwear with a hint of blue on them, or have your bridesmaids wear blue! We have so many wedding décor items in blue to choose from!
it's so easy to have something blue at your wedding, let us show you
What other ideas can we add to the list above? How can you follow this tradition but in an unconventional way? We look forward to hearing your thoughts! Please share with us in the comments below.