月別アーカイブ: 2016年7月

North Chesterfield woman gets married in third-generation wedding dress

Sixty-one years ago, Georgianna Straffi married John Paone and wore a custom-made gown with white Dresden rose lace over satin.

As she walked down the aisle at the Our Lady of Peace Church in Fords, N.J., a Queen Elizabeth coronet with seed pearls and rhinestones with an attached veil of illusion glittered atop her head. Sequins and lace medallions adorned the illusion neckline. The cathedral train was lined with satin.

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Twenty-seven years later, her daughter, Jeanne Paone, walked down the same aisle in the same dress when she wed Thomas Bader.

She met her husband during their junior year of high school. “I told her I would marry her,” he said. “And we would have a daughter and name her Jeannine.”

On July 16, Thomas Bader walked his daughter Jeannine Bader, 32, down the aisle in the same wedding gown at the Cathedral of the Sacred Heart in Richmond.

“It’s more than a dress; it’s what it signifies to the family,” Jeanne Bader said. “It’s almost 100 years of marriage.”

Georginanna Straffi Paone, 87, said she saw a picture of the dress in a bridal magazine in 1955. She took the picture as well as a handwritten description to a bridal shop and had the dress custom made. She put down a $10 deposit on the gown and veil, which cost a total of $200.

“My mother was and still is very fashionable,” Jeanne Bader said. “She knew about fashion before the word ‘couture.’ ”

After the wedding, Paone placed her dress in a box and did not know when she would open it again.

“Once it hits the air, it discolors,” Paone said, explaining why she kept the box sealed for years.

Two and half decades later, her daughter opened it.

“It fit like it was made for me,” Jeanne Bader said. Her figure was similar to her mother’s; she was just a little taller.

“The moment I just never forgot was walking down the aisle with my father, knowing that my mother wore the dress,” she said.

Bader knew her daughter would experience the same emotions she had when walking down the aisle.

In 2011, Jeannine Bader met her now-husband, Bryan Mangas, at a car dealership.

“He’s a ‘BOGO.’ I bought my car, and he came with it,” she said. “It’s kind of a joke.”

She leased a Mercedes, and the two drove everywhere together. They racked up the mileage fee and had to pay a hefty bill. She said it was bittersweet turning the car in after making so many memories.

“He’s really the perfect match for Jeannine because he loves tradition. He loves family, and he’s incredibly loyal,” Bader said. “He understands what this dress signifies.”

When thoughts of marriage filled Jeannine’s head, she told her grandmother she would like to wear the dress.

But Paone would not open the box until her granddaughter had an engagement ring and set a wedding date.

The family had a small ceremony and opened the box together at Paone’s house in New Jersey. The dress looked as it did on the day Paone walked down the aisle in 1955. The Dresden lace was still intact and the color still fresh.

“We were shocked,” Paone said.

But when Jeannine tried the dress on, it didn’t fit.

“It was way too small, and we didn’t even know if she would be able to wear the dress,” her mother said. “But then we found Oksana.”

Oksana Vladimirova, a seamstress who works off West Broad Street, had to maintain the integrity of the dress while fitting it to the granddaughter’s curves.

It was challenging, she said. The material was delicate and rare, leaving no room for mistakes.

“The material is rose-point lace, which I don’t think you can get today,” Paone said.

The seamstress bonded with the family during the 10 months she spent working on the sweetheart wedding dresses.

“I’m so glad it’s making you happy,” Vladimirova said, starting to tear up as she held hands with Paone. “It’s very valuable to you and your family.”

As her granddaughter tried on the dress a few days before the wedding, Paone saw herself.

“I guess you could say that’s me,” Paone said. “Sixty-one years ago.”

カテゴリー: Weddings | 投稿者kuidry 17:17 | コメントをどうぞ

16 Canadian couples get free Bahamas weddings

Sixteen Canadian couples are set to say “I do” at wedding ceremonies taking place simultaneously in the Bahamas later this year.

The spouses-to-be won the prize through an online contest aimed at promoting the Bahamas as a travel destination for weddings and honeymoons.

The simultaneous weddings at locations throughout the Bahamian islands are set for Nov. 16, at 4 p.m., local time.

The couples — seven from Ontario, five from Alberta, two from Manitoba and one each from Nova Scotia and New Brunswick — will receive round-trip airfare and accommodation in the Bahamas, plus a “personal wedding co-ordinator.”

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The Ministry of Tourism in the Bahamas ran the same contest in the U.K. and the U.S in previous years.

Paul Strachan, the senior director at the Bahamas Tourist Office in Canada, said about 350 couples entered the contest.

Lana Newell, 35, and her fiance Mark Voisin, 43, are the winners from Nova Scotia. Their wedding is being planned in Exuma.

Newell and Voisin were working as teachers in New Zealand when they got engaged four years ago. They wanted to make sure their friends and family could be at their wedding, so they waited until they came back to Canada to start planning. When they couldn’t find full-time work right away, they had to put everything on hold.

“We were really dreaming of a beach wedding, but financially a beach wedding wasn’t in the question … you enter contests and still don’t really think you have a chance,” Newell said. “Now, here we are in Canada, we have the friends and family, and we have our wedding. We’re set now.”

The couple, who met on a hike at an outdoor adventure club, are currently making plans for their family to attend the ceremony, especially Newell’s five- and seven-year-old niece and nephew.

“They’ve never been on a plane, have never been to a wedding, have never been on a beach,” Newell said. “They’re our ringbearer and flower girl. They’re thrilled.”

Strachan said more than 150,000 Canadians travelled to the Bahamas last year, and his organization hopes to increase those numbers.

“Given the decline in the Canadian dollar and the fact that by comparison, the Bahamas tends to be a little more expensive because we don’t have the variety of all-inclusive resorts some other destinations do, we wanted people to consider us.”

Travel to the Caribbean country is crucial to its economy: nearly half the population is directly employed in tourism, and it generates 60 per cent of the country’s gross domestic product.

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カテゴリー: Weddings | 投稿者kuidry 11:25 | コメントをどうぞ