Monday, 21 February 2011

Films to Inspire a Destination Wedding

Roman Holiday (1953) – Audrey Hepburn and Gregory Peck set in 1950’s Rome

Mamma Mia (2008) -  Film adapted from the West End musical based on the songs of ABBA. Most of the filming was done on the small Greek island of Skopelos.

A Room With A View (1986) – A Victorian love story set in Florence - a well executed intrigue set in 1907 and blended from a book by E.M. Forster.

Captain Corelli’s Mandolin ( 2001) - When a fisherman leaves to fight with the Greek army during WWII, his fiancée falls in love with the local Italian commander.

Casanova (2005) -  Heath Ledger plays the fabled romantic as a man who, after failing to win the affection of a particular Venetian woman, strives to discover the real meaning of love.

French Kiss (1995) - A woman flies to France to confront her straying fiancé, but gets into trouble when the charming crook seated next to her uses her for smuggling. Romantic comedy with fabulous soundtrack

Amelie (2001) - Amelie, an innocent and naive girl in Paris, with her own sense of justice, decides to help those around her and along the way, discovers love. A romantic French fable set in Montmatre


Sunday, 20 February 2011

Weddings Abroad - Tip of the Day

Take Care in the Sun

In the days leading up to your wedding, be careful when basking in the sun - tanned skin looks great, but burnt and peeling skin doesn't! Best book a course of fake tan treatments before you go - check out our favourite James Read the UK's Leading Self Tan Expert - Tantalist

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Tuesday, 15 February 2011

Weddings Abroad - Tip of the Day


Don't Assume All Of Your Guests Have Passports

Provide invited guests with a "Save the Date" card to ensure they have enough lead in time to get passports 

Monday, 14 February 2011

You are the air that I breathe: Divers have marriage blessed at London Aquarium

While many use Valentine's Day as an annual excuse to splash out on a bunch of roses or a nice dinner, some couples take the celebration just a little bit further.
James Oliver and Kathryn O'Connor celebrated February 14 with an underwater blessing at the London Aquarium.
Kathryn wore a flowing white gown under her diving apparatus while James accessorised with a sea-blue tie.


Giant green sea turtles, cow-nose rays and shoals of colourful tropical fish swarmed around the couple during the blessing. 
Valentine's Day has traditionally been the day for romantic gestures since the 14th Century and is celebrated all over the world in increasingly inventive ways.
London also saw people queuing up to give Bruce Willis a kiss - his wax model that is.
Madame Tussaud's let the public choose who they wanted as their Valentine's 'Heartthrob.'
The Sixth Sense actor came top of the list. Closely followed by BAFTA winner Colin Firth and Brokeback Mountain star Jake Gyllenhaal.
In New York, Stephanie Hull and Air Force Captain John Wu - both from Louisville, Kentucky - got married on the 86th floor of the Empire State Building.
The pair were one of 14 couples from all over the United States who got married in one of New York's most famous landmarks.
They had all competed for the prize during the17th Annual Empire State Building and TheKnot.com Valentine's Weddings Event.

Fourteen competitive couples in Pattava, South Thailand, all tried to break the record for the World's Longest Continuous Kiss.
The pairs were clearly taking the challenge very seriously, they were dressed as if they were about to go to an exercise class and even had little steps to stand on if there was a big height difference between the two smoochers.
Seven of the pairs broke the previous record of 32 hours, 7 minutes and 14 seconds which was set in 2009 by a couple in Germany - although one participant fainted just 34 minutes into the competition.
Rules stated that couples were not to sit, sleep or leave the venue while kissing. They were allowed bathroom breaks every three hours but had to continue kissing while using the toilet, accompanied by staff to verify the fact.
And they were allowed to eat and to drink water, coffee, milk or juice - but only through straws while keeping their lips firmly locked together.
Kissing en-masse was also on the cards in Beijing's Happy Valley amusement park.
Couples get two-for-one entries into the park from the 14th to the 17th of February. Happy Valley holds kissing and singing games for enthusiastically loved-up pairs over the romantic period.
It wouldn't be Valentine's Day without a couple of mass weddings.
In Palawan, western Philippines, at least 150 couples defied the rain by getting married and planting mangrove trees at a 'Love Affairs with Nature' themed mass wedding.
Back in Thailand, couples took to the skies to make their wedding vows.
Sontaya Tiemjun and Praputson Mahavong were one of the couples who hung from rappelling ropes during their mountainside ceremony.
Getting married in mid-air is a popular way for thrill-seekers to tie the know in Thailand's Prachinburi province.
Nicaraguans used Valentine's Day as an unusual excuse to promote animal protection laws.
An English Cocker Spaniel dog called Blondie and a American Staffordshire Terrier dog called Katar were given their own wedding ceremony in Managua to raise awareness of the law.


Tuesday, 1 February 2011

More Britons going abroad to get married


LONDON (Reuters Life!) - Prince William and Kate Middleton may have decided on a traditional British wedding but nearly a fifth of their compatriots prefer to get married abroad, according to new research.

A study by consumer research group Mintel showed on Tuesday that 18 percent of Britons chose to tie the knot abroad last year, a rise in the number of such marriages of 27 percent between 2005 and 2010.

The rise has taken place at a time when overseas travel is cheaper and as the number of weddings at home continues to fall as the price for getting married in Britain remains substantially higher than elsewhere.

An estimated 266,000 UK weddings took place in 2010 marking a 7 percent drop over the five years since 2005. In 2010, the average wedding abroad cost 6,585 pounds ($10,580), while the average British wedding costs just below 20,000 pounds.

"The lower costs of overseas weddings are an important factor for many, with cost concerns influencing the whole market," said Mintel Senior Travel and Tourism Analyst Tom Rees.

"However the various desires to do something different, seek out better weather than can be expected in the UK and to avoid overblown, too-many-guest affairs are attracting more and more couples to the weddings abroad market."

Click here to read the entire article.....