[Our Wedding] Preparations


We officially registered our intention to marry on the 1st of April (April Fools Day). It was tough going convincing the registrar that we were serious about having a wedding on the 13th at 13hr30. We are not superstitious. 

One of the earliest preparations we made after getting engaged was to book our dream honeymoon. We chose somewhere that we thought we wouldn't be able to do again for a long while. Somewhere with warm weather, exciting food and plenty to photograph. Then we kept it secret from the majority of our friends, which was great fun. 


I had a few certain ideas of what I wanted my dress to be like and it wasn't what was in the shops. I was after something that wasn't strapless, wasn't floor length and that I felt myself in. I always intended to buy one, but as the search was looking less and less likely to be successful we started to wonder about making it ourselves. And then, whilst shopping on my birthday with my sister, we came across this one. 

My Dad's rules for the dress where that you couldn't see my underwear and that I was happy in it, at this point I think he added that the colour should be white. Fear not Dunks: the dress wont be black with white spots when we walk down the aisle together!




We bought the dress from the fancy silk store, we'll the fabric anyway. It cost around £80 all in. And Nom's wonderful Mum did the rest of the magic.





Malc's Mum made our cake. She used their family's Christmas Cake Recipe, but multiplied the quantities generously- our top tier was the size of their annual celebration.
We asked Hana Kelly to draw the key decorative elements for our stationary, and she didn't disappoint. The stationary turned out to be one of my favourite things in the whole process. We digitised her pen work and added the typography and other essentials (such as the map). 


We spent an evening hand stamping the place cards with a two colour lino cut I made and wrote on our guests nicknames. We had a few left over cards to use as plant care labels to convert our phalaenopsis table centres into thank you gifts for a few special guests. 



We used a professional florist for our bouquets, button holes and church displays but bought the rest of our orchids from IKEA. We used them on the table centres and to decorate the cake. And now they have new homes, some with us and others with guests.



I embroidered a couple of hankies as gifts for the wedding morning, the yellow one was sent to Malc and the white one I gave to my Mum.


The finishing touches: I henna'ed my toes (the pattern was hidden by my wedding shoes) and packed the final items into my honeymoon suitcase.




[Our Wedding] Bling



Malc asked me to marry him on Christmas Day 2009. We were in a car park and he didn't get down on one knee, what he did do included chocolate peanuts, heartfelt words and a ring that he had spent hours deliberating over by himself (that fitted perfectly). And the car park was the place we first met, nearly 7 years previously.

After that we went carol singing with our families, made casual announcements with champagne, put it on Facebook (to make it real of course) and had 2 engagement parties, with more champagne.







[Menu Thoughts] Cold

Make the most of summer and avoid sweating in the kitchen by making heat-free foodstuffs to eat chilled.


Gazpacho: Summer soup eaten cold. 

1kg of tomatoes
4 inches of cucumber
a handful of chives
a clove of garlic
a couple of glugs of olive oil
a splash of white wine vinegar
Salt and pepper

Blend and fully chill.




Coffee ice lollies: these ones without milk, though milk reportedly works well too. 

Make a mug of strong and sweet coffee, then freeze in moulds.

By far my favourite of these frozen stuffs.



Summer Cooler Cubes:  a weird combination of savoury ingredients to put in a glass of water? A very refreshing combination. 

London Baby II- bring on next year


Does he look nervous? On Thursday Tom interviewed for a masters at University of Buckingam. We accompanied him to the big city for moral support. 


We "did" the Saatchi Gallery and it "did" us proud: its long qualified as my favourite gallery not necessarily because of its contents but because of how it "does" being a gallery. For a £1 they'll give you the complete listing of works in the show with information on each artist. There are no barriers so you can get up close and smelly with the work. And best of all you can take photos, with no restrictions.


We were reunited with Smithy by the Albert Memorial and made our way to the Lido for coffee before walking to the V&A to meet Nai. 


Keeping up with some favourite haunts we had cookies and milkshake at Ben's cookies in Covent Garden and discovered a new favourite place to sample tea for free, Tea Palace. Then found our way to Leon

Nai took this pic to record our milkshake


I'd strongly recommend the sweet potato falafel. And this pair seemed to enjoy their food too.



The trip was nicely rounded off when Tom got the call to confirm his place on the course next year, whilst driving home into the sunset no less. Well done Smithy.

Llangollen 2011


Last week we had the awesomely fun privilege of attending the International Eistedfodd in Llangollen, where Malc was singing with the Cantorion Ostinato Singers. There was a tonne of practising in the run up to their time on stage. The choir have only been together for about 6 months, though previously they have all been - or still are - members of the Elizabethan Madrigal Singers (of Aberystwyth University, of course).





Everyone made a very early start on Friday for the choir's performance in the Chamber Choirs competition. We were all pretty nervous as it was to be their very first public performance. They were up against six other groups from England, Lithuania, the Philippines, Canda, and the USA.





There was a huge level of excitement and fantastic performances. The standard in the Chamber Choirs class is reportedly higher than most and, although Ostinato scored a handsome 82, The Adventist University of the Philippines Ambassador Chior won. These guys went on to win the overall Choir of the World Competition. 




Billed as "the unique international festival" the Llangollen Eistedfodd started shortly after the end of the second world war in an attempt to bring countries together in peace. Its pretty good fun, though mysteriously ignored by nearly everyone outside Wales. The main tent houses formal choral performances of an impressive standards with competitors from all over the world competing in their own language and traditions. Other stages have a different vibe: the S4C stage included smaller bands from a variety of backgrounds, including folk and a local school brass band. There are stalls and shops selling crafts, clothing and food from across the world and everywhere groups of people (usually in matching clothing) rehearsing or singing just for fun. 



 

After all the hard work the choir relaxed with some drinks to plan out their programme for next years concert, plotting how many competitions they could fit into and testing their tuning against a guitar tuning app. And watched their performance on telly (with full subtitles in English). 



We stayed at a beautiful site next to an Abbey with cottages for rent, a home-grown butchers, coffee shop, and camping facilities (including tent pods). 


Joe and I were the unofficial Official Ostinato WAGs


Every year for a week in July the festival totally takes over this village and from what we saw the locals made all the festival goers very welcome. Its a stunningly beautiful place though, so I reckon its worth a visit when the crowds aren't there. There's beautiful scenery, historic sites, a steam railway, a canal with famous aqueduct and a good chip shop (we recommend the kebab shop at the top end of the high street). 







Los bebés


Last week the two of us travelled to Suffolk to visit Nom's aunty Bibi. She and uncle Joff were moving to a bigger house just a few minutes walk from where they'd been staying. This sounds relatively simple, but added to the equation were two four-month-old twins, two young, boisterous Labradors and the fact that Joff was away moving most of their stuff from their previous home in Derbyshire. You can see, then, why we were drafted in to help. Fortunately for us Bibi cooks a wonderful Spanish omelette and, as you can see, the babies are ridiculously cute.







Joff and Bibi's new home is in a small village surrounded by ample stretches of greenery. The dogs and babies take regular walks past a farmhouse that keeps some interesting pets: chickens, geese and Norfolk pigs, which have recently been revived from extinction!






The new house is very quaint: it has old crooked door frames (low enough to bump your head), a thatched roof, an enormous fireplace, and a vegetable patch. We'd happily swap pads with them for a while, and we're sure they'll be happy there.





Plaster Party


It was my sister's 18th birthday today. She had some people round for food. My parents are having a load of work done on their house and the most convenient available party space was a room that's recently been stripped down, knocked through and freshly plastered. I think they were a bit embarrassed about it, but I thought it looked pretty suave in a continental, unpolished, minimalist sort of way. I told them not to bother with the new floorboards. Here's the birthday girl by the way:


Enjoy being an adult Vanessa.