Beautiful place

April 03, 2010 at 9:33 PM

Beautiful place, can't wait to come back!

Todd and Steph - Brisbane



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Category: Testimonials

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Posted by Sweetlove on
This is great! I stumbled upon your site via BrideTide, and have bemokarkod your site to show to my future wedding planning clients. You're a great resource for puzzle piece guestbooks' and other ideas!
Posted by Sweetlove on
This is great! I stumbled upon your site via BrideTide, and have bemokarkod your site to show to my future wedding planning clients. You're a great resource for puzzle piece guestbooks' and other ideas!
Posted by Sweetlove on
This is great! I stumbled upon your site via BrideTide, and have bemokarkod your site to show to my future wedding planning clients. You're a great resource for puzzle piece guestbooks' and other ideas!
Posted by Muhamadsamadi on
WOW! Of course, as a neleywwd, I have an opinion. I'm just trying to figure out how to say this without offending anyone. Although the photographer seems to be having a temper tantrum, there are a few things that were said that made a lot of sense to me. I'm not a small, thin person and I'm not particularly beautiful. I would love to send our wedding pictures to some well-known blogs that might highlight our wonderful wedding, but ultimately decided that the time invested wouldn't be worth the rejection. I doubt that any other blog would be so gracious as Ron has been to post pictures of our wedding. Let's face it, thin and beautiful sells and blogs are about selling an image, an idea. However, I didn't feel pressured to have a particular wedding based on a blog acknowledgment. I understand that wedding professionals need to get their name out there, especially photographers, in order to drum up more business, which could be extremely helpful. I also understand the point the author was making about the pressure of having a different and unique wedding, and the lack of inspiration for the simple wedding. My feelings about this article are mixed. Everyone should have the same options of having their wedding showcased, but then again most of the time, the simple weddings seem to be stamped out of the same cloth, with little or no personal touch. Whether it is a mixture of dollar store decorations or well thought out decor, how many similar weddings can future brides honestly view before they get the picture? Blogs should highlight personal touches, unique ideas, moments of sincerity, and timeless displays of love. Whether or not a blog decides to publish an article about a wedding should be based on the story, the couple, and what the wedding portrays for the rest of the wedding world. Both sides of this argument are really birthed from the commercialism of weddings. One side posts ideas that represents the trends of the times, while the other side touts his/her beliefs or grievances about why he/she was left out. Truth is, there are so many blogs and so many schools of thoughts out there about weddings that it is hard to feel sorry for anyone. All of that being said, we do need to see the balance of wedding styles, but we also must remember that almost everything is driven by supply and demand. So, if you don't see anything on the blogs that represent your wedding, blog your ideas and share them with other brides like you. Don't let anyone determine your wedding, and definitely don't apologize for it. Have the wedding that will make you smile throughout the life of your marriage. Be true to yourself. Blogs will come and go. Nothing worth having was ever built on a blog post. So, for the author of the original letter, thank you for standing up for the little guy, but wouldn't it be more effective to give your brides a pep talk when they apologize to you rather than go on a rant? I find that change always happens with the man in the mirror.For this reason, I toss my support to the wedding blogs that opt to showcase the couples that made personalized their weddings. However, this is not to say that I think simple weddings aren't beautiful and should be
Posted by Muhamadsamadi on
WOW! Of course, as a neleywwd, I have an opinion. I'm just trying to figure out how to say this without offending anyone. Although the photographer seems to be having a temper tantrum, there are a few things that were said that made a lot of sense to me. I'm not a small, thin person and I'm not particularly beautiful. I would love to send our wedding pictures to some well-known blogs that might highlight our wonderful wedding, but ultimately decided that the time invested wouldn't be worth the rejection. I doubt that any other blog would be so gracious as Ron has been to post pictures of our wedding. Let's face it, thin and beautiful sells and blogs are about selling an image, an idea. However, I didn't feel pressured to have a particular wedding based on a blog acknowledgment. I understand that wedding professionals need to get their name out there, especially photographers, in order to drum up more business, which could be extremely helpful. I also understand the point the author was making about the pressure of having a different and unique wedding, and the lack of inspiration for the simple wedding. My feelings about this article are mixed. Everyone should have the same options of having their wedding showcased, but then again most of the time, the simple weddings seem to be stamped out of the same cloth, with little or no personal touch. Whether it is a mixture of dollar store decorations or well thought out decor, how many similar weddings can future brides honestly view before they get the picture? Blogs should highlight personal touches, unique ideas, moments of sincerity, and timeless displays of love. Whether or not a blog decides to publish an article about a wedding should be based on the story, the couple, and what the wedding portrays for the rest of the wedding world. Both sides of this argument are really birthed from the commercialism of weddings. One side posts ideas that represents the trends of the times, while the other side touts his/her beliefs or grievances about why he/she was left out. Truth is, there are so many blogs and so many schools of thoughts out there about weddings that it is hard to feel sorry for anyone. All of that being said, we do need to see the balance of wedding styles, but we also must remember that almost everything is driven by supply and demand. So, if you don't see anything on the blogs that represent your wedding, blog your ideas and share them with other brides like you. Don't let anyone determine your wedding, and definitely don't apologize for it. Have the wedding that will make you smile throughout the life of your marriage. Be true to yourself. Blogs will come and go. Nothing worth having was ever built on a blog post. So, for the author of the original letter, thank you for standing up for the little guy, but wouldn't it be more effective to give your brides a pep talk when they apologize to you rather than go on a rant? I find that change always happens with the man in the mirror.For this reason, I toss my support to the wedding blogs that opt to showcase the couples that made personalized their weddings. However, this is not to say that I think simple weddings aren't beautiful and should be
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