Tag Archives: Wedding flowers

Transatlantic Wedding Planning Adds Glamour

OK, so I’m going to admit it. American guests can be a little more demanding than the average Rigaud client and the NY crowd don’t always understand the limitations of our rural French community. So when we took a booking from a Brooklyn bride with roots in the fashion and photography industries it was not without stress that we get things absolutely right.

The bride and groom both come from high profile, creative backgrounds and have a very clear idea of how things should look. The flower brief referenced our all time favourite flower blog, the Brooklyn based Saipua. This inspirational blog comes from hottest flower shop in the hippest city on the planet, so being asked to deliver what they do was no walk in Central Park. From the images here you can see that Hayley came through the scared “Help!” phase and did us proud!

There were some crazy moments over the weekend.  The temperatures were into the 30’s, causing the suited groom to wilt a little so we popped him into the walk in fridge for ten minutes to relax and “chill”.  When the bride made her stunning appearance, thirty five minutes behind schedule, the heavens opened and the wedding party were forced to take shelter in the chateau, but this gave her the ten minutes of calm that she needed before floating down the aisle to the notes of the Kora, an African Harp, which was a first for the Rigaud lawns.

Chefs Steve Carss and new to the team, Rupert Craddock, produced an incredible meal which included the sweetest baby Charantais carrots and beetroots from the Chateau vegetable gardens. They topped the home grown strawberries on the white chocolate mousse with vibrant blue borage flowers and the effect was pure “dessert by Anthropologie”. I was so proud!

The weather was kind for the rest of the day until it was time for the fireworks at which point the chateau was engulfed in one of those dramatic electric storms when the rain falls in sheets and the ground rumbles with the vibration of the thunder. Thankfully our pyro technician had the forethought to wrap all the gunpowder in polythene ahead of the night to while the guests stood under the new bar cover so the grounds were spectacularly illuminated by lightening and “feu d’artifice” at the same time.

The bride and groom were delighted by the drama of it all. They loved, loved, loved that the rain forced guests to stay within the safety of the barn walls and dance the night away.

It was an intimidating booking and not without it’s moments of stress but when the very lovely bride left on Monday morning her comment to me was “Anna, thank you, for everything, it’s all been absolutely perfect” and that was high praise indeed!

 

But THESE are “Wedding Flowers”!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6ff13zZ0h0k

This made me laugh out loud…. It’s so true! I managed to avoid this sort of nonsense at Rigaud last year by setting off to the flower market myself for several of our brides who ended up with flowers at wholesale prices for their mum’s to arrange.

Today we found an even better solution to the challenge in the shape of a fabulous lady called Jenny Moss. Jenny lives locally but before moving to France she had an award winning Interflora franchise in the UK. Jenny is joining the team here at Rigaud as our “in house” florist and will help our brides work up their mood boards in the planning stages before turning their ideas into reality on the big day.

So our brides will have stunning flowers, a personal consultant who’s not trying to sell to them and great prices. Win, win, win…

Liberty and Oliver’s Wedding Part I

 

The Badger described it as “easy on the eye” and kept on and on about the legs but it was more than the ladies who looked utterly stunning at the Rigaud wedding this weekend. I think the keyword was simplicity. Liberty was certain about her colour from the start, which she described as “electric purple”. The colour was subtly repeated in the ribbons wrapping their very witty invite (photo booth poses) and in the favour wrapping, the flowers, the bridesmaids dresses, the grooms men’s ties and even the lanterns later in the evening.

There was panic when the carefully ordered electric purple gladioli arrived and were most definitely white with purple edges. They weren’t going to cut it on their own in the barn which definitely needs some colour, so, what to do? The answer was a mercy dash on Thursday morning to the Bordeaux flower market where they had a stock of gorgeous purple Lisianthus. We placed generous bunches in tall straight vases, alternated them with vases of Gladioli and voila, the flowers were all sorted out. The purple paper wrapped favours contained Space Invader sweeties.

It was all just lovely.

Wedding Flowers by The Mother of the Bride

We love it when friends and family want to get stuck in with the wedding arrangements and we’ve noticed that in particular it’s the mums who want to feel involved. At Hannah’s wedding this May we had the great idea that Hannah’s Mum, the Mother of the Bride, should do the flowers. Of course they didn’t arrive until two days before the wedding which made things tricky but some clever planning before hand made it possible. I visited the Bordeaux flower market on the Wednesday before the wedding and bought all of their flowers at fabulous prices. 220 stunning roses in various shades of cream and pink, plus a further 80 peonies in the palest pink. They were all loaded into buckets in “the wedding loos” and when Hannah’s mum turned up with her secateurs and apron on Thursday it was action stations. Here’s a picture of the work in progress.

We all love a wedding

All the hard work was worth it. It’s true that the spring was eclipsed by a relentless To Do list but in the end Rigaud was “Wedding Ready” for the big day and our first bride of the year, the stunning Hannah Di Lasti walked down our home made aisle in glorious sunshine. The white roses on the obelisks were in full bloom and the whole day was just about as lovely as it could be.

If you’re interested in the details then there were plenty of personal touches which ensured it could only have been Hannah and Geoff’s wedding. Famous race horses gave their names to the tables. The favours were made by the bride and groom – a compilation album of their favourite music on CD’s with some brilliant graphics on the outside.

For the wedding flowers the look was “DIY”, the idea being that it should look casually thrown together, as though Hannah had herself stepped out into the garden that morning and collected a few roses which she then threw into some jam jars that were lying around the place.

It all worked rather well and we’re looking forwards to more brides and their pictures later this year.