Presented by Daniel Toriola
The cost of having a wedding keeps getting hire and hire every year. Thousands and thousands of brides are in
the same situation that you are in. To make matters worse wedding vendors are scamming desperate
brides-to-be and playing off their emotions
Click here to know more
Not All Web Hosts Are The Same. Some Are Really Responsive To Customers. Backed By a 30 Day No
Questions Asked 100% Money Back Guarantee, 99.9% Uptime Guarantee. Read What Our Clients Say About Us!
Click here to know more
Co-ordinating Your Wedding Colours
By Sarah McCormack
Almost everyone starts planning their wedding with a picture in their head of how it will look. All you
need is to turn that into a workable reality. Picking your colour scheme is a great place to start and
helps the picture come into focus a little bit more.
Traditionally speaking we should all be starting with our central feature of a bright white wedding dress.
However many women now feel this colour scheme is outdated. It symbolises purity in a day and age
where an....untouched bride... is an exception rather than the rule.
So, maybe, rather than wearing white, opt for an equally stunning but less extreme colour. A wedding
dress in cream, ivory or off white creates the same eye catching focus without such extreme colouring.
The non-white tones also work well on people with pale skin, preventing `ghost syndrome', as I like to
call it. Now for the bridesmaids' dresses and colours. This is always a tricky one, especially picking a
colour all your bridesmaids find acceptable. This is where most brides become unstuck and start to
lose their vision.
The most important thing to remember is that this is your wedding, your choices and your colours.
Don't be bogged down by conflicting views of members of your wedding party. They will have their
chance to pick their colours at their own wedding. As long as your choices don't make any of your party
look ridiculous (like pale pink on someone with red hair), they should have no say. Next m