FALL/WINTER 2016
Solid ock
From Dolly Sods to The Greenbrier, your complete resource for stunning wedding venues in the Mountain State.
HOUSE of FASHIONS
REBECCA DEVONO PHOTOGRAPHY
We treat your experience as if it were our own.
Providing fashions for all of your wedding, tuxedo, prom, and formal needs. 121 DANIEL DRIVE, BRIDGEPORT, WV | 304.672.5490 | HOFWV.COM
FALL/WINTER 2016
volume 8, issue 2 published by New South Media, Inc. 709 Beechurst Ave., 14A, Morgantown, WV 26505 304.413.0104, mywvwedding.com
editor Nikki Bowman, nikki@newsouthmediainc.com art director Carla Witt Ford, carla@newsouthmediainc.com managing editor Mary Wade Burnside, marywade@newsouthmediainc.com associate editors Zack Harold, zack@newsouthmediainc.com Pam Kasey, pam@newsouthmediainc.com operations manager Allison Daugherty, allison@newsouthmediainc.com web and social media manager Kassi Roberts, kassi@newsouthmediainc.com interns Cami Coulter, Alison Kaiser, Cody Roane contributors Monica Orosz, Julie Perine, Mikenna Pierotti advertising and marketing director Heather Mills Berardi, heather@newsouthmediainc.com advertising Heather Mills Berardi, Amanda Eskew, Season Martin back issues Back issues may be purchased at mywvwedding.com or by calling 304.413.0104. editorial inquiries Please send queries to wvweddings@newsouthmediainc.com. A special thank you to our former office manager Sarah Shaffer for all of her years of dedication.
WV Weddings is published by New South Media, Inc. subscription rate: $10 for 1 year, $18 for two years. Subscribe online at mywvwedding.com or call 304.413.0104.
frequency: Biannual Š New South Media, Inc. Reproduction in part or whole is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of the publisher.
2 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
EDITOR‘S LETTER
what is your love story? In this magazine, we honor more than just a couple’s love. We celebrate the love of place. Each of the couples showcased in this issue carefully chose their wedding venue to memorialize their marriage. The place— whether it is a state park, a backyard, a glamorous resort, or a scenic overlook—is an important part of their story. This issue is filled with breathtaking venues, starting with the cover. Bear Rocks Preserve at Dolly Sods is uniquely West Virginian, as are Babcock State Park (page 60) and The Greenbrier (page 46). And check out Ryanne Nichols and Chad Parker’s wedding on page 130—they are the first couple to tie the knot on the catwalk beneath the New River Gorge Bridge. One of our featured weddings took place at Sandstone (page 38)—and I believe it might be the most unique wedding we’ve ever seen. This homesteading couple personalized their day in every way. After you read this issue and enjoy the amazing photography, I think you’ll agree with me that West Virginia has some astounding wedding locations. As always, choosing a cover is the most difficult of our tasks. This issue was particularly challenging. As you will see in our Wedding Wows section (page 12), all of our top 10 covers are spectacular— congratulations to the couples and their amazing photographers. We loved Allie Boso’s photo on a bicycle—that’s a terrific takeaway for future couples. Props are a great way to personalize your photographs. I’m particularly in love with Tracy Speilman’s wedding gown, but Elyse Boles’ (page 82) dress also took my breath away. I love red, and Amanda Sergent’s (page 150) non-traditional red lace dress is equally fabulous—and I adored her and her husband’s entire celebration. In fact, every time I look at their photos, I smile. And how about Caitlin Bailey and Martin Slavin’s wedding on page 54? What’s not to love about the tartan accents paying homage to the groom’s Scottish heritage? The bride is gorgeous and all of the groomsmen are decked out in Highland garb! I hope you enjoy this issue as much as we’ve enjoyed working on it! Don’t forget that you can submit your wedding and your engagement to the magazine. We are re-establishing the one-page submission option, so make sure you read about the submittal process on page 169. With love,
nikki bowman, Editor Follow us on
and
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facebook.com/wvweddings pinterest.com/wvweddings
Let us hear from you. We want to know what you think about the magazine, and we’d love to hear your suggestions. Email: info@newsouthmediainc.com Call: 304.413.0104 Mail: 709 Beechurst Avenue, Suite 14A, Morgantown, WV 26505 4 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
CONTENTS 30 WHEN THRIFT MEETS CHIC This Bohemian bride did not have to compromise on style for her green nuptials.
38 46
38 PURE MAGIC
Nearly a decade of affection blossomed into a whimsical—and DIY—homesteader wedding overlooking the New River Gorge. 46 GOING TO THE CHAPEL
When Jill Justice and Adam Long got engaged, it was a time to build a church at The Greenbrier.
54 A HIGHLAND RING A bride selects tartan accents and a hilly, misty site to make her Scottish groom feel at home during their West Virginia nuptials. 60 SWEET & SIMPLE
Natural autumn beauty and Babcock State Park’s historic grist mill provide an ideal wedding setting for this Charleston couple.
30
66 TOGETHER FOREVER, FINALLY
66
After a long-distance romance, ‘one day’ finally arrives.
54 60
FALL/WINTER 2016
Solid ock
From Dolly Sods to The Greenbrier, your complete resource for stunning wedding venues in the Mountain State.
cover photo Gena Spratt and Steve Matthews, pictured at Dolly Sods, were on top of the world when they wed in Tucker County. Photo by The Oberports
mywvwedding.com | 7
THE REGISTRY
CONTENTS 12 WEDDING WOWS Who had the most unique wedding location and bridal shoes and our favorite bouquets? 79 WEDDING REGISTER
Forty-four couples announce their nuptials in the pages of our wedding register. 170 ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCEMENTS Betrothed couples tell their stories as they prepare for the big day. 177 RESOURCE GUIDE
Let them eat cake and smell the roses! Explore these great options for caterers, bakers, florists, bridal shops, and more. 181 VENUE GUIDE Whether you’re looking to tie the knot in a fancy hotel, a casual setting, or the great outdoors, this list of top venues will guide you to the perfect place to say “I do.” 184 BRIDAL REGISTER INDEX An alphabetized listing of our wedding couples.
170 8 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
181 79
12
CONTRIBUTORS
MIKE HALL
LIV HEFNER
Based in South Charleston, Mike Hall began his career in 1984 with a small studio that has grown into one of the top portrait studios in the area. He specializes in wedding photography, senior portraits, and commercial photography for many corporations in the area. Mike was self-taught as a high school student, then attended Triangle Institute of Professional Photography in Pittsburgh to expand his expertise and study photographic skills with masters of the craft. wvphoto.com
Liv Hefner is a West Virginiabased wedding photographer consumed by wanderlust and photographing those who are in love. She regularly photographs throughout the East Coast, but loves when work takes her on adventures. Her work is classic, joyful, and authentic. She strives to capture the feelings and emotions of the day, not just the outward beauty of it. Liv is also a teacher, wife, and daughter, indulger of all things Disney, and unabashedly obsessed with her fur babies, Henry and Pepper. livhefnerphotography.com
MELISSA & SCOTT HOPKINS
At Hopkins Studios, Melissa and Scott are a husband-andwife team of photographers who specializes in taking vivid, modern, and creative images for weddings and events. Since they founded Hopkins Studios, they have been deeply committed to caring for their clients and to delivering photographs that evoke the magic of a once-in-alifetime day. They are based in Savannah, Georgia, but travel the region—and the country—to capture clients’ unforgettable moments. hopkinsstudios.com
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10 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
MONICA OROSZ
Monica Orosz spent 29 years at the Charleston Daily Mail in positions including court reporter, business editor, assistant city editor, and lifestyles editor before leaving the paper in December 2013 to divide her time between West Virginia and Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. She now freelances, which leaves lots of time for golf—she’s awful— and other outdoor fun. She’s an avid reader of the New York Times wedding section and admits to loving marathons of TLC’s Say Yes to the Dress.
CONTRIBUTORS
THE OBERPORTS
The Oberports (Emily Porter & Bobby Oberlander) are a married full-time, international awardwinning wedding photography team based in Charleston. They love showing off the beautiful state of West Virginia whenever they can and are drawn to non-traditional weddings and elopements. Their couples know them as easygoing, professional, and highly experienced photographers who focus on candid documentation and classic, cinematic portraiture. theoberports.com
MELISSA PERELLA
JULIE PERINE
MIKENNA PIEROTTI
Melissa Perella is a documentary and fine art wedding photographer. Self-taught and with a professional background in fashion photography, Melissa returned to the Mountain State in 2004 and quickly became one of the most sought-after photographers in the mid-Atlantic. Attention to detail, creative composition, and the ability to quickly assess natural light are among the strongest components of Melissa’s shooting repertoire. Melissa specializes in destination weddings and unique venues. blog.perellaphotography.com
Julie Perine is a writer for connect-bridgeport.com and has contributed to various West Virginia publications, including WV Living and WV Weddings. She is part of the public relations team for The Fly Rod Chronicles with Curtis Fleming and is a former lifestyles editor of The Exponent Telegram in Clarksburg. She is an outdoors enthusiast and loves to fish, bike, and travel, often writing about those experiences. She lives with her family in Bridgeport where she is part-owner of Della’s Deli. wvjewel.com
Mikenna Pierotti moved to West Virginia in 2010 from upstate New York to complete her master’s degree in English, live in the mountains, and write. She loves digging around in the history, landscape, and culture of West Virginia, looking for those shiny gems that become great stories. She lives in Morgantown with her husband, Adam, her wiener dog, Tally, and far, far too many houseplants.
mywvwedding.com | 11
Top 10 Covers -
The staff of WV Weddings share the beautiful photos that nearly made this issue’s cover. Here are our favorite runners-up.
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FINALISTS
1. Gena Spratt & Stephen Matthews, photographed by The Oberports 2. Alexandra Boso & Alexander Aspinwall, photographed by Liv Hefner Photography 3. Gena Spratt & Stephen Matthews, photographed by The Oberports 4. Elyse Boles & Jacob Fernandez, photographed by The Oberports 5. Tracy Speilman & Nicholas Culicerto, photographed by Kelli Carrico Photography 6. Abigail Hathaway & John Tonkin, photographed by Kristin Hurley Photography 7. Karly Kramer & James Wallace, photographed by Maryn Graves Productions 8. Mary Grace Legg & Anthony Terrafranca, photographed by The Oberports 9. Tracy Speilman & Nicholas Culicerto, photographed by Kelli Carrico Photography 10. Erica Dickerson & Jonathan Holbert, photographed by Melissa Perella Photography & Design
9 12 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
10
WEDDING WOWS
best WINTER
WRAPS
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP: MacKenzie Florence & Brent Brown, photographed by Jessica Christie Photography; Morgan Nickerson & Michael Caridi, photographed by James Carl Photography; Leslie Curtis & Ryan Bremar, photographed by Michele Coleman Photography
unique
BRIDAL SHOES
Mary Grace Legg & Anthony Terrafranca, photographed by The Oberports mywvwedding.com | 13
WEDDING WOWS
best
BRIDAL PORTRAIT
Tracy Speilman & Nicholas Culicerto, photographed by Kelli Carrico Photography
14 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
mywvwedding.com | 15
WEDDING WOWS
props to the CARS CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Alexandra Boso & Alexander Aspinwall, photographed by Liv Hefner Photography; Brooke Reynolds & John Frost, photographed by Alan French Photography; Katie Flint & Caleb Carte, photographed by Rhea Hickok Photography; Jillean Justice & Adam Long, photographed by Hopkins Studios
best
POOCH PORTRAITS
Jessica Facemire & Asa Coplin, photographed by Kuirsta + Seth; Erica Dickerson & Jonathan Holbert, photographed by Melissa Perella Photography & Design
16 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
WEDDING WOWS
most unique
CEREMONY LOCATION
Ryanne Nichols & Chad Parker, photographed by Jasmine Rose Photography
best
BRIDESMAIDS’ DRESSES
Maria Juliana Lloreda & Leonard Maier, photographed by Lauren Love Photography
mywvwedding.com | 17
WEDDING WOWS
most unique wedding
CAKE TOPPERS
FROM TOP Amanda Sergent & Todd Griffith, photographed by The Oberports; Erica Dickerson & Jonathan Holbert, photographed by Melissa Perella Photography & Design; MacKenzie Florence & Brent Brown, photographed by Jessica Christie Photography
18 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
mywvwedding.com | 19
WEDDING WOWS
favorite
BOUQUETS
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT Abigail Hathaway & John Tonkin, photographed by Kristin Hurley Photography; Elyse Boles & Jacob Fernandez, photographed by The Oberports; Karly Kramer & James Wallace, photographed by Maryn Graves Productions; Stephanie Hess & Justin Jarrell, photographed by Lindsey Johnson Photography
20 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
mywvwedding.com | 21
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
< TIE THE KNOT IN >
THE OBERPORTS
CANAAN VALLEY
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Located in one of the most stunning natural environments in West Virginia, Canaan Valley is a oneof-a-kind wedding destination, where the land buckles and
folds into spiny ridges and dramatic monoliths. Lush valleys and grassy plains with wildflowers sway in the wind, and snowcapped mountains are stippled with ice-tipped trees. Easily accessible from major interstates and highways, Canaan’s rivers, forests, valleys, and vistas provide limitless opportunities for breathtaking ceremonies and festive receptions. With distinctive venues and lodging options that cater to everything from intimate to large gatherings, you’ll say “I do” to Canaan Valley. For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775.
CANAAN VALLEY RESORT STATE
KATE FISHER PHOTOGRAPHY (2); WEDDINGS BY ALISA
PARK pulls triple duty as a luxurious resort, a four-season wedding destination, and a pristine 6000-acre state park. From pre-wedding party outings and bachelor/ bachelorette parties to rehearsal dinners, ceremonies, and receptions, Canaan Valley Resort provides enough activities to keep your wedding party entertained for the entire weekend. With space that will accommodate 20 to 300 people and price points for every budget, the resort offers a range of options: from the covered outdoor pavilion with its spectacular view of the mountains, to the ballroom with its wall of windows and panoramic valley vista, to Bear Paw Lodge with its 6,750 square feet of open space and unique mountain setting overlooking the ski slopes. canaanresort.com; 304.866.4121 ext. 2671 BLACKWATER FALLS STATE PARK is best known for its energetic waters that rush through an eight-mile gorge before plummeting 63 feet into the canyon below. With outdoor and indoor options perfect for the budget-minded bride, the park offers scenic overlooks with endless photo opportunities. Lindy Point is one of the most famous views in the state—a breath-stealing drop-off into Blackwater Canyon where 45 acres of wild country stretch out in all directions. But don’t miss Pendleton Point Overlook, showcasing the canyon’s deepest and widest point, where the dramatic curves of the landscape spread out before you. The Blackwater Falls Conference Center seats 150 guests with floor space for a head table and dancing. blackwaterfalls.com; 304.259.5216.
DOLLY SODS With its bogs, heaths, and boulder-strewn plains, Dolly Sods is a unique romantic windswept wedding venue, with terrain more typical of Canada than south of the Mason-Dixon. The view from Dolly Sods’ perch on a ridge to the west of the Allegheny Front is incredible. On a clear day you can see seven mountain ridges across a 30-mile stretch to the east. NELSON FARM is a top-of-the-mountain paradise, owned by Jim and Linda Nelson since 1984. Located two miles from Canaan Valley Resort State Park, it’s a private and secluded venue with panoramic mountain views that gives couples the freedom to build the wedding they want. The barn is a blank slate for rustic weddings, and tables and chairs are provided. Nelson Farm is available for weddings from April to September. 140 Almosta Road, Dryfork; 304.866.8745 (after 5 p.m.) BLACK BEAR RESORT Set on more than 40 landscaped acres, Black Bear Resort offers sweeping views of Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge, Cabin Mountain, and Timberline ski area. Located on Canaan Mountain at the north end of Canaan Valley between Blackwater Falls State Park and Canaan Valley State Park, four miles from the town of Davis, Black Bear offers several on-site amenities, including an outdoor heated pool, fish ponds, a scenic nature trail, miles of private roads for bike riding, and a large mountain lodge with spacious decks for weddings and receptions. blackbearwv.com; 304.866.4391
For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
MAKE IT A WEEKEND CELEBRATION GROOMSMEN GETAWAY
CHEERS! Celebrate with a before- and/ or after-party at one of the area’s amazing craft breweries, music venues, or coffee shops. Stumptown Ales, Mountain State Brewery, Blackwater Brewing Company, Purple Fiddle, and Tip Top are popular spots.
OUTDOOR RECREATION Whether it’s fishing, shooting clays, kayaking, whitewater rafting, tubing, hiking, mountain biking, or skiing, there’s an abundance of activities for the outdoor enthusiast.
SCENIC CHAIR LIFT Want to see the views from the highest peaks? Both Canaan Valley Resort State Park and Timberline Four Seasons Resort offer year-round chair lift rides for amazing vistas.
The Perfect Plan ELLA WEDDINGS & EVENTS specializes in eclectic, vintage, handmade, and unique specialty rentals as well as custom design and décor styling. Planning packages include: “The Real Deal”, Full Planning & Design; “Half Way There”, Partial Planning & Design; and “No Worries Wedding Weekend”, Day-of Coordination. Ella Weddings & Events has a storefront in Thomas curated and owned by Erika Smith, where you’ll find everything including custom paper goods, repurposed and handmade furniture, décor, and antiques. Her shop is the go-to place for the area’s vintage event rentals and wedding and event planning services. Erika says, “I truly believe that life (and love) is better in the mountains. As a Mountain State native, I have a deep love for my home, my state, and people, and nothing makes me more happy than being able to bring big dreams to life for couples who want to celebrate their love and new beginnings among the mountains. Let’s adventure together.” ellaandcompanywv@gmail.com; 250 East Avenue, Thomas; 304.614.7273; facebook.com/ellaandcompanywv
Tucker’d? You and your guests will enjoy the wide variety of lodging options. From slopeside vacation homes with hot tubs and premium amenities to an abundance of hotel/motel rooms to lodge accommodations at the resorts, the choice is yours. CANAAN VALLEY RESORT STATE PARK With 160 new guest rooms and fireplace suites and 23 cabins and cottages for your guests’ accommodations as well as amenities that include an indoor pool, hot tub, saunas, 18-hole golf course, scenic chairlift rides, and more; Canaan Valley Resort is perfect for weddings, of all needs and sizes. Add delicious cuisine catered by the resort’s chef, and your wedding will be memorable not only for you, but for your guests as well. canaanresort.com; 304.866.4121, ext. 2671
BLACK BEAR RESORT Black Bear Resort may be best known for its charming pedestal homes, but there are also large suites in the inn that overlook Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge. With amenities that include an outdoor heated pool, fish ponds, mini golf, playground, tennis, basketball, volleyball, a nature trail, 24-hour security, miles of private roads for riding bikes, and a large mountain lodge with large decks for meetings, events, weddings, or reunions, your wedding party will never want to leave. blackbearwv.com; 304.866.4391/800.553.2327
For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775
CALLIE LINDSEY PHOTOGRAPHY; MYKAH PHOTOGRAPHY
Golf is a major attraction at Canaan Valley Resort State Park, featuring one of the top 10 courses is the state.
THE OBERPORTS
BLACKWATER FALLS STATE PARK
TIMBERLINE FOUR SEASONS RESORT
Blackwater Falls State Park is an iconic four-season state park, offering 54 lodge guest rooms that provide sweeping views of the densely forested gorge. In addition to lodge rooms, there are 39 fully furnished cabins—13 deluxe cabins and 26 vacation cabins—to choose from. blackwaterfalls.com; 304.259.5216
While there are plenty of adventures to be had in the area, another option is to just relax while you are at Timberline resort. Timbers Inn, a slopeside hotel, offers all the amenities you need to kick back after a day of celebrating. Vacation homes and condominiums are another option. Many homes feature hot tubs, decks, and fireplaces. t4sr. com; 866.438.7259
GOLDEN ANCHOR CABINS
RENT A VACATION HOME
Conveniently located two miles south of Canaan Valley State Park with panoramic views of Mount Porte Crayon, one of the five highest points on the Eastern Continental Divide, Golden Anchor Cabins offers luxury honeymoon cabin rentals with private hot tubs and gas fireplaces. Enhance your stay by adding hand-dipped chocolate covered strawberries, a custom welcome banner, a rose petal heart on the bed, a dozen long stem roses, and a chilled bottle of wine. goldenanchorcabins.com; 304.866.2722
With a plethora of rental companies in the area offering everything from intimate cabins perfect for the honeymooning couple to estate homes large enough to house your entire wedding party, it’s easy to make your destination wedding a weekend-long affair.
For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775
BEST OF CANAAN bestofcanaan.com; 304.866.8680/877.484.8680 CANAAN REALTY canaanrealty.com; 304.866.4400/800.448.0074 MOUNTAIN TOP REALTY mountaintoprealty.com; 304.866.4300/800.624.4341 TIMBERLINE FOUR SEASONS REALTY t4sr.com; 304.866.2127/866.438.7259
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Bear Paw Lodge overlooks the slopes, photo courtesy of Canaan Valley Resort. Brides have many indoor reception sites to choose from, photo courtesy of The Oberports.
Countryside weddings are popular, photo courtesy of Photography by Amanda. Nelson Farms has indoor and outdoor options, photo courtesy of Erika Smith. Indoor sites
are easily personalized, photo courtesy of The Oberports. Old Timberline offers scenic backdrops, photo courtesy of The Oberports.
For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Top Spots for Photo Ops In Canaan Valley, the highest valley east of the Mississippi, Mother Nature is a guest at your wedding. Encompassing some of the most majestic scenery in the highlands, it will feel as if you’ve stepped into a painting. Here scenic destinations outnumber traffic lights and your options for fabulous photography know no bounds.
THE OBERPORTS; CALLIE LINDSEY PHOTOGRAPHY; JESSICA WALDO
1. Dolly Sods Wilderness The 17,000-acre Dolly Sods Wilderness Area in the Monongahela National Forest is filled with heart-stopping scenic opportunities—from blueberry bogs to waterfalls to plateaus of pines. Bear Rocks Preserve is a boulderstrewn, windswept expanse that lies on a ridge crest that forms part of the Eastern Continental Divide.
2. Blackwater Falls It’s easy to get to a beautiful spot to capture the tumbling headwaters of the Blackwater River plunging 63 feet behind you. With a well-maintained wooden walkway and stairs, the path to the falls offer several viewing platforms that place the falls in picture perfect position.
3. Lindy and Pendleton Point Overlooks These two locations located within Blackwater Falls State Park are a short hike and the vistas are worth it. The dramatic dips and curves of Blackwater Canyon are a breathtaking backdrop.
NEED A CATERER? If your reception is held at Canaan Valley Resort State Park or Blackwater Falls State Park, your catering needs will be provided by the venue. But for other locations, check out these creative culinary options. White Grass Café, 304.866.4114, wgcafe@yahoo.com is known for its vegetarian options and locally sourced cuisine and exceptional service. Sirianni’s 304.259.5454 is an institution in the valley, known for its casual fare and range of home-style options. Tuscan Grille Catering, 304.478.4020, dishes out Americana cuisine. Be sure to try the much-requested Oak Barrel Steak. For area information, visit canaanvalley.org or call 800.782.2775
4. Canaan Valley National Wildlife Area The 16,000-acre refuge is comprised of unique topography. The expansive views over grasslands and wetlands are bookended by mountains and dotted with wildflowers, waterways, and manicured trails.
FLORALS For your bouquets, centerpieces, and floral décor, these area florists will help make your vision a reality. Morning Glory Floral by Heather Nelson morninggloryfloralwv@gmail.com; facebook.com/morninggloryfloralwv; Thomas Yard, 304.463.4999; Steven’s Florist, 304.478.2161.
mywvwedding.com | 29
Chic
WHEN THRIFT MEETS This Bohemian bride did not have to compromise on style for her green nuptials. written by
Monica Orosz â&#x20AC;˘ photographed by Liv Hefner Photography
A
alex aspinwall recalls noticing allie boso around the campus of West Virginia University when he enrolled there in 2010—her distinctive fashion sense at the time included carrying a Rubik’s Cubeinspired purse she’d found at a thrift store. The native of Chesapeake, Virginia, hadn’t quite worked out a way to strike up a conversation with Allie until he noticed her standing in line one day to donate blood. “I’d never given blood before, but I figured if there’s ever a good time to give blood, it’s now,” says Alex, who’d transferred to WVU as a sophomore. “I saw she was giving blood at 2, so I went for 2 also.” Alex and Allie, a freshman, chatted during the process, which fortunately went smoothly, and afterward he asked her if she’d like to go to a baseball game in Pittsburgh with him. When Alex learned Allie was a vegetarian, he tried not to advertise the fact that he’s an avid hunter and fisherman—in fact, he’d transferred to WVU after a year of college in Virginia to enter WVU’s fisheries management program. Allie, who’d grown up in Wood County, near Parkersburg, was a fashion design major and says the hunting and fishing stickers on Alex’s car gave him away. Still, the two hit it off immediately and issues like eating meat and hunting didn’t seem to matter as much as the things they shared in common, like enjoying nature and concern for the environment. By the time Alex graduated, a semester before Allie, they were planning their future together. Alex headed off to graduate school at Auburn University in Alabama and the two were separated for about six months before Allie graduated in the spring of 2014 and decided to move to be near him. That fall, he proposed. “There was a park across from where I lived and we would walk there a couple of times a week,” Allie says. “One day we met there and he wanted to get some good pictures with the leaves, so he set up a GoPro camera to get pictures, and he proposed.” They decided to marry the following summer, giving them about 10 months to plan the wedding.
an outdoor ceremony
Allie knew right away she wanted to get married at her family’s home in Washington, situated on 13 acres that had provided many happy days of playing in the woods as a child. “I’ve always wanted a small wedding and I didn’t want it to be indoors or in a church,” she says. “I had seen a picture of a wedding in the middle of the woods, so that was my original plan. I just wanted to be really close to nature and to have just our families there.” Alex says that was just fine with him. “I kind of liked that it was going to be in the woods and outside,” he says. Allie’s mom, Anne Boso, admits she and her husband, Ed, were taken aback by the plan at first. “We kind of panicked,” she says. “We tried to get her to consider a church wedding—we were a little afraid we couldn’t make this wedding what she wanted. I had 32 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
never been to a wedding in the woods. But after about two weeks, we just decided it was so Allie. She is so hippie, and Alex is an avid hunter and fisherman. It was perfect for them, so how could we say no? We accepted the challenge.” Then Allie started letting her other ideas slip out a bit at a time, Anne recalls: things like how she wanted to make her own wedding dress and purchase used bridesmaids’ dresses from thrift stores, and that she wanted a “green” wedding—no paper products. “Little by little, she told us what the whole idea was. And we accepted each thing as it came along,” Anne says.
walking the walk
This was the child, after all, who had been a vegetarian since the 10th grade and who preferred as a teen to purchase clothing at thrift stores and remake them. “It got to the point where she didn’t want to buy new material. She wouldn’t even let me take her shopping for new clothes, except for jeans,” says Anne, a seamstress who taught Allie to sew when she was a girl. Though she was under no edict to keep costs down, Allie says she was determined to. The biggest savings came from having a wedding at home and the reception in the family barn. There were some compromises, however. At first, Allie suggested guests—about 100 total—could just sit on the ground
Allie’s dream wedding included going green—not only by having the ceremony in the woods on her parents’ property, but also by being
frugal, like getting her attendants’ blush dresses from thrift stores. She also used invitations made from botanical paper that could be planted.
during the ceremony. Anne put her etiquette foot down and came up with an alternative that suited Allie to a T. A windstorm had come through the property and knocked down a number of oak and cherry trees that Ed, who is handy with wood, hadn’t gotten around to dealing with. The Bosos suggested he could craft benches for the wedding using the felled wood for the bases and planed wood from a local sawmill for the tops. The no-paper edict actually made planning dinner settings a fun project. “I have to confess, I love dishes and old glassware, so I had a good start,” Anne says. Her collection was being built even before Allie was born—she’d attended an auction at the closing DeSales Heights Academy in Parkersburg when she was pregnant with Allie. “They had a fabulous set of china from the ’20s and I waited all morning for it to come to bid. And I eventually got it,” she says. “I never realized I was buying china for the baby I was carrying—I never really used that china until the wedding.” Still, the wedding dinner was going to require more settings than the Bosos owned. Anne and Ed spent weekends scouring antique shops and flea markets, making a loop around West Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania. “Everything was going to be mismatched, all different colors,” Anne says. “I kept a running tally of colors and designs I already had and I tried to buy in multiples when I could. I wanted to make it look cool. I probably had three boxes of silver plate by the time I was finished—we mismatched all of that as well.” Anne did not stop there. “I found some old cotton napkins with crocheted edges, and Allie said they would be great.” Her collection of pewter candlesticks also would be put to good use. In a favorite antique shop and craft mall in Uniontown, Pennsylvania, they found a chandelier perfect for anchoring the wooded site of the wedding—and they returned there when everyone decided another was needed for the barn reception area.
planning from afar
Because Allie and Alex were still in Auburn and Anne was in West Virginia—and because none of them had experience lining up caterers, florists, and the like—they decided some help was in order. Enter Misti Sims of Little Black Dress, an event planner who works in both Ohio and West Virginia. “I couldn’t have done it without my mom and I don’t think my mom could have done it without Misti,” Allie says. Misti loved Allie’s Bohemian vision for the wedding and stepped in quickly with ideas of her own, along with recommending vendors that fit the bride’s ideas. The three soon were texting, emailing, and sharing photos of ideas. “I bounced ideas off her and asked her opinion and I just can’t say enough about her,” Anne says of Misti. Allie was adamant about not wasting paper and Anne says if she’d had her way, there wouldn’t have even been paper save-the-date notices or invitations. Misti located a source of botanical paper that could be used for both. “It was embedded mywvwedding.com | 33
Personal touches at Allie and Alex’s wedding included flowers that looked like they had been
plucked from a field and a swing that was a throwback to one from Allie’s childhood.
with wildflower seeds that could be planted after,” Anne says. “We purchased the same paper to print programs on.” Misti, who has run her own business for seven years, calls the Boso-Aspinwall wedding one of her all-time favorite events. “I loved Allie’s style. And I never did a wedding before where the bride had such concerns about being green.” The planner also appreciated the enthusiasm Allie’s parents had for sourcing eclectic details for the wedding. The only items rented were farm tables, which were paired with Chiavari fruitwood chairs Misti owns as part of her business. She recommended Valley Catering in Washington, which developed a menu that included pecan chicken and a pasta bar, and that emphasized local produce that would be in season during the August wedding. Lisa’s Sweet Stop in Beverly created a traditional three-tiered cake along 34 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
with other confections, such as cookies and candy. Misti recommended photographer Liv Hefner because her photo style is soft. “I knew she could capture these two beautiful people being married in the forest where Allie used to swing as a little girl; I knew she could capture the story of Allie and her dad walking out the front door of their home, down the steps, in a gown she made herself and into the woods.” Passiflora in Marietta was the natural choice for flowers. Owner Caroline Waller is a grower and designer with an extensive cutting garden who created arrangements and bouquets that fit Allie’s request that they seem like plucked wildflowers. Selections included zinnias, hydrangeas, roses, and even green succulents tucked in. The groom and groomsmen wore boutonnieres made of succulents.
mywvwedding.com | 35
the big day
A mint-colored bicycle and a microbus served as photo props, while flowers could be found everywhere: on the table, on the cake, and in the
bicycle’s basket. Allie’s parents sourced mismatched china from antique shops in West Virginia, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
36 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
The day of the wedding, August 22, 2015, dawned beautifully—Misti jokes she has a weather angel on her side. “In 100 weddings I have planned, it’s only rained for one of them.” Ed’s benches were in place, along with several Persian rugs from the Boso household, which decorated the gift and guest book section as well as where the bride and groom stood when they exchanged vows. Antiques placed around the area created a welcoming outdoor space at the edge of the woods. A mint-colored vintage bicycle, complete with flowers bursting from the basket, added to the ambience. Ed surprised his daughter by making and hanging a wooden swing similar to one Allie had played on many times as a child. He also borrowed a vintage Volkswagen bus as a prop for photos—Allie says she’s always dreamed of owning one. The bride donned the long ivory chiffon and silk charmeuse dress she designed and made. It was sleeveless, with a deep V front and a low back embellished with a chain detail made of Swarovski crystals and rhinestone strands Allie found at a hobby store. Her mom ordered the belt and Allie, who was barefoot for the wedding, created coordinating anklets. She wore an Italian silver necklace that had been her great-grandmother’s. She estimates her total cost was about $100. In keeping with the rest of the wedding, Allie selected mismatched blush dresses that she and her mother found used, in stores and on eBay, for the four bridesmaids. “I didn’t want my bridesmaids to have to worry about spending money on a dress when they agreed to be with me on my day,” Allie says. All she asked was that they wear neutral sandals—or go barefoot, as she did. Alex and his groomsmen wore simple gray tuxes from Hornor & Harrison in Parkersburg. Alex had no special requests or requirements for the day, “as long as Allie was happy.” Nonetheless, he wasn’t forgotten in the planning. The tables were decorated with antlers, a nod to the hunter. Allie’s father walked her down the aisle to The Temptations’ “My Girl.” As part of the ceremony, Allie and Alex planted a tree on the property, near the road, where they will be able to see it in years to come even if her family no longer owns the home. The oak was placed in soil from both Allie’s and Alex’s homes to symbolize the families joining together. During the barn reception, Allie and Alex had their first dance to Aqualung’s “Brighter Than Sunshine.” In a fun turn of events, Allie’s maid of honor caught the bouquet and Alex’s best man was able to nab the garter. Now that Alex, 26, has completed his graduate degree, the couple has relocated to Norfolk, Virginia, a natural place to pursue his fisheries management career. And Allie, 24, has recently changed her diet a bit. She now eats fish.
Magic PURE
Nearly a decade of affection blossomed into this whimsical—and DIY—homesteader wedding overlooking the New River Gorge. written by
Mikenna Pierotti • photographed by The Oberports
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they actually met some 15 years ago, Tony Terrafranca is quick to point out. “But she didn’t remember me,” he says. Mary Grace Legg, for her part, sheepishly admits that she didn’t recognize the young man she was re-introduced to at a birthday party in Denver, Colorado, in 2004, even though they’d first laid eyes on each other years before, at a college party, in Colorado Springs. “It’s terrible, I know,” she says. But as much as he chides her, Tony doesn’t seem to mind. He insists she made an impression on him, though—one that convinced him to make his move. “I thought she was intimidating. She’s so beautiful and sophisticated, but in a punk rock kind of way,” he says. Mary Grace laughs at his description, but chimes in with one of her own. She says she was a bit cynical before she met him. “Tony was very persistent, which was nice. He was just different from anyone I’d dated before. He’s loving. He’s really good at expressing his emotions. And he’s good at getting me to actually open up. I’d never had anyone in my life do that so well. And he’s a good-looking guy, too. That helped,” she laughs. Their first date in 2007, however, was memorable for both. Perhaps to solidify him in Mary Grace’s memory, Tony invited her to nearby Lincoln Park and the two took a stroll, exploring the landscape in a totally unfamiliar way: with their eyes closed. “I loved that he was so adventurous,” she says of the date that quickly became much more. And that sense of adventure would follow the new couple from the Rocky Mountains to Appalachia.
taking root
Although Mary Grace’s business—LockerPartners Love Cinematography—was a growing success in Denver, the city of her birth, Tony’s love for the land and dream of homesteading were drawing him to Sandstone, West Virginia, where he’d grown up. Thankfully, the couple wasn’t deterred by the idea of a temporarily long-distance relationship. So, for six months in 2011, Tony returned to the Mountain State to farm, raise hogs, and learn a thing or two about self-sufficiency. He took that knowledge back to Denver to try his hand at urban homesteading in 2012, but the landscape of his childhood wouldn’t let him go. “Tony just wanted to farm in West Virginia,” Mary Grace says. “He’s attached to this land.” So the couple decided to make the leap. “Tony and his brother had bought the land next door to where he grew up. That was a turning point in our relationship,” she says. “A few years after that we decided to both move out, take two years, and build a small house.” The couple also took the opportunity to start a new chapter in their relationship. In spring 2013, at the very park where they’d had their first adventurous date, Tony proposed
Mary Grace and Tony’s wedding on their Sandstone homestead was a
completely unique reflection of their lives, featuring a woodsy ceremony,
40 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
friends playing music, and a tintype photo booth.
The bride and groom’s nuptials included hanging their wedding
rings from a tree for three days. Mary Grace helped create her
dress, and she also made a kravat from ties to top off Tony’s outfit.
to Mary Grace with an antique emerald ring that once belonged to his grandmother. Mary Grace said yes. But not just to him. “For me, it’s like I decided to marry this landscape—marry West Virginia,” she says. “It’s been a crazy change going from Denver to Sandstone, but I think that’s what made the decision so powerful.”
from the earth up
In 2013, Mary Grace and Tony didn’t only have a wedding to plan. They had a homestead to get off the ground. And they had a vision of using that homestead to celebrate their union in a truly unique way—as both a venue and a source of sustenance. “We were always going to have the wedding here, on our land. It wasn’t even a question,” Tony says. “We knew we had a lot to figure out. But we wanted to have our families and friends here so they could experience it.” The multi-year process involved everything from raising hogs and growing vegetables for friends and a local caterer to cook at the reception to growing flowers and collecting fun, animal-themed vases to display arrangements. For this pair, every detail was an opportunity to fuel their guests’ excitement—and show off their creativity. The couple’s save-the-dates contained a riddle and a special key that guests had to solve to discover the wedding date, which was revealed when the key was placed over the correct page in the Old Farmer’s Almanac. Their invitations were flash drives accompanied by tiny plastic figures representing each guest, which were returned to represent the guests’ intentions to attend and later used to decorate their favors: tiny terrariums filled with soil and moss from the couple’s land. Although the couple didn’t have a traditional wedding party, they knew from the beginning stages of planning that they wanted to involve friends in the ceremony. And because many of Tony’s friendships revolved around music—he’d begun drumming in high school and had played in bands since 2000—asking those friends to play seemed a natural fit. “In Colorado Springs he helped form a band called Happy Ugly Ostrich with friends Tim Costigan and Brian Elyo,” Mary Grace says. “We asked Tim to play ‘Where is My Mind?’ by The Pixies to call wedding guests to the ceremony. It’s a song that’s especially important to Tony because he performed it with friends at the second show he ever played.” Another musically inclined friend, Chris Fowke, from a Denver band Tony was involved in called The Jim Jims, played “Jelly” by The Flaming Lips, and “Just Like mywvwedding.com | 41
Heaven” by The Cure. And Mary Grace’s friend Shawn played a cover of The Kinks’ “Strangers” during the reception bonfire lighting. Wanting to honor a few of her closest lady friends, Mary Grace asked several to take part in the ceremony, playing the part of the four elements. “We decided to include blessings of the four natural elements that also happen to affect living and thriving off the land: the elements of air, water, fire, and earth,” Mary Grace says. Knowing she wanted to wear some sort of crown herself, Mary Grace invited those friends to her house for drinks and laughs and to create their own elemental headpieces from craft supplies and found items like ferns, beads, and pheasant feathers. Friends and family were also asked to participate in many of the couple’s whimsical traditions, including a special game of Assassin using homemade rubber band guns. Kickball, fireworks, wish lanterns—even a bonfire—were planned to keep the mood light, yet meaningful. This was the same approach Mary Grace and Tony took to outfitting themselves for the big day. As someone who works in the wedding industry, Mary Grace has seen it all and knows the difficulty of creating a unique look. Luckily, she had a connection—Denver artist Leslie Minnis—who happily offered to make the bride’s dress. First, Mary Grace and Leslie got to work laying the foundation for the ensemble, inspired by a styled wedding dress shoot on the Lifetime series “Project Runway.” “It was called the ‘Hurricane Dress.’ I was attracted to the non-wedding, almost punk rock/deconstructionist feel of it. It was gorgeous and feminine but not precious—almost tough. A feeling of originality and femininity without perfection—void of pretension but still otherworldly and special.” They then took their vision to the streets of Denver, finding fun materials at Allyn’s Fabric & Bridal Supply and tulle stripped from skirts they found at a thrift store. “We took the material and experimented with dying it, shredding it, and pinning it up in different ways until it felt right. It was a mix of softer fabrics like cotton and linen that we dyed and mixed with some textured fabric pieced together with metallic thread, a few art deco embroidered trim and beads, and the deconstructed thrifted tulle underskirts.” In the end, she and her friend were able to bring that dream to life—in three parts—a top layer with a beaded neckline made from a vintage necklace in Mary Grace’s own collection, an underskirt that added lift, and a tulle train the bride was able to remove later in the evening when she was dancing. To complete the look, Mary Grace added an icy white and silver crescent-shaped crown made by Etsy artist Insubordinate Avantgarde Design and a pair of perfectly whimsical sparkly blue-green shoes with gold sculpted heels in the shape of woodland creatures. Not to be outdone, Tony put his own stamp on his wedding attire—an ensemble pieced together from vintage, DIY, and steam punk-inspired details like smokejumper work boots, a crown of branches, and a cravat crafted of vintage ties fashioned by the bride herself. “I had to find something I felt comfortable standing next to her in,” he says of Mary Grace’s stunning dress. 42 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
Mary Grace and Tony wore crowns on the big day and grew much
of the food that was served. Tony called everyone to dinner, which
ended with a table full of pies for guests to select from.
A bonfire kept guests warm during the September reception that went into the evening. It provided a gathering place for Tony’s musician friends to play a specific setlist of songs, as well as for striking photos.
To keep this organic theme running throughout the ceremony and reception, the couple provided woodland animal masks, flower crowns, and homemade brooches to family and friends participating in the ceremony, while guests were encouraged—and inspired—to join in the fun with their own woodland-themed attire.
bound to the land
The morning of the wedding, Tony and Mary Grace woke up together. Some of their guests and wedding party members had stayed the night and camped at the homestead, and the group hung out and prepared for the day as the couple took a morning drive to pick flowers for bouquets of 44 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
zinnias, bachelor’s buttons, amaranth, cosmos, marigolds, and greenery—including brightly colored chili peppers and fragrant basil. For the wedding, those flowers, along with whimsical bunches of baby vegetables, were whipped into stunning arrangements by florist friend Bianca Maestas, owner of Sketch Garden in Denver. Other friends, including Tony’s old bandmates, played guitar or sang throughout the ceremony. Wherever they could, the couple encouraged friends and family to get involved and make the day that much more meaningful. And to tie all the elements together, the couple created a unique ceremony to celebrate their love of each
buried the effigy of a saint in the middle of their circle of guests. As a last touch, the couple jumped a broomstick after being pronounced husband and wife. “This was all about creating a sacred space. We wanted it to feel big and binding,” she says. For Tony, “it was about making something meaningful for us.”
celebrating the harvest
other, the land, and the people who came to share in their homesteading happiness. “We’re sort of earth worshippers,” Mary Grace says. “We get a lot from our land, being on this path of sustainability and trying to grow our own food. That needed to be incorporated somehow.” To pay homage to the landscape that fed and supported them, the couple created a short yet meaningful ritual, starting with their wedding rings, which were hung from a tree for three days. In addition to the four friends who represented air, water, fire, and earth, the couple had four family members each recite a blessing during the ceremony. The couple later tied an infinity cord and, in honor of Mary Grace’s Filipino and Catholic heritage, her mother
After a photo shoot with West Virginia photographers The Oberports, the wedding party and guests enjoyed cocktails and a tintype photo booth until the chiming of a cast iron dinner bell, made by the groom’s father during his own back-to-the-land days, called them all in for a reception feast. The bounty, in part raised on the newlyweds’ homestead, included roasted vegetables, winter squash, beets and potatoes, stuffed mushrooms with barley and quinoa, yellow curry, salad, bread, and succulent pork, accented in spectacular fashion with homemade pies, West Virginia beer, and Colorado whiskey Mary Grace bottled herself. After dinner, guests gathered around a bonfire to dance and spot glowworms in the chilly September night. “We’re older, in our mid-30s now, and it was great to be able to just hang out, bond with everyone, and feel like kids again,” Mary Grace says. “We wanted to bind our relationship and our families to this place,” Tony agrees. Now, looking back on the day that was some three years in the making, and with a long future of homesteading to look forward to, Mary Grace and Tony can’t help but describe their wedding in otherworldly terms. For them, “the day was pure magic.”
The couple’s do-ityourself wedding was especially meaningful because they hosted it at their homestead on land near where Tony grew up in Sandstone. mywvwedding.com | 45
GOING TO THE
Chapel When Jill Justice and Adam Long got engaged, it was time to build a church at The Greenbrier.
written by
Mary Wade Burnside â&#x20AC;˘ photographed by Hopkins Studios
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the white clapboard chapel—topped by a bell tower and steeple and distinguished by columns and colorful stained glass windows—looks like it has stood on the stately grounds of The Greenbrier for ages. And yet, it was built in 2015. The White Sulphur Springs resort’s owner, Jim Justice, who had eventual plans for the church at the resort he bought in 2009, was motivated to hasten its construction when his daughter, Jill, got engaged to Adam Long in November 2014. That gave the entrepreneur a mere 10 months to pull off the feat, from the time Adam asked for Jill’s hand in marriage during a walk on a lovely autumn day on the highest point of the Greenbrier County farm where they now reside to their star-studded nuptials that took place over Labor Day weekend in 2015. Creating a venue from scratch, of course, was only one aspect of the event that required a great deal of planning and coordination, and many friends, family members, and associates gathered around Jill to make her vision come alive. They included The Greenbrier’s new director of weddings, Maren White; wedding planner Melinda Workman at Gillespie’s Flowers & Productions, which delivered approximately two semi-truck loads of dahlias, roses, and hydrangeas to the ceremony and reception sites; and even the chapel project manager, Jill’s godfather Bob Cochran, whose discovery, along with Maren, of when the sun would hit the altar’s centerpiece stained glass window just right to light up the chapel set the time that Jill would walk down the aisle and exchange vows with Adam.
perfect day
But before there could be a weekend-long celebration of Jill and Adam’s marriage, the two had to meet. That took place in high school in 2000, although they did not even live in the same state. They first bumped into each other at a football game in Lewisburg, where she attended Greenbrier East. He was home visiting from Hargrave Military Academy in Virginia. “I was attracted to her,” Adam says. A similar circle of friends kept them bumping into each other but geography kept them apart until he moved back to Lewisburg after graduating from West Virginia University’s College of Law in 2011. Jill was 80 miles away, finishing up her residency at the Edward Via College of Osteopathic Medicine at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia. “We were at least only about an hour and a half drive away, not multiple hours,” Adam says. They began dating in the winter of 2013, and by November 2014, Adam, now an attorney for The Greenbrier, made a plan to propose during a walk. “It was a fall day but still clear, and you could see all the valley and it was just really pretty. It was just a perfect day in our book,” says Jill, who serves as president of the resort as well as a family physician at The Greenbrier Clinic. As for the proposal itself, surrounded by a 360-degree view of the Greenbrier Valley, Adam got down on one knee and asked Jill to marry him. “And luckily she said yes,” he says. Jill and Adam considered a spring 2016 wedding, but decided 48 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
they wanted to marry sooner. So, after consulting football schedules for both Virginia Tech and WVU, they chose the following Labor Day holiday as the time for the event, with the ceremony on September 5, 2015. Of course, there was that little issue of the chapel where the ceremony would take place to replace one that had existed at The Greenbrier years ago. “That’s something that never got started and, when we got engaged, it kind of expedited that process of going through with that plan,” Jill says. But with winter on its way, construction did not begin until spring, leaving six months to raise the roof and complete all the design elements. “It was really a time crunch to get it done.” Jill also met with Maren, who was settling into her job as the director of weddings at the resort. “She was great about getting to know me first and suggesting things I would like and that would fit Adam and me as a couple,” Jill says. “She would get ideas and let us pick things. We did a lot of Pinteresting. It was very interactive.”
Jill and Adam might have had 500 guests at their wedding at The Greenbrier
and 1,250 for the reception, but they still demonstrated their
personalities with touches such as a Jeep Wagoneer as a photo prop.
mywvwedding.com | 49
Maren had the task not only of helping Jill and Adam, as she would any other betrothed couple, but also balancing their low-key personalities with the sumptuous celebration the wedding inevitably would be. After all, the guest list for the ceremony filled the chapel’s 500-seat capacity, and a total of 1,250 were invited to the reception, including dignitaries such as former West Virginia Governor Gaston Caperton, current Governor Earl Ray Tomblin, and U.S. Senator Joe Manchin. “The first day I started working there, I learned of their interests,” Maren says. “I learned of their love of dogs and their color palette and I deduced that she is reserved as far as approaching it. I did keep that in mind and didn’t really try to make this wedding any more than what she wanted it to be. At the end of the day, it was going to be a grand affair, due to her family and the location, but it was about her and Adam. I tried to keep it personal to them as opposed to showy.” One of the first ways guests witnessed Jill’s and Adam’s personalities was in their save-the-date cards, which featured a line drawing of a classic Jeep Wagoneer—a staple from Jill’s childhood—and her dogs Lilly, Butter, and Molly hanging out the windows. The Jeep became a reality when the father of one of her bridesmaids restored an early 1980s model that the couple used for day-of wedding photos. Dogs figured into the wedding in many ways, including when Boston terrier Molly walked down the aisle on a cherry blossom-covered leash as a flower girl, and when her likeness, carved in fondant, peered out from a cluster of white and pink roses on the bottom layer of a six-tiered, blush-colored wedding cake on an etched, gold stand. Jill and Maren also took care to make sure all the guests felt tended to. For instance, when the wedding weekend arrived, each one received a welcome basket filled with bottled water; snacks; koozies; cupcakes from Jill’s Blacksburg, Virginia, shop Gobble Cakes; and a beautiful, hand-painted itinerary. Those were personalized depending on which events each guest would attend and featured drawings representing each activity, such as the rehearsal dinner or a welcome dinner and a Friday night party at The Greenbrier’s Casino Club featuring a Michael Jackson cover artist. It was just one of the many fine points executed by Maren and her team for all aspects of the weekend celebration.
get the church to me on time
When it came time to select her gown, Jill traveled to Kleinfeld Bridal in New York City, renowned as the shooting location of TLC’s Say Yes to the Dress. And Carleton Varney, president of Dorothy Draper & Co.—named for the designer who in the mid-1900s gave The Greenbrier its distinctive and colorful makeover—attended Jill’s appointment, offering his opinion on the feel of each gown. That fact, along with Jill’s connection to the internationally famed resort, might have made for an interesting episode of the show, but the bride had no interest in pursuing that path. “I’m too shy for that.” She tried on about 10 dresses, including some full ball gowns. Then she slipped on a silk zibeline A-line, V-neck gown with a high collar by Tony Ward. “I knew what I wanted,” Jill says. “I had in my mind something simple and 50 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
timeless when I went up there. I tried on some beautiful dresses, but they were just not me.” When she saw the Tony Ward gown, “I knew immediately, and that was it.” Varney agreed with her selection. “I thought it was very appropriate,” he says, calling it “Shakespearean” in its aura and tone. “It’s a gown that looked like it had mystique and antiquity to it, but it was simple.” With the date set and a gown selected, Jill and Adam’s wedding was taking shape, but there remained one large detail: the chapel. Jill’s father decided to have it built on the North Lawn, where a historic old oak tree had died. Ultimately, the memory of the tree would be infused into the chapel when it was carved into two wooden crosses— coincidentally 42 inches tall, the same number Jill had worn as a high school basketball player. As for the chapel’s décor, Varney drew on “spirit of the mountains” when he designed the stained glass windows with West Virginia’s flora and fauna in mind. “It’s a little rabbit, it’s a butterfly, flowers, and roaring water,” Varney says. But would it all come together in time? Jill played the part of the cool bride even as she made daily checks on the progress. “I always had the attitude that if it got done, great, and if not, we would do it outside the chapel,” Jill says. Of course, that was not necessary, as the chapel was officially completed the night before the nuptials as workers stained the floors. It ended up being a special place for Jill for more than one reason. Wood beams in the church have been inscribed with Jill’s and Adam’s names, the date of the wedding, and their status as the first couple married there. “No one can see it but it’s special, because we know it’s there,” Jill says.
traditional vows
For some brides, superstition dictates that they walk down the aisle on the upswing of the hour hand of the clock. When Jill and Adam married promptly at 5:30, however, it was not so much superstition as it was how, at that hour, the light would beam through the chapel’s feature window—depicting the Appalachian Mountains, a stream, dogwood blossoms, and a sun—as well as the timing of the festivities that would follow. The bride and her father rode a carriage to the chapel. As they emerged, Jim told Jill that he loved her and was proud of her just before the doors—covered in hundreds of white roses and hydrangeas—opened. Jill figures the timing was the doing of her wedding planner, Maren. “There was no time for nerves,” she says. “I know she did that on purpose.” For Adam, in spite of all the glamour of the weekend, this was the part of the day he remembers most. “Seeing her come through the doors of the chapel was amazing. That’s what stands out the most. Jill came through the doors and I can just remember standing there. It really didn’t feel like 500 people in there. The doors opened and Jill was coming down with her father. It was the first time I had seen the dress and the first time I had seen her all day. It took my breath away.”
Jillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s attendants matched The Greenbrierâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s rhododendron china, personalized with
monogrammed napkins and sprigs of lavender like those used in the bouquets and other flower
arrangements. Jillâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s mother, Cathy, opened a letter from Jill before the chapel ceremony began.
mywvwedding.com | 51
An artist painted Jill and Adamâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s nuptials at the newly built chapel
52 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
and then finished up outside the grand custom reception tent so
that the guests who did not attend the ceremony could take in the scene.
Jim Justice surprised his daughter with a performance
by Lionel Richie for their fatherdaughter dance; Jill’s Boston
terrier Molly made a fondant appearance on the five-tiered cake.
song,” Jill says. “He smiled ear to ear. He was really smiling, thinking, ‘This worked out. She picked a Lionel Richie song.’” Guests enjoyed a buffet including country fried chicken marinated in buttermilk and spices and grilled prime filet mignon from The Greenbrier’s famed Draper-designed rhododendron china. “We really tried to do Southern comfort food,” Jill says. “We did fried chicken and sweet corn pudding and cheese grits and lobster mashed potatoes. They are staples at The Greenbrier and some of our family’s favorite foods.” Accommodating 1,250 guests in a custom tent was no easy Afterward, Jill and Adam cut into the crème brûlée-flavored feat, but Steve Gillespie, project manager at Gillespie’s Flowers cake, created by Amy Mills, the executive pastry chef at The & Productions, was able to put together a tent that was nearly Greenbrier Sporting Club. 28,000 square feet and provided both the grandeur expected As another special touch, Maren had napkins embroidered of The Greenbrier as well as the cozy feeling Jill wanted. He with Jill’s and Adam’s first initials, featuring sprigs of lavender achieved that by using five tiers on three levels so the space did tucked into the gray ribbon that had been tied around them, not seem so big. When it came to decoration, Varney helped out to be used at the head table. “Then, of course, the lavender again, and the tent ultimately was outfitted with 14 chandeliers, sprig was something carried out through bridal party,” Maren strings of lights and white draping hanging from the ceiling, says. Lavender also provided a lovely scent to the bride’s and a black and white checkered dance floor, and of course, more bridesmaids’ bouquets, also featuring blush and cream garden white roses and hydrangeas. roses, artemisia, and seeded eucalyptus. There also was a smaller tent for cocktails at the site originally Adam and Jill took a honeymoon to Maui, Hawaii, but not intended for the reception tent before that was moved to the 17th until after they had completed their wedding weekend. That hole of the Old White TPC golf course. “We did two different included brunch guests on Sunday and traveling to Blacksburg feels for both tents,” Jill says. “The cocktail tent was more like a on Monday to see a Virginia Tech–Ohio State football game. garden theme, but we wanted to make the reception tent more “It was neat because Virginia Tech has always been a staple in romantic and cozy. It sounds ridiculous because it was so big.” Adam’s and my life.” Jill and Adam had selected the band Party on the Moon to And a year after her whirlwind-but-methodically planned keep their guests dancing into the wee hours, but before the wedding weekend, Jill looks back on the celebration with band took the stage, Jim revealed a surprise to his daughter. fondness for how she and Adam were able to make their perBoth Jim and Jill are big Lionel Richie fans and Jill had decided sonalities shine through in spite of the large scale of the event. on the Commodores hit “Three Times a Lady” for their dance “I think we had a real good balance,” Jill says. “A lot of people together. Little did she—or just about anyone else at The said the same thing, that it seemed very intimate and seemed Greenbrier—know that Jim got the band’s famed singer and very personal. As crazy as it seems, it didn’t seem like things songwriter to perform. Surprisingly, it was a coincidence. “I told were big or extravagant, surrounded by friends and family and dad a couple days before the wedding that I had chosen that with all the very meaningful things we did.”
a special surprise
mywvwedding.com | 53
A Highland
Ring
A bride selects tartan accents and a hilly, misty site to make her Scottish groom feel at home during their West Virginia nuptials. Mary Wade Burnside photographed by Mike Hall written by
O
on a summer day in 2014, after five years of dating Martin Slavin, Caitlin Bailey heard her beloved say the words she had longed to hear, and in a romantic Scottish brogue, no less. “He got down on one knee,” Caitlin says. “I don’t really remember what he said, but I was so happy we were finally going to do this. We had been dating since 2009. And he said he wanted to spend the rest of his life with me. I said ‘yes’ before he stopped talking.” Martin, a native of Glasgow, Scotland, had taken Caitlin whitewater rafting on the Potomac River in Harpers Ferry, near where the couple lives in Martinsburg. That should have been her first clue, while because she enjoys paddling the rapids, Martin’s fear of drowning had prevented him from trying it before then. Little did she know on that date she has imprinted in her memory—June 22, 2014—that he had a vintage, cushion-cut diamond engagement ring zipped up in his swim trunks during the entire trip down the river, as well as a big surprise brewing in his mind. Even though the couple had been dating since 2009, their story goes back even further, to 2006 at a Halloween party at West Virginia University, where Caitlin was studying. Martin attended Potomac State College in Keyser, where he played soccer, and he was visiting friends in Morgantown. “I thought he was funny,” Caitlin remembers, but, “I thought he was out to meet girls.” Eventually, Martin transferred to WVU and her impression changed. “I got to know him more than as just the British soccer player.” He made her laugh and balanced out her more serious side. They began dating in the spring of 2009. A year later, Caitlin enrolled in WVU’s College of Law; Martin stayed in school to get a master’s degree in coaching. They both graduated in 2013 and moved to Martinsburg, where he had a coaching opportunity. She got a job as an assistant prosecuting attorney in Berkeley County.
a castle ceremony?
A year later, Caitlin was planning a wedding. As a native of Charleston whose family lived on the other side of the state from the Eastern Panhandle, and factoring in that her husband would have friends and family crossing the Atlantic Ocean for the event, that opened up locations to consider. Plus, Martin was going to wear his family’s McGoldrick tartan kilt for the wedding, and Caitlin had to plan around that. Her first thought was that Berkeley Springs Castle, an EnglishNorman castle built in neighboring Morgan County in the late 1800s, would be the ideal venue to match Martin’s kilt. But then Caitlin saw the rugged terrain and rolling hills of Swift Level Farm in Lewisburg and decided it would be the perfect spot. “Swift Level reminds me of a place out of a storybook or a fairy tale, and when you are standing out in that field with mountains rising around you on all sides, it has a magical feel to it. I got the same castle vibe from that space.” Caitlin went about making other choices that would fit in with her burgundy tartan wedding. At first, she thought that would be limiting, especially when she was trying to match every color in the kilt. But then she decided that, combined with the fall season of her 56 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
Caitlin wanted to honor Martinâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s Scottish heritage when she made
decisions about their wedding, so she matched his kilt with a tartan
belt and chose a location that complemented the theme.
mywvwedding.com | 57
In addition to the familiar “Take Me Home, Country Roads” singalong, guests also could chime in on Martin’s favorite Scottish pop song, “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles).”
September 12, 2015 wedding, she could use the maroon hue to her advantage. It did not hurt that Pantone—the purveyor of popular pigmentation—had designated the red wine-colored marsala as “in” for 2015. “At first, I was like, ‘Oh my gosh, it’s burgundy and funky yellow-brown, but then I started looking online. I looked at pictures of different Scottish weddings and seeing what brides did and I saw where brides didn’t match every color, and it looked great.” That did not mean Caitlin eschewed the idea of complementing her husband-to-be. She had a belt made in the kilt material to wrap around her light gold A-line Maggie Sottero gown. “I definitely loved the tartan belt and thought it was awesome that she had that made to match my kilt colors,” Martin says. He already owned a kilt, one that had been given to him by his late father; his groomsmen wore kilts that had been ordered from a company in Atlanta, Georgia. Martin also completed his look with the most formal highland accessories, including a Bonnie Prince Charlie jacket over a matching vest, a burgundy tie, a Jacobite-style shirt, a pouch around his waist called a sporran, kilt hose, and shoes called brogues.
58 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
Caitlin found other ways to coordinate the colors, including selecting burgundy dresses for her bridesmaids and an autumn palette for the flowers used at the wedding. For help with that, she turned to Pam West at West Farm Flowers in Lewisburg. “It was the goal to match the kilt and capture the theme of the wedding,” Pam says. “They supplied a piece of kilt material and we went from there.” Caitlin and Pam walked through fields of flowers and selected lisianthus and rose carmine for bouquets and decoration, as well as some peach and pink dahlias to brighten up the burgundies.
the perfect place
The bride also scouted Swift Level Farm, selecting a site for the ceremony that no other wedding couple had chosen. “She was drawn to one of the hay pastures with an amazing backdrop of the mountains,” says Rece Nester, events director at the Lewisburg venue owned by her mother, Jennifer “Tootie” Jones. “She wanted to keep things as natural as possible.” Rece and her team gathered additional branches to decorate the arbor that served as the altar under which Caitlin and Martin would exchange vows.
Swift Level Farm provided the feel that Caitlin wanted for her wedding as well as plenty of options for the ceremony,
Also important to the couple was spending time with all the friends and family who traveled to Lewisburg for the nuptials, so a bonfire on the property the night before brought guests together. The day of, dark clouds threatened the planned outdoor ceremony. But the weather cleared up a bit—providing just enough mist to hearken to the Scottish moors—so, just past the 4:30 start time, Caitlin was able to walk down the outdoor aisle as planned to a recording of The Beatles’ “In My Life,” in a nod to the music her parents had used at their wedding. Before and after, Lewisburg bagpiper Chris Brumley played “Scotland the Brave” as guests took their seats and “Flower of Scotland” for the recessional. And during, Caitlin and Martin exchanged “moderately traditional” vows and participated in a Celtic handfasting ceremony in which the couple’s hands were wrapped together in ribbon to symbolize their union. Bridge Road Bistro in Charleston celebrated the season with a buffet featuring both bacon and regular scones, an autumn salad with fall vegetables and pear vinaigrette, parmesan cheese grits, cornmeal crusted trout, and a roasted apple brined pork loin with an apricot glaze. Guests also could taste specialty cocktails, one created for Martin called a Maple Manhattan, and for Caitlin, a vodka and grapefruit juice concoction dubbed the Bride’s Pink Fairy Punch.
the reception, and photos. Although it was raining before the ceremony, it stopped just in time.
When it came time for their first dance, the couple chose a relatively new tune, Ellie Goulding’s “How Long Will I Love You.” But everyone had the opportunity to recognize the bride’s and groom’s cultures with sing-alongs to both “Take Me Home, Country Roads” and “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles),” the hit by the Scottish duo The Proclaimers. Although not usually considered a love song, it does conveniently feature some romantic lyrics: “When I wake up, I know I’m gonna be, I’m gonna be the man who wakes up next to you. … But I would walk five hundred miles, And I would walk five hundred miles, Just to be the man who walked a thousand miles, To fall down at your door.” Says Caitlin, “Martin likes to shut down the party with that song. Martin loves that song.” After the wedding and reception, Caitlin and Martin delayed a honeymoon to the Amalfi Coast of Italy in order to spend time with Martin’s relatives who had traveled from Scotland. Caitlin hopes the two can take a proper trip to Scotland to visit Martin’s family at some point. In the meantime, when they look back at their wedding, the emotions set in. “When I saw Caitlin walking down the aisle, I was tearing up, but I tried to hold it in,” Martin says. “She looked so beautiful.” mywvwedding.com | 59
&
Sweet Simple Natural fall beauty and Babcock State Parkâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s historic grist mill provide an ideal wedding setting for this Charleston couple. Julie Perine photographed by Melissa Perella Photography written by
T The Glade Creek Grist Mill was the perfect backdrop for Erica and Jonathan’s Babcock State Park wedding.
the night jonathan holbert asked for Erica Dickerson’s hand in marriage didn’t feature any frills; just sweet and simple honesty. “It was a very private moment filled with love shared between two people in a home they had built together,” says Erica about the country house she and Jonathan had purchased in Charleston nearly three years before their engagement. It just made perfect sense that their wedding should showcase that same kind of simple beauty and intimacy. Both being avid outdoors enthusiasts—enjoying everything from fishing to feeding wildlife—and having a sweet spot for preserving the environment, the couple eventually chose Babcock State Park in Clifftop for their wedding ceremony. Erica, a sales and marketing manager originally from the southern coalfields, and Jonathan, an engineer from North Central West Virginia, were engaged in December 2012, just before Christmas. But it wasn’t until nearly three years later that they actually tied the knot. Life was busy, Erica says, and when the time was finally right, they were eager to say their “I do’s” in their own way and without a lot of fuss. They had been together so long and knew each other so well that
the details weren’t so important, Jonathan says. Having Erica become his wife was what mattered. Erica never dreamed about the big wedding or the “princess dress.” “I’m a down-home country girl and wanted things to be simple and to be in nature,” she says.
perfect place, perfect date
What mattered very much to her was for her dad to walk her down the aisle. He had a stroke in May 2015 and underwent rehabilitation at a center near Babcock State Park. That made the venue, located on 4,000-plus acres along the New River Gorge in Fayette County, an immediate consideration. A sweet memory that Erica had about a landmark at the park was the icing on the cake. “My grandmother had a picture of the grist mill that hung in her house and I had always admired it. I don’t think I realized until I was grown up that it was local,” she says. “The proximity of Babcock State Park worked and it was a lovely place.” Erica and Jonathan decided upon the famous, historic Glade Creek Grist Mill with a view of the picturesque waterfall as the perfect setting. The date of October 10, 2015 was not only available, but “10.10” would also be very easy to remember. With five weeks until “go time,” they set the wheels in motion for their special day, beginning with her selection of a wedding mywvwedding.com | 61
Erica and Jonathan took advantage of the autumn splendor for their October wedding. The bride promised herself that she would enjoy
the day and focus on what was important: spending time with family and friends and solidifying her commitment to Jonathan.
“I gave creative freedom to the people I chose to work with. I kind of felt God had brought me these individuals and I considered them family.”
autumn splendor
dress, which Erica ordered online at landybridal.co.uk. “I was able to send my custom measurements and I paid more to have the dress expedited than for the creation of it,” she says. The dress she envisioned would combine old-world elegance with a bit of new-age sass. She admits she had a little anxiety about what the dress—which would be shipped all the way from China—would look like. But when it arrived, she couldn’t have been happier. “The top was all beadwork and beautifully done—the overlay and everything,” she says. Before making a lifelong promise to Jonathan, Erica made a promise to herself: She would enjoy her special day and everything about it, focusing on what was important. She refused, she says, to become a “bridezilla.” She entrusted decisions to her caterer and baker, florist, and photographer. 62 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
When the day arrived, Erica, in her cap sleeve, lace-embossed gown and Jonathan in an Alfani suit, completed with a persimmon tie and pocket square, were married against a pristine autumn backdrop at Babcock State Park’s grist mill. “I can’t tell you how many people said it was the prettiest wedding they had ever seen,” Erica says. “It was all real, it was alive, and it was so beautiful.” The backdrop of fall foliage starred deep autumn hues of gold, green, and persimmon, the latter color also appearing in the bride’s bouquet of Gerbera daisies, lilies, and asters, in the sole bridesmaid’s gently gathered gown, and in the wedding party’s flowers. The bride’s romantic gown featured a ruched bodice, lace back with miniature satin-covered buttons, scalloped hemline, and small train. She completed her ensemble with her mother’s heirloom jewelry. Not only were the bride and groom, their attendants, and their guests spruced up for the occasion, but the couple’s dogs, Grace and Patchy, both sported classic black and white diamond-print leashes. Escorted by her dad, the bride walked down the aisle to Schumann’s Bagatelle Op. 68, played by guitarist Christopher Reese. The music was beautiful, it complemented the scenery, and it was different, says Erica, who wanted to avoid the traditional bridal chorus. Under a grapevine arbor accented with Gerbera daisies, lilies, asters, fall leaves, and berries, the couple were married in a short, simple ceremony. “We kind of did a twist on traditional vows by altering them just a little,” Erica says. It all played out just as the couple had envisioned; maybe even better. “By having our wedding at Babcock State Park, we had many park visitors who decided to participate in the wedding,” Erica says. “Jonathan and I felt as though we had tons of guests who wished us well and sent prayers and blessings our way. It truly was an unforgettable experience, filled with love and happiness.” After the recessional—Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy”— the family celebration continued with a reception at nearby Country Road Cabins in Hico. Under a lighted white wedding tent, guests enjoyed music, a buffet-style baked steak dinner, and a two-tiered red chocolate and vanilla almond cake embellished with buttercream icing, white fondant, and a love nest topper. Erica danced with her dad to Fleetwood Mac’s “Landslide,” and with Jonathan—their first dance as husband and wife—to “Your Love Is a Song” by Switch-
It was important to Erica that her father, who was recovering from a stroke, walk her down the outdoor aisle during her wedding ceremony.
foot, a contemporary Christian tune handpicked by the bride. “I definitely wanted God at my ceremony and God was definitely there that day,” Erica says. As the couple had been warned, their wedding day is “a happy blur,” but some moments will forever be remembered. Jonathan said he’ll never forget how beautiful his bride looked. “Until she walked down the aisle, I hadn’t laid eyes on her that day and had never seen her dress,” he says. “The emotions of the whole day all came together when I saw her start walking toward me. She was just as beautiful as I had imagined.” One of Erica’s favorite moments, of course, was walking down the aisle with her arm tucked into her dad’s. “That was really my top priority, making sure he
was there and that he participated in the ceremony,” she says. “Jonathan had the desire to ask him for my hand in marriage and to respect his generation, so it meant a lot to him, too, to walk his little girl down the aisle. It was a special moment—and a very emotional one for everyone.” For both, the exchange of wedding bands was very special and it brought their love story full circle. Jonathan had worked with the jeweler to custom-design her engagement ring—a curved gold band featuring the infinity symbol and a round diamond in a love knot-style setting. With that ring, he had surprised her on that cold winter’s evening, as she wore jeans and a sweatshirt and was eating barbeque potato chips. “I’ll remember it for the rest of my life. It was fun. It was emotional and it was just perfect,” Erica says. mywvwedding.com | 63
F orever, FINALLY
TOGETHER,
After a long distance romance, ‘one day’ finally arrives. written by
Zack Harold • photographed by The Oberports
W
when we want to know about a couple’s history, we usually ask how long they’ve been “together.” It’s an innocent question, but not always a fair one. Sometimes two people love one another deeply but, because of the crazy twists and turns of life, can’t be together. At least, not physically. That’s the story of Jaclyn “Jackie” Lazaro and Emanuel Gunn. They met as students at Huntington High School, where he was a drummer and she played the flute in the marching band. They were inseparable, but when he graduated and headed to Vanderbilt University in Nashville, they decided to break things off so each could move on to their new lives. Still, they talked every day on the phone. Eventually, the pair went nine months without speaking. But in 2007 when Jackie’s cousin was in a fatal car accident, “Emanuel was the first person I called,” she says. From that day forward, they were back to talking every day, and soon the talk became more and more about their future together. “‘One day’ was our thing. ‘One day’ we’ll be together. ‘One day’ we’ll be able to travel the world,” she says. Still, Emanuel and Jackie continued to pursue their educations and careers. Jaclyn attended Eastern Kentucky University, then Marshall University for graduate school before going to the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in Lewisburg. After Vanderbilt, Emanuel moved to Philadelphia for work. “The longer our relationship went on, the farther we got apart,” he says. The phone calls kept coming, however, and they tried to visit one another at least once a month.
68 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
They kept up this longdistance relationship for the better part of a decade. But as Jackie was nearing the end of medical school, Emanuel knew it was time to take the next step. Jackie and Emanuel had made it a tradition to spend New Year’s Eve together, but in 2014 she was scheduled to work. They decided to celebrate early, went to a few stores at the Huntington Mall, and had dinner at a hibachi steakhouse they liked. “I was oblivious. I was telling him about my rotation at school, not thinking about anything,” Jackie says. He shifted the conversation to the previous year, and they talked again about how one day they’d be together forever. Then Emanuel lifted a small velvet-covered box from his pocket and set it on the table between them. He told Jackie he loved her and that the box contained something she had wanted for a long time. He had her open it. It was a diamond, but not a ring. It was a necklace in the shape of the numerals 28. Jackie had often complained they didn’t have an official anniversary, so Emmanuel suggested they make that day—December 28, 2014—their date. The number was significant to the couple for other reasons, too: It was the date they made things official in high school and Jackie’s current age. It was not at all what she’d hoped for. “Inside I was so mad,” she says. “I said, ‘That wasn’t very nice, putting a necklace in a ring box.’” Emanuel played dumb, but this was part of the plan— he’d even asked the jewelry store to put the necklace in a ring box. They left the restaurant with plans to go to his parents’ house and watch a movie. He stopped at Kroger on the way, saying he needed to pick up some Skittles. Emanuel is a manic Skittles fan, but this was another ruse. While in the store, he called his brother and Jackie’s sister to get ready. “As soon as I ring the doorbell, my brother comes to the door with a camera and I hit the knee.” Emanuel reached into his pocket and pulled out another ring box. He opened it, and Jackie saw this one contained a diamond ring. As for Emanuel’s gift from earlier that night? “Jackie has never worn that necklace. I don’t even know where that necklace is,” he says.
After years of living in different places, Jackie and Emanuel achieved their happily ever after
with a ceremony and reception at the Clay Center for the Arts & Sciences of West Virginia.
mywvwedding.com | 69
wasn’t completely sure. “It was like, is this the one?" Then the attendant took her to the back of the store, fixed her hair, and added some accessories. That cinched it for Jackie. However, “That night I had a little freak-out,” she says. True to her indecisive nature, she knew she liked the dress but was worried she’d made the wrong decision. “I just had to visit it again.” She called the shop the next day and asked if she could drop by. She examined each inch of fabric, every stitch of lace, and every Swarovski crystal. And that’s all it took. “She sent me a text: ‘I found the one,’” Emanuel says.
last-minute vows
a crazy year
Emanuel and Jackie started drawing up their guest list the night they were engaged. But there were more plans to be made—and plenty of other things that also demanded Jackie’s time. The year they were married, she finished med school, moved to Reading, Pennsylvania, started her residency, and dealt with the death of both of her grandmothers. “It was a crazy year. I don’t know how Jackie did it, but she planned a wedding,” Emanuel says. The couple picked Charleston for the wedding because it was a central locale for both their families. They just needed a venue. “I just wanted a gorgeous location,” she says. Jackie and her mom attended the Charleston Wedding Expo, where they met a representative from the Clay Center for the Arts & Sciences of West Virginia. Jackie decided to host the reception in the venue’s Benedum Grand Lobby and the ceremony in its 1,800-seat Maier Foundation Performance Hall. Instead of having the service onstage and the audience in the seats of the cavernous auditorium, Emanuel had an idea to make the whole thing a little more intimate: everyone, guests and wedding party alike, would be onstage, with the guests facing out into the theater. “When you walk out there, it was an amazing view,” he says. “We wanted our guests to be able to experience that,” Jackie says.
the dress
Lights strung from the Clay Center’s second-floor balcony that grew brighter with the outside darkness created a romantic feel that Jackie loved during the reception.
With the venue squared away, Jackie next faced an even bigger decision: what she would wear. “I’m a very indecisive girl. When I shop, I like to know my options,” she says. “I was shocked how fast I chose my dress.” She made an appointment at Bridal and Formal in Cincinnati, Ohio, and with her sister, her mom, her mom’s best friend, and one of her bridesmaids in tow, she went to try on gowns. When she arrived, the attendant had 10 lined up. Jackie tried a few she’d seen on Pinterest, but nothing clicked. “The consultant says, ‘I know the perfect dress for you.’” It was a beaded, ivory lace gown with champagne underlay from Kenneth Winston, Private Label By G. She liked it, but
70 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
On the day of Jackie and Emanuel’s wedding, guests entered to the sound of The Lincoln Brass, a quintet from Huntington. This was a wedding gift from Jackie’s cousin, who plays in the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra. The stage was decorated with a large trellis, creating a focal point against the dramatic backdrop of the performance hall. A sparkling chandelier hung from the middle. Arrangements of hydrangeas and calla lilies decorated the space. Emanuel’s uncle officiated the ceremony. And, when the time came, Jackie and Emanuel exchanged vows they wrote themselves. Unbeknown to her, he did not put pen to paper until shortly before the ceremony. He figured, “If I wait until the last minute, I’ll get my true feelings out. It was literally as I was getting dressed, I was writing it out on a little note card.” What emerged was a story about their long friendship, their long-distance relationship, and how, after all this time, “one day” had finally arrived. Once the ceremony was completed, ushers led guests offstage, through the orchestra pit, and up through the aisles into the Clay Center’s Grand Hall for the reception. “Our vendors worked really well to create that fun, inviting, romantic elegance that we wanted,” Jackie says. Much of that vibe came from the lights Clay Center workers strung from the hall’s second-floor balcony. The lights shone brighter and brighter as the night got darker outside. “That was my favorite part of the reception, the lights,” Jackie says. “It was a romantic feel." But more than anything else, Jackie and Emanuel enjoyed the time they got to spend with their family and friends. Jackie’s Uncle Charlie did a clog routine to “Rocky Top,” a family tradition for decades. Emanuel’s fraternity brothers said a prayer and sang a hymn, a tradition at members’ weddings, and did a step routine. His extended family also used the wedding as a chance for a rare group photo—members are spread everywhere from West Virginia to Tennessee to Texas. “It was special. It really meant a lot to us,” he says. The night ended with a sing-along to “Take Me Home, Country Roads.” The next day, Jackie and Emanuel headed off on their honeymoon, a week at an all-inclusive resort in Montego Bay, Jamaica. Even a week in paradise could not match the excitement of their wedding day, however. “It was the best day of our lives,” Jackie says. They got everything they wanted: a beautiful ceremony, a chance to celebrate their love with family and friends, and a great party afterward. But more than all that, their wedding meant Emanuel and Jackie were finally—and forever—together. Their years of loving one another from afar were over. Their “one day” had finally arrived.
SAY YES TO
OGLEBAY f photographed by Rebecca Kiger Fotografia
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Featuring 1,700 acres of lush, landscaped lawns, four golf courses, three restaurants, two swimming pools, a stately mansion and lake, and a plethora of activities, Oglebay Resort in Wheeling, West Virginia, is a unique wedding venue that offers a myriad of options to customize the wedding of your dreams. From an intimate garden party ceremony to an all-inclusive destination extravaganza to a post-nuptial brunch for a small gathering, Oglebay is the pictureperfect backdrop to your special day. For more information on how Oglebay Resort can transform your vision into the wedding of your dreams, call 304.243.4060, or visit oglebay-resort.com OGLEBAY is where tradition begins—from your tailor-made wedding to your reception to the honeymoon afterwards. It’s a place where you will return year after year. You can choose among a variety of venues, such as the West Spa Patio that has a stunning view of the resort’s hillsides and Schenk Lake. You can then celebrate with a reception suited to your wedding size, from the rustic Caddy Camp to the graceful Glessner Ballroom. Oglebay is a canvas on which you can paint your perfect wedding, from elegant to rustic to anything in between. Developed after Earl W. Oglebay willed his mansion— now a museum—to the city of Wheeling in 1926, the resort has so many celebration options that it can host multiple weddings in one weekend. Guests can enjoy a weekend full of fun, food, and friendship without ever having to take a step off the resort’s manicured lawns. Golfers can choose among four courses—
championship greens designed by the late, great Arnold Palmer and Robert Trent Jones Jr., the 18-hole regulation Crispin Golf Course, and a nine-hole Par 3. After—or instead of—hitting a hole-in-one, a host of other activities beckon, including splashing around in the outdoor pool at the Crispin Center or the indoor pool at Wilson Lodge; paddle boating, fishing, and kayaking at Schenk Lake; visits to the Mansion Museum, Glass Museum, and the Good Zoo; horseback riding, biking, and walking; or even skiing and the Winter Festival of Lights in December. The West Spa provides an oasis for the wedding party to get manipedis or guests to enjoy a relaxing massage. Guests can gear up for the day with a hearty breakfast at the Ihlenfeld Dining Room daily buffet, have a late afternoon nosh at the new seasonal, outdoor Garden Bistro, and wind down with dinner at Ihlenfeld or the Glassworks Grill.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
A Feast—and Several Settings—Fit for a Fabulous Wedding Customizing is the name of the wedding game at Oglebay Resort, when it comes to both menus and venues. For the reception on the big day, couples can choose among different packages—Diamond, Platinum, and Gold—featuring a four-hour hosted bar, hors d’oeuvres, a champagne toast, and a plated or buffet dinner. Depending on the tier, the packages can include breast of chicken stuffed with lobster, lump crab-crusted halibut, roasted tri-pepper crusted tenderloin of beef, and Oglebay’s own jumbo lump crab cake, plus a variety of sides, salads, and vegetables. A three-tiered wedding cake tops off the celebration. Customize your reception with a wide array of venue sites. Oglebay Resort has several to offer, starting with Glessner Auditorium, an elegant ballroom that holds up to 400 guests, who can dance the evening away on an inlaid wood floor underneath
a dramatically draped wooden ceiling. The room’s unique splitlevel layout offers attendees a lot of room to mill around and visit with friends and family. An elevated stage, power screens, a sound system, and remote lighting provide additional entertainment options. Then there is the Pine Room, which has a similar capacity but a completely different feel. Built in the 1930s by the Works Progress Administration, the Pine Room offers the warmth of a fireplace and the image of cool fun as it overlooks the outdoor pool. A stage also provides the opportunity for an evening of music and dance. Wilson Lodge has several sizes of banquet rooms that can be customized to seat up to 250. In all locations, Chiavari chairs and linens are among the items that Oglebay can provide to meet a couple’s expectations. Whatever your vision or dream, Oglebay Resort makes it come to life.
For more information, visit oglebay-resort.com or call 877.436.1797
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
Lodging à la carte For wedding guests who make a weekend of it, Oglebay Resort offers a variety of options, from cottages or estate houses where families and friends can gather to lodge rooms that offer hotel-like options to the Presidential Suite, where the wedding party can get ready for the big day in comfort and style.
WILSON LODGE
Guests who choose the Wilson Lodge have a selection of rooms, from traditional to intermediate and deluxe, and now the newly renovated West Wing rooms. All rooms have LCD TVs, high-speed Internet, and Keurig coffeemakers, as well as easy access to Oglebay’s fitness center and indoor pool.
An All-inclusive Destination Oglebay was close for their West Virginia friends and a convenient drive or flight for others. Maria Juliana loved the beauty and breathtaking view of her ceremony site—the West Spa Patio— where chairs were set up in a circular pattern for a more inclusive feel. For the reception, she and Lenny chose the dazzling Glessner Auditorium. She also loved that she could choose from a plated meal or buffet service, that the package came with served hors d’oeuvres
and a cake with textured, ruffled buttercream icing. Between the ceremony and the reception, Maria Juliana and her bridal party also had time to ride around on one of two Oglebay Trolleys, where they could relax and enjoy a cocktail as they traveled to various resort locales— including the columned Mansion Museum—for photo opportunities. “It gave the wedding party, me and my husband the opportunity to spend time alone, have a few drinks, and talk.”
One of Oglebay Resort’s unique amenities are the two trolleys that can take wedding parties around the 1,700-acre grounds or even to points off-site for tours, after-ceremony photos, and more. The bridal party can relax, enjoy drinks, and visit with one another while the trolley takes them from one fantastic, photogenic destination—the Formal Gardens, the Mansion Museum—to another. The trolleys, which seat 32 people, also can be used to take a bridal party from a church to its Oglebay reception. For more information, visit oglebay-resort.com or call 877.436.1797
COTTAGES
For large family gatherings or getting together with good friends, consider a cottage. They come in two, four, six, and eight bedrooms— as well as with amenities including traditional, deluxe, and premium, and options including a fireplace and a washer and dryer.
ESTATE HOUSES
CHRIS WEISLER
OGLEBAY RESORT’S unique location makes it an ideal setting to bring friends and family together. When Maria Juliana Lloreda was looking for a place to hold her all-inclusive August 2015 destination wedding, Oglebay Resort—an hour’s drive from Pittsburgh International Airport—made a lot of sense. Born in Columbia, South America, Maria Juliana met her future husband, Leonard Maier, in Florida, and got engaged to him in their current home of Morgantown.
The 4,600-square-foot estate houses feature six bedrooms and six bathrooms and a powder room overlooking the Speidel Golf Club, which accommodates the Arnold Palmer- and Robert Trent Jones Sr.-designed championship courses. All houses come equipped with gas grills, washer and dryer sets, dishwashers, and more.
ELIZABETH VINCENT PHOTOGRAPHY
Picture-Perfect Venues Oglebay doesn’t just have one or two tried-and-true wedding venues. Amidst its 1700 acres, it has countless options. From a formal garden party to a rustic retreat, Oglebay’s capable staff will help you find that special spot and make your dream wedding come true. Fees vary based on the venue and catering package. WEST SPA TERRACE
This popular and versatile location provides a rooftop feel with a stunning view of the rolling hillsides of Oglebay and Schenk Lake. Arrange your outdoor seating in a traditional style or opt for a more contemporary circular pattern. The area can be tented as well.
ANNE KUCHINKA AMPHITHEATER
This unique 1400-seat outdoor theater is a customizable backdrop awaiting your creative wedding décor. It has been the site of many concerts and events since the 1930s and is perfect for large weddings.
THE PINE ROOM
Built in the 1930s by the Works Progress Administration, this beautiful facility overlooks the outdoor pool and features a large fireplace, stage, heating/air-conditioning, and catering kitchen, and has a dinner seating capacity of 350.
For more information, visit oglebay-resort.com or call 877.436.1797
THE GOOD ZOO
With over 50 species, 20 that are rare or endangered, the Good Zoo was dedicated in memory of 7-yearold Philip Mayer Good in 1977 and continues to thrive through the support of local residents. The Zoo is an open canvas for your wedding ceremony or reception. This facility will hold up to 100 guests for a unique, intimate wedding.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION The greenhouse overlooks perfectly manicured gardens. End your celebration with a fireworks display. The West
FORMAL GARDENS
Nestled behind the Mansion Museum, Oglebay‘s 10-acre gardens have been restored to resemble the flowerbeds of the early 1900s. Visitors to the gardens are treated to a three-season kaleidoscope of color as they meander along the brick walkways past sweeping beds of vibrant blooms and hanging baskets. Improvements completed in 1994 made the gardens, arboretum, and outdoor theater area handicappedaccessible. This lovely spot is an ideal setting for an outdoor wedding ceremony, with a capacity of 150.
CAMP RUSSEL AND CADDY CAMP
Built in the 1930s by the Civilian Conservation Corps, these locations represent the “rustic architecture” of the era that strove to blend interior design with the surrounding landscape. Heavy logs and exposed beams with stone accents provide the perfect backdrop for a rustic wedding. Caddy Camp is located at Crispin Golf Course and provides a secluded location for weddings or rehearsal dinners. Camp Russel is larger with a nearby covered pavilion and large open field. It has a capacity of 200.
Spa Terrace overlooks the rolling hillsides of Oglebay. Flower-lined bricked pathways meander through the resort. Photo
MANSION MUSEUM AND MANSION WOODS
opportunties are as unique as the seasons. Camp Russel is the perfect backdrop for an elegantly rustic wedding.
Purchased by Colonel Earl W. Oglebay in 1900 as his summer retreat, the stately yellow Mansion Museum, operated by the Oglebay Institute, is a striking backdrop for wedding photos. The surrounding wooded acreage is another lovely option for a garden-style ceremony or reception site.
For more information, visit oglebay-resort.com or call 877.436.1797
SCHENK LAKE AND VISTA
This 3-acre lake surrounded by rolling hills is a romantic backdrop for weddings. A floating pier can be provided on the lake for your special day. The scenic vista framing Wilson Lodge offers amazing views of the surrounding countryside and Schenk Lake.
The Fall/Winter 2016 Wedding
REGISTER Falling in Love
Real West Virginia couples like Tracy Speilman and Nick Culicerto announce their marriages in the WV Weddings register. Photographed by Kelli Carrico Photography
BRIDE’S GOWN
David’s Bridal, Charleston GROOM’S ATTIRE
Men’s Wearhouse, Charleston FLOWERS
Kroger
CATERER
Beni Kedem Temple, Charleston CAKE
Sugar Pie Bakery, Charleston ENTERTAINMENT
Sonic Solutions, Charleston VIDEOGRAPHY
EJF Video Productions CEREMONY
Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, Charleston RECEPTION
Beni Kedem Temple, Charleston
mywvwedding.com | 167
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FALL/WINTER 2016
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• Photos and material must be submitted by January 11, 2017, for Spring/ Summer 2017 and July 1, 2017, for Fall/Winter 2017. • Couples will receive two complimentary copies of the WV Weddings magazine in which they appear.
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EARLY BIRD TWO-PAGE SPREAD WEDDING REGISTER FEE: $375 ONE-PAGE SPREAD FEE: $275 Register by the early bird deadline and save $50.** *Someone in the couple must be from West Virginia to be included. **Regular fee is $425 for a two-page spread and $325 for a one-page spread. Refunds for submissions will not be given after 10 days from purchase date.
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WV MARKETPLACE THEWEDDINGS REGISTRY
174 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
WV WEDDINGS MARKETPLACE
mywvwedding.com | 175
WV WEDDINGS MARKETPLACE
westfarms@frontiernet.net
westfarmflowerswv.com
“West Farm Flowers - we grow beauty”
Sarah Garland Photography
The Beautiful Mess
Sarah Garland Photography
The Beautiful Mess
A Unique Floral Experience with a Personal Artistic Designer Pick out your own locally grown fresh flowers for your wedding day!
Pam West, Grower & Designer
304.647.8195
176 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
@westfarms-wv
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
RESOURCE GUIDE MYWVWEDDING.COM
Let WV Weddings help you plan your big day. Don’t forget: When you choose one of our advertising vendors, make sure you mention the magazine!
BEAUTY & WELLNESS
MARSHALL PLASTIC & RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY We offer the latest in skin care treatments and surgical techniques in a comfortable, spa-like atmosphere to help you prepare for the big day. Discover the benefits of non-surgical procedures to help you look and feel your best. 5185 Route 60 East, Suite 26 Huntington, WV 25705 304.691.8910 muplasticsurgery@marshallhealth.org marshallhealth.org/plastics NICO SPALON Our services include hair styling, color keratin, smoothing, extensions, deep conditioning, traditional makeup, airbrush makeup, and full-body waxing. 80 South Pierpont Road Morgantown, WV 26508 304.594.1550 info@nicospalon.com nicospalon.com TUSCAN SUN SPA & SALON Whether you are looking for youthful solutions, salon services, or spa treatments, Tuscan Sun Spa & Salon has the ideal experience for you, with the finest products, equipment, and highly skilled experts. 482 Emily Drive Clarksburg, WV 26301 304.326.2204 1013 Fairmont Avenue Fairmont, WV 26554 304.333.0281 401 Boyers Avenue Morgantown, WV 26505 304.296.1325 info@tuscanspaandsalon.com tuscanspaandsalon.com
BRIDAL SHOPS, TUXEDOS, & ACCESSORIES
CONI & FRANC Voted best place to buy a wedding dress in Morgantown five years in a row. For a personalized, one-onone shopping experience, visit us in downtown Morgantown, where we carry sizes 0 to 30 and dress our clients from head to toe. We are your one-stop shop, where we always have something fabulous waiting just for you. 422 High Street Morgantown, WV 26505 304.292.1111 coniandfranc.com HOUSE OF FASHIONS We are a full-service bridal boutique offering wedding gowns, mother-ofthe-bride/groom dresses, bridesmaids’ dresses, and flower girls’ dresses, plus veils, accessories, and tuxedos. We also provide formal gowns for evening, prom, and homecoming events. 121 Daniel Drive Bridgeport, WV 26330 304.672.5490 keri@hofwv.com hofwv.com
CAKES & DESSERTS SUGAR PIE BAKERY We offer wedding cakes, gourmet cupcakes, handheld desserts, pies, cheesecakes, and wedding favors. 3624 MacCorkle Avenue SE Charleston, WV 25304 304.205.7753 info@sugarpiebakerywv.com sugarpiebakerywv.com
THE CUPCAKERIE The Cupcakerie is a gourmet cupcake bakery that can cater your wedding, bridal shower, bachelorette party, or any other event. We bake from scratch daily with the freshest and finest
ingredients. It‘s not just a cupcake. ... it‘s a Cupcakerie cupcake! 194 Willey Street Morgantown, WV 26505 304.212.5464 orders@thecupcakerie.com thecupcakerie.com
ENTERTAINMENT
MONTANI MUSIC ENSEMBLE We offer string music for your wedding, cocktail hour, or reception. From solo violin to string quartets, our ensembles provide a variety of styles for your special occasion. P.O. Box 11725 Charleston, WV 25339 304.550.0678 mangomusic3266@gmail.com jenniferwood.net
FLORISTS
GILLESPIE’S FLOWERS & PRODUCTIONS Open since 1923 at The Greenbrier, we offer full-service wedding florals, décor, and rentals, including unique and specialty items. 377 Main Street West & The Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs, WV 24986 304.536.1881 john@gillespiesflowers.com gillespiesflowers.com WEST FARM FLOWERS Local producer of specialty cut flowers. Wedding designs and unique floral designs available. 2824 Carroll Hill Road Lewisburg 24901 304.647.8195 facebook.com/westfarms-wv
HAIR & MAKEUP
NICO SPALON Our services include hair styling, color keratin, smoothing, extensions,
deep conditioning, traditional makeup, airbrush makeup, and full-body waxing. 80 South Pierpont Road Morgantown, WV 26508 304.594.1550 info@nicospalon.com nicospalon.com TUSCAN SUN SPA & SALON Whether you are looking for youthful solutions, salon services, or spa treatments, Tuscan Sun Spa & Salon has the ideal experience for you, with the finest products, equipment, and highly skilled experts. 482 Emily Drive Clarksburg, WV 26301 304.326.2204 1013 Fairmont Avenue Fairmont, WV 26554 304.333.0281 401 Boyers Avenue Morgantown, WV 26505 304.296.1325 info@tuscanspaandsalon.com tuscanspaandsalon.com
HOME FURNISHINGS
CHUCK‘S FURNITURE Chuck‘s Furniture, established in 1967, started out as a small, family-owned retail furniture store in a warehouse in Morgantown. Now, more than 40 years later, Chuck’s has over 100,000 square feet of space filled with fine furniture. 77 Lawless Road Morgantown, WV 26501 304.292.7621 chucksfurniturecarrie@comcast.net chucksfurniture.com WELLS HOME FURNISHINGS Wells Home Furnishings is West Virginia’s premier furniture store. Family-owned and -operated since 1994, Wells is the source for unique and stylish home furnishings. Wells offers more than 100 quality brands, many completely customizable and
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
American-made. Wells‘ in-home design program helps you create the home of your dreams, with the flexibility to fit your life and budget. To guarantee you love your furniture, we’ve integrated a state-of-the-art 3D design tool into our program so you can virtually tour your new rooms. Located in Charleston and Morgantown. 1040 Fairmont Road Morgantown, WV 26501 304.322.2129 wellshome.com
INVITATIONS/STATIONERY
EGGPLANT Eggplant is an anything-but-ordinary gift store located in Charleston. We specialize in bridal invitations and registries, offering a wide range of choices and personalized options to meet the individual styles of our bridal couples. 1011A Bridge Road Charleston, WV 25314 304.346.3525 eggplant@suddenlinkmail.com eggplantshop.com YOURS TRULY Yours Truly is a full-service stationery studio with personalized one-on-one service. We offer save-the-dates, wedding invitations, rehearsal invitations, programs, seating charts, and more. Follow us on Facebook and Instagram to see sneak peeks. 3231 Rosemar Road Parkersburg, WV 26105 304.893.3760 lindsey.yourstruly@gmail.com yours-truly-invitations.com
JEWELERS
CALVIN BROYLES This third-generation, family-owned fine jewelry company offers appraisals by certified gemologists, AGS, jewelry repair, and CAD/ CAM jewelry design services. 4708 MacCorkle Avenue SW Charleston, WV 25309 304.768.8821 Hurricane, WV 25526 304.757.3920 donbroyles@calvinbroyles.com calvinbroyles.com JACQUELINE’S FINE JEWELRY Jacqueline’s is a full-service jewelry store offering the best in quality products, service, and design. Jacqueline’s is known for its incredible and wideranging inventory with something for everyone. 1070 Suncrest Towne Centre Morgantown, WV 26505 304.599.6981 tom@jacquelinesfinejewelry.com jacquelinesfinejewelry.com
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OFF-SITE CATERING
BRIDGE ROAD BISTRO Bridge Road Bistro has earned a reputation as one of West Virginia’s premier dining spots. The same commitment to quality, guest service, and professionalism has earned the bistro equal recognition for its personalized catering service. Bridge Road Bistro offers farm-to-fork casual fine dining and caters to any venue—large or small— within a two-hour radius of Charleston. 915 Bridge Road Charleston, WV 25314 304.720.3500 sandy@thebridgeroadbistro.com thebridgeroadbistro.com THE TEA SHOPPE We offer both on-site and full-service off-site catering for your special events. Our newly expanded dining room offers seating for up to 50 people, perfect for showers, bridal luncheons, and more. 709 Beechurst Avenue, Suite 23 Morgantown, WV 26505 304.413.0890 theteashoppewv@gmail.com theteashoppewv.com BELLA THE CORNER GOURMET We provide wedding & gift registry services, online and in-store. We stock Beatriz Ball, Fiestaware, Blenko Glass, Le Creuset, Big Green Egg, and more. Need gifts for your wedding party? We‘ve that, too. Bella also provides catering for small pre-wedding events. Call us for more info! 1017 East Washington Street Lewisburg, WV 24901 304.520.4921 info@bellathecornergourmet.com bellathecornergourmet.com
PHOTOGRAPHY & VIDEO SERVICES
HOT TOMATO PIN-UP ACADEMY Hot Tomato Pin-Up Academy is a body-positive, all-female portrait studio located in the Marietta, Ohio/Parkersburg, West Virginia area. We offer high fashion, pin-up, and boudoir portraits that include hair, makeup, wardrobe, and tons of fun! Book today for a unique gift, a girls’ night out, or bachelorette party! 200 Putnam Street, Suite 300 Marietta, OH 45750 513.400.4872 hottomatopinupacademy@gmail.com hottomatopinupacademy.com KELLI CARRICO PHOTOGRAPHY I am a fine art wedding photographer based in Southern West Virginia but available for travel anywhere. Specializing in wedding couple portraits and unplanned candid shots, I document your wedding from every beautiful posed image to each unexpected moment.
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
1107 Pinewood Drive Beckley, WV 25801 304.575.2579 kellicarricophotography@hotmail.com kellicarricophotography.com MCCOMAS VIDEO PRODUCTIONS Our award-winning wedding team captures every moment of your wedding day and brings those memories back to life through our beautiful HD wedding films. Let us tell your wedding story! 304.654.0025 booking@mccomasvideo.com mccomasvideo.com SHIFOTO – PHOTO BOOTH RENTAL Shifoto’s first-class Photo Booth Experience will add to YOUR day’s memories for you and your guests. We provide props, Custom Memory Book & lots of laughs, all at an affordable price. Servicing the Eastern U.S. Contact us for your personalized quote. P.O. Box 605 Coal City, WV 25823 888.744.3686 shifoto@suddenlink.net shifoto.com THE OBERPORTS Emily and Bobby are international awardwinning wedding photographers who especially love shooting non-traditional weddings. They are known for their professionalism, experience, and creativity. Charleston, WV hello@theoberports.com theoberports.com
REAL ESTATE
BEST OF CANAAN Offering serene and scenic honeymoon locations with hot tubs, fireplaces, and more. Let us help you plan. If Canaan Valley is your wedding destination, BOC offers lodging discounts for friends and families. An affordable option for a once-in-alifetime celebration! 5546 Appalachian Highway Davis, WV 26260 304.866.8680 info@bestofcanaan.com bestofcanaan.com
REGISTRIES
BELLA THE CORNER GOURMET We provide wedding & gift registry services, online and in-store. We stock Beatriz Ball, Fiestaware, Blenko Glass, Le Creuset, Big Green Egg, and more. Need gifts for your wedding party? We‘ve that, too. Bella also provides catering for small pre-wedding events. Call us for more info! 1017 East Washington Street Lewisburg, WV 24901
304.520.4921 info@bellathecornergourmet.com bellathecornergourmet.com EGGPLANT Eggplant is an anything-but-ordinary gift store located in Charleston. We specialize in bridal invitations and registries, offering a wide range of choices and personalized options to meet the individual styles of our bridal couples. 1011A Bridge Road Charleston, WV 25314 304.346.3525 eggplant@suddenlinkmail.com eggplantshop.com WELLS HOME FURNISHINGS Wells Home Furnishings is West Virginia’s premier furniture store. Family-owned and -operated since 1994, Wells is the source for unique and stylish home furnishings. Wells offers more than 100 quality brands, many completely customizable and Americanmade. Wells‘ in-home design program helps you create the home of your dreams, with the flexibility to fit your life and budget. To guarantee you love your furniture, we’ve integrated a state-of-the-art 3D design tool into our program so you can virtually tour your new rooms. Located in Charleston and Morgantown. 101 Bowers Road Charleston, WV 25314 304.343.3600 wellshome.com
RENTALS & PARTY SUPPLIES
LITTLE BLACK DRESS Little Black Dress was born as a collaboration between an event planning company and an event rental company. A dreamer and a doer who loves design, style, and all things beautiful, owner Misti Sims saw a niche that wasn’t filled and put together a collection that now makes up her refined (albeit small) offerings of boutique event rentals and sophisticated event planning. A highly fashionable, detailed wedding deserves pieces that will complement a sophisticated décor. 740.568.8552 misti@littleblackdressevents.net littleblackdressevents.net GILLESPIE’S FLOWERS & PRODUCTIONS Open since 1923 at The Greenbrier, we offer full-service wedding florals, décor, and rentals, including unique and specialty items. 377 Main Street West & The Greenbrier White Sulphur Springs, WV 24986 304.536.1881 john@gillespiesflowers.com gillespiesflowers.com mywvwedding.com | 179
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TRAVEL
BRAXTON COUNTY CVB Need a venue for your wedding? Call for info on Café Cimino, Flatwoods Conference Center, Sutton Lake, Burnsville Lake, and Red Rooster Cafe! Want to provide easy access for your guests on your special day? Center your wedding in Braxton, West Virginia! 250 Skidmore Lane Sutton, WV 26601 304.765.6533 info@braxtonwv.org braxtonwv.org/weddings
UPSHUR COUNTY CVB Whether you want to enjoy the great outdoors by hiking or biking, see historical sites including Civil War battlefields, or stroll through quaint shops and local eateries, Upshur County is a great place to base your stay in the region. You’ll find big opportunities here and around the area! 14 East Main Street Buckhannon, WV 26201 304.473.1400 lmeadows@visitbuckhannon.org visitupshur.org
UNIQUE GIFTS
MARION COUNTY CVB Marion County, West Virginia provides romantic settings with indoor and outdoor spaces for an intimate ceremony or a large event. Scenic parks provide wonderful photo opportunities and culinary professionals will prepare memorable meals. We’re here to help negotiate the best rates for your group lodging and discounts on admission to some of our area attractions. Let us help you create a memorable event. 1000 Cole Street, Suite A Pleasant Valley, WV 26554 304.368.1123
EGGPLANT Eggplant is an anything-but-ordinary gift store located in Charleston. We specialize in bridal invitations and registries, offering a wide range of choices and personalized options to meet the individual styles of our bridal couples. 1011A Bridge Road Charleston, WV 25314 304.346.3525 eggplant@suddenlinkmail.com eggplantshop.com
TURNER TRAVEL & TOURS We create stress-free travel experiences for you and your traveling companions. Whether you are planning a destination wedding, honeymoon, family vacation, girlfriend getaway, or multigeneration trip, let us create the trip you will always remember. 1551 McNabb Drive Elkview, WV 25071 304.546.2395 tpauline@turner-travel.com teresa.turnertravel@aol.com turner-travel.com/page/teresa
WEDDING PLANNING & COORDINATING
HOMER LAUGHLIN CHINA COMPANY We are the makers of the iconic Fiesta Dinnerware. Whether you are starting a collection or simply looking SUMMERSVILLE CVB MOUNTAIN LAKES We offer information on accommodations, dining, for that perfect piece, Homer Laughlin China Company Factory outlet has something for everyone. parks, recreation, and shopping in Summersville. 672 Fiesta Drive Free visitor guides and vacation itineraries are Newell, WV 26050 available. 304.387.1300 3 Armory Way outlet@homerlaughlin.net Summersville, WV 26651 fiestafactorydirect.com 304.872.3722 866.716.0448 THE TEA SHOPPE summersvillecvb.com The Tea Shoppe is the perfect spot for purchasing teas, tea-related items, spices, seasonings, teaware, and TUCKER COUNTY CVB giftware. Whether you are looking for that perfect gift for Looking for a unique wedding destination? the newlyweds or to treat yourself, The Tea Shoppe is at Say “I Do” with some of the most breathtaking your service! Enjoy our café with seating up to 50 people, views serving as your personal backdrop. Host perfect for showers, bridal luncheons, and more. Off-site your guests at one of Tucker County’s beautiful catering is also available. mountain resorts, rustic cabins, or luxury vacation 709 Beechurst Avenue, Suite 23 homes, and let our fresh, local caterers and Morgantown, WV 26505 florists bring your vision to life. Need suggestions? 304.413.0890 We’re here to help! theteashoppewv@gmail.com canaanvalley.org theteashoppewv.com 800.782.2775
180 | WV WEDDINGS Fall/Winter 2016
LITTLE BLACK DRESS Little Black Dress was born as a collaboration between an event planning company and an event rental company. A dreamer and a doer who loves design, style, and all things beautiful, owner Misti Sims saw a niche that wasn’t filled and put together a collection that now makes up her refined (albeit small) offerings of boutique event rentals and sophisticated event planning. A highly fashionable, detailed wedding deserves pieces that will complement a sophisticated décor. 740.568.8552 misti@littleblackdressevents.net littleblackdressevents.net
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
The Ultimate
VENUE GUIDE Find the perfect place for your intimate ceremony, modern reception, or discover just the right spot for your elopement or honeymoon.
VENUE NAME
CAPACITY
CONTACT
CHECK IT OUT
Adventures on the Gorge, Lansing
50-250
855.972.6763 j.campbell@onthegorge.com weddingsonthegorge.com
Located on the rim of the New River Gorge, AOTG venues offer incredible views, resort amenities, fun adventures, and catering at one destination. Choose from our four venues— Smokey’s on the Gorge, The Lookout Post, the viewing deck, or the fantastic swimming pool— or a combination of them all.
Black Bear Resort, Davis
up to 125
304.866.4391 jenni@blackbearwv.com blackbearwv.com
Great for outdoor weddings—the deck that overlooks the Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge offers great views. Black Bear also can accommodate the wedding party and guests with 40 cabins, four houses, and 12 hotel suites. The wedding couple must find their own caterer and rent tables and other necessities.
The Blennerhassett Hotel, Parkersburg
up to 175
304.865.8657 edavenport@theblennerhassett.com theblennerhassett.com
Built in 1889, The Blennerhassett Hotel is a historic gem that can offer your dream wedding with our spacious ballroom or charming, climatecontrolled outdoor patio tent. Four-star on-site catering, customizable wedding packages and unprecedented service.
Bridgeport Conference Center, Bridgeport
up to 300
304.808.3000 amber.crimm@bridgeportconference.com bridgeportconference.com
Brown Oaks, Summersville
up to 250
304.872.9248 brownoaks@summersvillewv.org summersvillwv.org/brownoaks
The historic Brown Oaks offers both intimate and one-of-a-kind indoor and outdoor event spaces. The tastefully decorated home and its manicured grounds are “wedding worthy“ and can easily accommodate showers, luncheons, and rehearsal dinners.
Café Cimino Country Inn, Sutton
up to 125
304.765.2913 info@cafeciminocountryinn.com cafeciminocountryinn.com
This is a beautiful, historic estate on 1.5 acres with 10 bed and breakfast guest rooms, a spa, a cigar bar, and award-winning hospitality and food and beverage.
Canaan Valley Resort, Davis
20-300
havertys@canaanresort.com 304.866.4121, ext. 2671 canaanresort.com
Choose the perfect wedding destination regardless of the season. From summer mountaintop vistas to winter’s wonderland playground. Customizable wedding packages available for 20 to 300 guests.
Planning a wedding reception, reunion, formal dinner, or other type of social event? Fulfill your dreams with Bridgeport Conference Center, which offers intimate space for a group dinner or a full-service ballroom for your wedding reception or banquet.
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VENUE GUIDE
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
VENUE NAME
CAPACITY
CONTACT
CHECK IT OUT
Charleston Civic Center, Charleston
25–1,470
304.345.1500 info@charlestonwvciviccenter.com charlestonwvciviccenter.com
The Charleston Civic Center is open for business during our $100 million dollar renovation project. Glass lobbies mark the arena, convention center, and ballroom. An elegant 8,000-square-foot prefunction reception area, overlooking the Elk River, will be adjacent to a 22,000-square-foot beautifully appointed ballroom.
The Clay Center for the Arts & Sciences of West Virginia, Charleston
Varies
304.561.3560 lfrancis@theclaycenter.org theclaycenter.org
The Clay Center offers spaces intimate or vast, and catering is provided on-site by Embassy Suites. The Clay Center is centrally located with beautiful views of downtown Charleston.
The Confluence Resort, Hico
up to 200
304.573.4900 info@confluenceresort.com confluenceresort.com
This spectacular outdoor venue in southern West Virginia specializes in elegant, rustic tented events. Packages begin at $5,500. Rentals include on-site lodging, multiple ceremony locations, and equipment. Confluence features a rustic barn, breathtaking overlooks, and personalized service like on-site catering, décor, and floral packages.
Embassy Suites Charleston, Charleston
up to 500
The Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs
304.347.8700 hayley.tighe@atriumhospitality.com embassysuitescharlestonwv.com
Enjoy Charleston’s premier downtown hotel. Embassy Suites by Hilton is an all-suite hotel offering complimentary breakfasts and nightly manager’s receptions. Relax in our atrium, fitness center, and pools. Celebrate in our ballroom with premier catering, wedding planning, and coordinating. Discounted suite blocks are available for out-of-town guests.
up to 500+
304.536.4951 weddings@greenbrier.com greenbrier.com/weddings
Featuring a one-of-kind chapel designed by Carleton Varney and a variety of uniquely colorful reception venues, The Greenbrier is sure to stand out! From an intimate gathering to a wedding with 500 of your closest friends, The Greenbrier is where experiences are timeless and memories last forever.
Guyan Golf & Country Club, Huntington
up to 300
304.736.5233 mblair@guyancc.com guyancc.com
The Guyan is the perfect location for wedding receptions, rehearsal dinners, baby and bridal showers, and other events. Choose from the ballroom, Guyan Room, and Campbell Room.
Highgate Carriage House, Fairmont
up to 160 inside, 300 outside
304.333.2552, events@highgatecarriagehouse.com highgatecarriagehouse.com
Hocking Hills Wedding Chapel, Sugar Grove, Ohio
65
740.746.9934 valleyviewcabins@gmail.com hockinghillsweddingchapel.com
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Built in 1908, the Highgate Carriage House offers weddings with the elegance of a bygone era. Your event can be held inside the carriage house with up to 160 guests or under the high-peak tent in the garden that can accommodate up to 300 guests.
Get married in our log chapel, gazebo, or near the outdoor stone fireplace. All-inclusive wedding packages are available with customizable options. Accommodations for lodging are available onsite. You can elope with or include up to 65 guests!
SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION
VENUE NAME Lakeview Golf Resort & Spa, Morgantown
CAPACITY 400+
VENUE GUIDE
CONTACT
CHECK IT OUT
304.594.1111 info@lakeviewresort.com lakeviewbride.com
This great venue offers ceremony and reception options, customized packages, personalized cake designs, and maître d’ service.
800.972.1991 304.842.2801 sales@oglebay-resort.com lpiosek@pacificlinks.com oglebay-resort.com/weddings pacificlinks.com/petedye
With 1,700 picturesque acres and $5.5 million For truly one-of-a-kind weddings andamemorable renovated lodge withand a spa, Oglebay is the perfect events, the gorgeous historical ambiance of destination wedding location. Oglebay provides Pete Dye Golf Club is unrivaled in West Virginia. beautiful weddings formal gardens and areceptions rooftop patio for Romantic and lavish create ceremonies well as small and large ballrooms memories thatasare indeed special to all who attend. for receptions.
Oglebay Resort & Conference Center, Wheeling
up to 400 200
The Resort at Glade Springs, Daniels
up to 350
855.999.4120 achoutaylor@gladesprings.com gladesprings.com
Serenity Point, Summersville
up to 150
Serenity Point is a breathtaking outdoor venue, 304.872.6222 info@mountainlakecampground.com with Summersville Lake as your backdrop. Our nature setting offers a wedding site, an area mountainlakecampground.com for receptions, and a fire pit. We are located within Mountain Lake Campground and Cabins, offering lodging and so much more.
Snowshoe Mountain Resort, Snowshoe
Varies
304.572.5463 jeilers@snowshoemountain.com snowshoemtn.com/en/plan-yourtrip/groups/destinationweddings
Snowshoe Mountain offers a range of meeting spaces and venue sites. Whether you are looking for something cozy and intimate or grand and elegant, our mountain can serve up the perfect backdrop for an unforgettable event.
Summersville Arena & Conference Center, Summersville
25-600
304.872.3722 marianne@summersvillecvb.com summersvillearena.com
This is a perfect wedding venue offering planning and coordinating, beautiful rooms with round tables and chairs to accommodate 25–600 guests as well as linens, chair covers, sashes, and in-house catering. Bar services are also available.
The State Fair of West Virginia Event Center, Lewisburg
50–1,000
304.645.1090 statefairofwv@statefairofwv.com statefairofwv.com
The State Fair of West Virginia Event Center offers a wide range of building rentals perfect for weddings, parties, reunions, and meetings. Couples can rent the space and then hire their own caterer for their ideal, tailored event.
WV State Parks
Varies
304.558.2764 megan.n.brown@wv.gov wvstateparks.com
The perfect locations for your wedding plans. Ten parks with lodges have restaurants for food services. Most importantly, you’ll get ideas for indoor or outdoor venues. Weddings, honeymoons, and anniversaries happen at WV State Parks.
The Resort at Glade Springs‘ scenic 4,100-acre property provides the perfect West Virginia wedding location for your ceremony and reception, rehearsal dinner, bridal shower, and departure brunch. Choose indoor or outdoor sites with spectacular views and unique settings.
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