Wedding Packages

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Wedding Packages Wedding Packages The following pricing is designed with you in mind. I want to give you the best options for your budget. Packages have starting prices as you can have many add ons. If you’d like me for more hours stated in the package, it will be an extra $200 for each hour. If I am travelling for you, a set $400 flight fee (unless it runs over) will be added plus costs of hotel stay and transportation (to/from airport and to/from venue). This will differ depending on what is available near your venue as well as Uber/Lyft cost. Flights to Georgia and to Pittsburgh will be discounted to $200 set rate. If your destination is on my bucket list – a discount will be added from your package! Simple - Starting at $1600 The Simple Package, explains itself. A very laid back day that isn't very long. You just want some good photos of you both looking awesome, the ceremony, and some portraits of family thrown in. Includes: Location Details Ceremony Family and Bridal Party 30 min. Newlywed session Cocktail Hour / Small Reception *Add engagement session for $200 Classic - Starting at $2000 Here's a little something that isn't the most but it's the least. Baby bear's porridge if you will. Eight Hours Includes: EITHER Getting Ready OR Exit Location details Ceremony Family and Bridal Party Portraits 30 min. Newlywed session All of reception *Add engagement session for $200 Premium - Starting at $2500 Start to finish with second shooter for 6 hours Eight to Nine Hours Includes: Getting ready Location details Ceremony Family and Bridal Party Portraits 30 min. Newlywed session All of reception *Add engagement session for $100 Elopement Packages The following pricing for elopements have a little wiggle room. I want to make sure you get your beautiful day outdoors just right. Since there more than likely won’t be a venue or tent to run under if it is pouring rain, I give the option for rain checks. As it gets closer to your date and we see that it calls for rain, a reschedule of a day or two will be offered. However, I must have availability for you. Packages have starting prices as you can add hours. If you’d like me for more hours stated in the package, it will be an extra $200 for each hour. Many elopement locations require fees or permits. These prices do not include these fees and will be an extra added cost. Just Us - Starting at $1200 Maybe you are looking for a quiet time to celebrate your love. Let's do it. Two to Three Hours Includes: Final Touches of Getting Ready Walking or taking a short hike together to destination Ceremony Photos with Ordainer Newlywed portrait session Photos walking/hiking back Mom and the Kids - Starting at $1500 Are you thinking about your parents and the kids or best friends wanting to get in on witnessing this magnificent time in your life? You want to elope but you want them to be there too? We can make it happen. Two to Four Hours Includes: Final Touches of Getting Ready Walking or taking a short hike with everyone to destination Ceremony Candids Family/Friends Portraits Photos with Ordainer Newlywed portrait session Photos walking/hiking back All Day Adventure - Starting at $1800 Wanting a great adventure and aren't afraid to get your hair messy and your dress dirty? This is the one for you. How about we kick off those high heels and put on some hiking boots. Four to Eight Hours Includes: Sunrise Hike and Photos on Hike to destination Reading of Vows or Ceremony Photos with Ordainer if there is one Newlywed portrait session Photos of Location Downtime and Candids Photos on hike back .
Recommended publications
  • The Hmong Culture: Kinship, Marriage & Family Systems
    THE HMONG CULTURE: KINSHIP, MARRIAGE & FAMILY SYSTEMS By Teng Moua A Research Paper Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Master of Science Degree With a Major in Marriage and Family Therapy Approved: 2 Semester Credits _________________________ Thesis Advisor The Graduate College University of Wisconsin-Stout May 2003 i The Graduate College University of Wisconsin-Stout Menomonie, Wisconsin 54751 ABSTRACT Moua__________________________Teng_____________________(NONE)________ (Writer) (Last Name) (First) (Initial) The Hmong Culture: Kinship, Marriage & Family Systems_____________________ (Title) Marriage & Family Therapy Dr. Charles Barnard May, 2003___51____ (Graduate Major) (Research Advisor) (Month/Year) (No. of Pages) American Psychological Association (APA) Publication Manual_________________ (Name of Style Manual Used In This Study) The purpose of this study is to describe the traditional Hmong kinship, marriage and family systems in the format of narrative from the writer’s experiences, a thorough review of the existing literature written about the Hmong culture in these three (3) categories, and two structural interviews of two Hmong families in the United States. This study only gives a general overview of the traditional Hmong kinship, marriage and family systems as they exist for the Hmong people in the United States currently. Therefore, it will not cover all the details and variations regarding the traditional Hmong kinship, marriage and family which still guide Hmong people around the world. Also, it will not cover the ii whole life course transitions such as childhood, adolescence, adulthood, late adulthood or the aging process or life core issues. This study is divided into two major parts: a review of literature and two interviews of the two selected Hmong families (one traditional & one contemporary) in the Minneapolis-St.
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  • Wedding Planning Checklist
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  • Marital Problems in Religiously Mixed Marriages Amongst the Vhavenda People of South Africa : an African-Christian Perspective
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  • Your Wedding Ceremony Worksheet
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  • Asheville Elopement Packages
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  • Rates for Wedding Ceremony and Receptions
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  • Not Your Mother's Library Transcript Episode 26
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  • A Phenomenological Study of Hmong Women's Experience
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  • “Real, but Glossy” – Technology and the Practical Pursuit of Magic In
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  • Framing Elopement in a Romani Community
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  • Marriage Dynamics in Central Asia Lesia Nedoluzhko Victor
    Between Tradition and Modernity: Marriage Dynamics in Central Asia Lesia Nedoluzhko Victor Agadjanian Abstract The demographic literature on union formation in post-communist Europe typically documents retreat from marriage and increase in cohabitation. However, sociological and anthropological studies of post-Soviet Central Asia often point to a resurgence of various traditional norms and practices, including those surrounding marriage, that were suppressed under the Soviet rule. We engage these two perspectives on union formation by analyzing transition to first marriage in Kyrgyzstan both before and after the collapse of the USSR. We use uniquely detailed marriage histories from a nationally representative survey conducted in 2011-2012 to examine the dynamics of traditional marital practices among that country’s two main ethnic groups – Kyrgyz and Uzbeks, focusing on trends in arranged marriages and in marriages involving bride kidnapping. Whereas the analysis reveals instructive ethnic and period differences, it also indicates an overall decline in the risks of both types of traditional marriage practices in the post- Soviet era. In fact, although the decline has characterized all marriage types, it was more substantial for traditional marriages. We interpret these trends as evidence of continuing modernization of nuptiality behavior in the region. Keywords: Nuptiality, traditional marriage, modernization, Central Asia, event-history analysis 1 Introduction Transformation of nuptiality is an inalienable ingredient of modernity. Although changes in nuptiality regimes and union formation take different shapes in different societies, for many settings, including those of the former USSR, the demographic literature typically documents declining marriage rates and increase in non-marital cohabitation (e.g., Gerber and Berman 2010; Katus et al.
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