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Hello all:

So, Valentine’s day falls on a Sunday this year, this makes for some very happy brides, as it’s the most romantic day of the year, until, they start dreaming about their flowers. Roses are a hot commodity from mid January until the week after Valentine’s day. This is when the farms are going to make most of their money for the year.

Please consider using flowers other than roses for your wedding if it is going to fall during those 5 weeks.  If you absolutely must have roses, choose a color other than red.

Flowers that don’t generally go up too much in price for that time of the year are hydrangeas, orchids, tropicals,  and daisies. 

We will always do our best to bring you the freshest, most beautiful flowers, for the lowest price possible.  Though our prices on flowers will go up during those 5 weeks, they will still be nowhere near what the traditional florist will be charging, if they even have time to take your wedding during that weekend.

So go ahead and dream of the most perfect Valentine’s weekend wedding, then give us a call for the very best pricing available.

Have a flower filled day!

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Hi Ladies:
Another wonderful site was just found, and what a site it is. If you have been looking at bridal dresses and veils in the stores you know that those veils can really be pricey. Some of you have even opted not to have a veil, just to save money. Well, now you can have the perfect veil, just as you want it, personally made just for you, by hand.
***They are running a special for the month of August, place your order by midnight 08/31/09 and shipping will be free***
You know, if I’m recommending it, it’s gotta be a killer deal! Go, look at the site, then give them a call. All you need is an idea, a picture a computer and a phone. The rest is done by ultimate dream veils. Check them out on weddingwire.com or http://ultimatedreamveils.bravehost.com/

Here’s to a flower filled day!

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We found another wonderful site for you. If you are looking for really well priced items for your wedding, they charge almost the same thing for purchase as most of you would pay for renting. Check them out.
www.efavormart.com

Have a flower filled day!

Dorelle

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Hello Everyone:
I found this article written by the Linen House, to be very infomative. For the Bride, it is a good tool to measure the vendors you are considering, for the vendors, it is a good tool to make sure that you are doing everything that the Bride is expecting of you.

Brides, are your vendors following these critical 6 steps?

Brides, repeat this mantra before you walk into your next vendor meeting: I’ve come to this vendor appointment to find things to make my wedding fabulous and memorable for my guests. I’m working within a budget and vendors need to respect that. After this meeting I don’t want to have to worry about these items at all. I trust the vendor to do his job and involve me in finalizing numbers or to inform me if anything unexpected happens. Regardless of my previous lack of experience with this type of vendor or the size of my order or the venue where I am holding my reception I expect to be treated with courtesy, dignity and respect. This is my wedding and it is very special to me. That’s why I am here! Well, all that, and I want to have fun!
The process as important as the product
When savvy vendors meet with their bridal clients, they want to ensure each meeting is successful. Obviously the vendor wants to make the sale. The bride wants to find those ‘just right’ items for the wedding. Smart vendors understand satisfied customers can become their best marketing campaign of one. Even before the final product is delivered, vendors are evaluated by the bride on the experience of making their selections. That information is likely to be shared with friends and family. It almost certainly will be shared over and over if the experience was a bad one.
How are vendors to ensure their business is not the target, deserved or not, of a bride’s frustration? The best way is for vendors to make sure the appointment is a fulfilling experience for all parties. Keep in mind these 6 steps.
1. Greet
2. Share
3. Select
4. Confirm
5. Summarize
6. Agree on next steps
The bullet points under each heading are the specific vendor tasks associated with the six phases of the perfect appointment.

1. Greet the clients
Welcome the bride and others in her party
Greet each person by name if known
Introduce yourself; provide a business card to each person
Offer a beverage or refreshments
Ask if the bride has previously been to this business location
Give short tour/highlights of the business
2. Share Information
Validate your understanding of what if anything you know about the wedding
Listen to the bride to correct or update your knowledge of the purpose for the visit
Take notes. These will prove invaluable in the weeks ahead
Use a form or check list during the meeting to make sure every possibility is covered. Blank paper is better than nothing, but not as professional and complete as a form.
Start to collect the basic information about the location, time, guest count, etc. during this phase. You will have to circle back to fill in the blanks during the summary phase.
3. Bride makes selections
Encourage the bride to interact with the sample merchandise. The more involved the bride is in the process the more ownership she will feel.
Don’t be discouraged if the bride does not care for the first options you suggest. At the beginning you may have to show a multitude of choices until something clicks. Even at that it could be more about color, texture, price or other factors. Be flexible. Use your experiences and expertise to offer suggestions that would enhance the wedding.
Be patient. The bride is here to make an important decision so it may take a little while to arrive at the final vision.
Enjoy the process. Smile and compliment the bride on her choices. This should be genuinely fun!
Share in the excitement of the wedding you are helping to plan. Ask questions to get more information about the vision, the guest of honor, the venue. Any information that helps make the event more real for you will help you do a better job in assisting the bride.
4. Confirm Availability and Pricing
Nothing is more discouraging to a bride than to fall in love with a selection only to find out later what she wants is not available or exceed the budget
During the appointment, once the selections start to solidify, confirm general pricing and availability. This gives the bride the option to choose alternatives or even enhance her décor based on this current information.
5. Summarize the selections
Wrap up the decision making phase of the meeting
Make certain you know what selections have been made. Confirm this with the bride.
Now is the time to get the exact bill-to name, phone numbers, e-mail addresses, mailing address, venue name, delivery addresses, contact information, table sizes, etc. Doing it later increases the likelihood it will be overlooked.
Provide the client samples of the selected items.
Stress that only firm reservations hold items. Offer to write a reservation right then. If it will take some time to write up the reservation:
Make sure the bride’s beverage glass has been refilled
Provide a blank contract form so the bride can read it in detail
Keep a stack of current wedding magazines handy for browsing
6. Agree on time frame and responsibility for next steps Now is the time to recap what you are going to do and when
Also review what information you still need from the bride and when she will provide it to you and how
Say goodbye; thank your bride for visiting
Review your notes to make sure they are in good order
Straighten the showroom for the next guest
Send a hand-written thank-you note or at least an e-mail recapping the next steps time frame and high level selections.

Brides, ask yourself as you walk out the door after a vendor meeting: Was this a worthwhile experience? Did I have the opportunity to see an adequate sampling of the merchandise and choose items that reflect my personal taste? Did I learn something new that will help me at the next vendor appointment or that I can use when planning other events in the future? Do I know specifically what I selected? Do I need to provide the vendor additional information? Do I know what and by when?

Was being a bride fun today?

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Hello Friends:

Yesterday I met a lovely woman at a Business Expo where we were showcasing our flowers. Her name is Diane Cavanaugh, and she works with a company known as New Horizons Computer Learning Centers. You might be asking me why am I placing this info on my blog, it has nothing to do with flowers…You’d be right; However, we believe in helping others in any way that we can.
What New Horizons can do for you is help you to update your skills, if you have recently lost your job, in the IT field.
You may think that you knew everything there was to know about the field you were in, but, there is always something new to learn, and you may have only learned what was applicable to your particular job, and missed all the other applications that may help you have a leg up on the competition, in this tough job market.

Give Diane a call (813-387-3500 xt. 3613), if you think she can help you, tell her, Dorelle at Bridesnblooms.com sent you.

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I’ve decided to let my local readers in on a secret location where they can tantalize their tastebuds!
Urban Culinary Cuisine is a “small eatery that is big on flavor.”
This intimate restaurant is run by Chef John Sexton who is passionate about food and flavors. If you are lucky enough to come to the restuarant when it is open, (Chef will close for private catered events), you will open your tastebuds up to a whole new world of Yum!
The location is unassuming, yet, you feel the chef’s arms wrap around you as soon as you put the food in your mouth. When you realize that you can actually have the chef cater your own private event, you feel honored and priveleged, as well as well fed.
Make sure you call ahead to see if the restaurant is open, so as not to be disappointed if some other lucky person has booked them privately.
Whether you want Southern Comfort food or upscale culinary cuisine, Chef Sexton will lovingly put it all together for you.
Check out the Chef’s Lecture series as well…
“The sensual Side of Foods” every other Friday evening, starting 06/26/09…an adult only event starting at 9:00 pm.

Urban Culinary Cuisine…813-994-3800…10016 Cross Creek Blvd. Tampa, 33647

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Brides Kiss Dream Weddings Goodbye as Vendors Shut (Update1)

By Alexis Leondis and Elizabeth Hester

April 13 (Bloomberg) — Connie Banks was planning a “bride’s dream” at Tuscany of Garden Oaks, a Houston banquet hall with ceilings painted to resemble the Sistine Chapel. Then the hall’s owner filed for bankruptcy.

Banks, whose family paid $22,000 for the space and catering, was suddenly left with no place to put the 250 people on her wedding list.

“I still feel guilty my parents lost all that money,” said Banks, a 24-year-old teacher who found a new venue at the additional cost of having to change the date to a Friday from a Saturday this June. “I also feel guilty guests will have to take more time off from work to attend a Friday wedding.”

The $60 billion-a-year U.S. wedding industry is contracting along with the rest of the economy, said Millie Martini Bratten, editor-in-chief of Conde Nast’s Brides magazine in New York. Couples are scaling back on champagne and chocolate fountains, and business failures by florists and caterers are forcing changes in plans.

“People don’t time when they fall in love with the economic cycles,” Martini Bratten said. “But when times are tight, we do see a pull-back in spending.”


Cocktail Parties

The economy has shed about 5.1 million jobs since December 2007, the most in a post-World War II slump, according to the Labor Department. The U.S. jobless rate is 8.5 percent, the highest since 1983.

Wedding industry unemployment can’t be calculated because photographers, dress makers and others usually don’t limit their work to one kind of event, McMurray said.

“Ninety percent of wedding vendors are small businesses, so these folks are obviously struggling,” he said.

In Manhattan, couples are downsizing by opting for cocktail parties instead of sit-down dinners, said Amy Aversa, owner of Sweet Basil Catering in New York.

“It’s definitely forcing caterers to get more creative,” said Aversa, who estimates her average client is spending 30 percent less this year.

$2,200 More

To trim the budget for a September reception, Aversa said she’s using fewer fresh flowers in centerpieces and filling empty spaces with candles and photographs. She’s also getting more requests for cupcakes rather than multilayered bridal cakes.

For Margarita Lambos in Charlotte, North Carolina, the cost of the shrinking economy was $6,200.

Lambos paid cash in advance when she ordered a $4,000 Swarovski crystal-embellished Ines Di Santo gown for her walk down the aisle. Then the recession claimed another victim: the bridal boutique that had her money and her dress.

“Their bankruptcy almost ruined my wedding,” said Lambos, a 26-year-old stay-at-home mother. After La Bella Sposa closed in June, Lambos said she contacted the designer’s Toronto studio and, parting with $2,200 more, was married in August in her “dream dress.”

Lambos said she decided not to bother signing up as a creditor in the La Bella Sposa bankruptcy.

Second Choice

The bridal store couldn’t survive a pullback in discretionary spending, said Rick Mitchell, the owners’ bankruptcy lawyer.

“People don’t necessarily need an $8,000 wedding gown to get married,” Mitchell said.

In Houston, after Tuscany of Garden Oaks closed and owner Titus Inc. filed for bankruptcy, Banks reserved her second- choice wedding location, Chateau Polonez. She said she thinks her situation “turned out on the better end” of the spectrum.

Minute Maid Park, home of baseball’s Houston Astros, was the site of weddings for 33 other brides left without reception spaces by Titus, which also owned Bella Terraza, another venue that shut down. Chef and television personality Rachael Ray threw them a mass ceremony and party for 500 friends and family in November and aired the event on her syndicated show.

Other area vendors offered discounts to help brides offset the costs of the venues’ closings, Banks said.

Leonard Simon, a lawyer for Titus’s owner, Carolyn James, declined to comment.

The recession hadn’t begun when Laura McCormick, a stay-at- home mother in Middle Township, New Jersey, posed for pictures with her wedding party in March 2007. McCormick, 28, said she paid Celebrations Studios $4,000 and still doesn’t have a professional photograph of the event.

The Culprit

“We ended up with pretty much nothing,” McCormick said.

Celebration Studios, based in Chester, New Jersey, was low on cash as business started to slow and couldn’t pay photographers who took pictures around the time of the McCormick wedding, said Jeffrey Herrmann, Celebration Studio’s attorney. Some workers who hadn’t been paid kept their images, he said.

The company closed in January 2008 and was sued that month by the New Jersey Division of Consumer Affairs, which accused Celebration Studios of violating state consumer fraud law by taking deposits when it knew it wouldn’t be able to perform the services. Under a court order, the agency is distributing photos, negatives and video footage to customers, according to Jeff Lamm, a spokesman for the consumer division.

Celebration Studios didn’t intend to deceive clients, Herrmann said.

“The culprit in this was the recession,” he said.

Celebratory Wedding Mood

Katharine Atkinson, a 29-year-old grant writer in Portland, Oregon, has mailed save-the-date cards for her August wedding at the Portland Classical Chinese Garden. Because her father, a home-builder, hasn’t made a sale in eight months and her mother and stepfather lost their jobs, she said, she’s concerned about what she’ll be spending.

“It feels uncomfortable for me to be in a celebratory wedding mood,” she said in an e-mail. “It didn’t take long for the glow of being newly engaged to wear off.”

“Bridesnblooms.com is a great choice for your flowers, as you don’t “pay” for your flowers until 1-2 weeks before your event, if other things have to change, we can still fill your order. We can change your delivery location,or change your order amount if you call us within 2 weeks of your event”

To contact the reporter on this story: Alexis Leondis in New York aleondis@bloomberg.net; Elizabeth Hester in New York ehester@bloomberg.net.

Last Updated: April 13, 2009 10:35 EDT

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Hi all!
Just wanted to pass on a really cool tip that a bride passed on to me. If you need glass vases, or other craft type items for your event, and you live near a dollar tree, you can order in bulk through their website and save a ton of money. Dollar tree will sell to you in bulk, and ship directly to the store that’s closest to you, and won’t charge you for shipping. You just go to the store and pick it up.
What a coup!!! 12 cylinder vases for $12.00 and no shipping charges. Check them out
www.dollartree.com

Go DIY!

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WeddingWire, the nation’s leading wedding technology company, just announced that Bridesnblooms.com has won the 2009 Bride’s Choice Awards™! In its inaugural year, the Bride’s Choice Awards recognizes and honors vendors from the WeddingWire Network that demonstrate excellent quality of service, responsiveness, professionalism, value of cost and flexibility. This year’s recipients represent the top 3% of WeddingWire’s vendor community, which includes over 100,000 wedding vendors from across the US. That means Bridesnblooms.com is one of the very best Wholesale fresh flower companies online. Unlike other awards in which winners are selected by the company, the Bride’s Choice Awards are determined exclusively by recent newlyweds through surveys and reviews. “We are excited to launch this annual award program to honor high-performing vendors based solely on the experiences of our WeddingWire community,” according to Timothy Chi, WeddingWire’s Chief Executive Officer. “This year’s recipients have set the bar high, exhibiting excellent service and expertise in the wedding industry.” Bridesnblooms.com would like to thank our past clients for speaking on our behalf and helping us win the 2009 Bride’s Choice Award!

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