Friday, October 30, 2009

Why A Wedding Video


A wedding video is more than a luxury. The day is going to be a blur for you. Wedding videography is the best documentation of your day. A professional wedding videographer captures everything that happens in your wedding. It’s not like looking at a picture. Memories fade.

After your wedding is all done and your friends and relative’s have gone home, you have your wedding video to relive that special day. You hear the laughter, you see how your parents react to you saying “I do”, you see how your future husband teared up when he saw you walking down the aisle. You hadn’t noticed that. You were too busy trying not to cry and trying not to trip. You watch your friends and family having fun.

You don’t even remember seeing some of them at your wedding. You see the the flower girl going the wrong way down the aisle. Now you know why you heard laughing while you were waiting nervously in the hall. These memories are precious and once it’s over, it’s over. There is no going back.

Professional Videographers seem to pricey?

If you are planning on putting a tripod up at your wedding, here are some things to consider. Full bright sunlight, crying baby, coughing, dark ceremony, lots of beams in the reception hall. Editing itself is an art form both with the video and the audio side (take the hours you filmed and at least triple it for editing). You might not think of this but professional videographers have dealt with these issues and know how to make your wedding video look and hear like you never had any of those obstacles. You are not going to be able to see yourself and your fiancee’s expressions or really hear your voices with one tripod set up in the back of your wedding venue. Wedding videographers not only document your day, but create a wedding video that even strangers would want to watch over and over again. When choosing a professional, ask questions like how many cameras do they use during the ceremony? Do they mike up the pastor and your future husband? Do they charge extra for High Definition filming?

Watch a wedding video done by a professional wedding videographer and you will see just like wedding photography it is an investment. Oregon is lucky to have such top videographers. We are all striving to perfect our art and story telling and every year we are inspired by what fellow videographers are creating and what we have created. Oregon wedding videographers are in the forefront of recreating what it means to having a wedding film. A wedding video is an heirloom you can show your children or future children, and they can show their children. We often hear from our brides and grooms that it was the best investment they made on their wedding day.

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Halloween Ideas For Your Party


Here is a link that will give you all the ideas you need for your event. Have fun and be safe!


Jenniene



http://www.halloween-online.com/


Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Finding Everything You Need In One Place

Accounting Acne Adsense Advertising Aerobics Affiliate

Alternative Articles Attraction Auctions Audio-streaming

Auto-care Auto-parts Autoresponder Aviation


( B )

Babies-toddler Baby Bankruptcy Bathroom Beauty

Bedroom Blogging Body-building Book-marketing

Book-review Branding Breast-cancer Broadband Internet

Business-loan Business-plan Business


( c )

Cancer Car-buying Car-insurance Car-loan Car-maintenance

Career Cars Casino Cell-phone Cgi-bin

Chat Christmas Claims Coaching Coffee

College-university Computer-pc-tips Cooking-tips Cooking

Copywriting Cosmetics Craft Creative-writing Credit-cards

Credit-repair Credit Currency-trading



( D )

Data-recovery Dating Debt-relief Diabetics Diet

Digital-camera Diving Divorce Domain Driving-tips



( E )

Ebay Ebook Ecommerce Email-marketing Emarketing

Essay Ezine



( F )

Fashion Finance Fishing Fitness Flu Furniture




( G )

Gambling Gardening Golf Google Gps



( H )

Hair-loss Hair Hdtv Health-insurance Heart-disease

Hobbies Holiday Home-business Home-improvement

Home-organization


( I )

Interior-design Internet-tips Investment


( J )

Jewelry


( K )

Kitchen

( L )

Ladies-accessories Lawyer Lcd-plasma Legal

Life-insurance Lingerie Love


( M )

Mailing-list Make-money Mortgage Mp3 Music

( N )

Network-marketing


( O )

Online-shopping


( P )

Paid-survey Pc-games Perfume Personal-injury Ppc

Pregnancy Publishing


( R )

Real-estate Recipe Recreation Relationship Resume

Romance Rss


( S )

Sales-letter Self-employment Seo Shoes Small-business

Smoking Software Spam-blocking Sports Spyware

Stress


( T )

Trading Travel


( V )

Vacation Video-conferencing Video-streaming Virus Voip


( W )

Web-design Web-development Web-hosting Website-traffic

Wedding Weight Wine Women Writng-tips

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Choosing Fall Wedding Colors


Some of the most common colors used for fall weddings include:
Rich red
Burgandy
Rust
Sage Green
Bronze
Gold
Copper
Wheat
Off-white
Pumpkin
Taupe
Mocha
Marigold
Fall is a season of change, so it's difficult to pick a single color palette. Instead, you can choose from several groups of colors depending upon whether it's early fall, mid-fall, or late fall. There's a wide range of vibrant colors, muted tones, and even metallic shades that symbolize the season beautifully.

Early Fall
In the early fall, the sun is still vibrant and the colors of the harvest are rich and beautiful. If you're getting married in September or early October, the best colors to use are reds (from apple to burgundy), pumpkin, marigold, green, and cream.

Apple Red
It seems that no matter what the season, apple red is always right for the occasion. Fall weddings are no exception, as juicy red apples are a symbol of the fall harvest. You can use red as a main color or just as an accent, but it's a surefire way to liven up your color scheme.

Bright and Warm
Colors like marigold and green make perfect fall wedding colors because they embody the bright warmth of the season without overwhelming the senses. In this way, they're just like fall—it's bright, warm, and not overdone. It's simply, classically beautiful.

Mid-Fall
Getting married in mid-to-late October or early November? Your color scheme should shift a bit away from all of the vibrant colors that accompany the early fall. Instead, try metallics like bronze or gold, burgundy, rust, and perhaps even shades of brown. Peach, burgundy (or wine
), and red, combined with a few pops of sage green, make a stunning set of fall wedding colors that really captures the essence of the season. It's romantic and classy, plus it's easy to find flowers that really fit in with the theme.
Think Orange
All shades of orange—including peach—are great for mid-fall weddings. If you're planning a Halloween wedding, you may even want to consider featuring true orange in your decorations. Even if you're not getting married on or right around Halloween, orange is one of the top picks for mid-fall weddings.
Dusty rose tones look beautiful against peach, orange, and even rust. Other complementary fall shades include browns, wine, and burgundy. Red looks best as an accent color when used during the middle and late fall.

Metallics Add Spark
Shades of bronze, copper, and gold make for a beautiful color scheme. They can also be used as accent colors in the ribbons on the flowers, the decorations at the weddings site, or to enrich the reception hall's beauty. If you're getting married somewhere with lots of earth tones, using metallics can make it seem as though you spent much more money on the decorations than you did.

Embrace seasonal colors.
Not everyone looks their best in deep bronzes, coppers, and so forth, so keep your wedding party's skin tones in mind when choosing bridal party dresses
.
Late Fall
Late fall is very versatile. You can use the deep, rich colors like chocolate or red-tinged plum, and go for a metallic theme with pops of color to welcome the coming winter season (such as apple red or pine green) mixed with cream and mocha
, or go for a nearly monochromatic theme using pale gold, cream, and shades of brown.
Subdued Neutrals: Almost Monochromatic
One of the most beautiful ways to welcome winter when you have a late fall wedding is to choose a pale, neutral, monochromatic color scheme with golden accents. That means lots of browns: mocha, tan, caramel, cream, off-white, beige—whichever mix you prefer. Make sure you add gold to give it a hint of glitz and a whole lot of glam.
Adding a bit of red, green, or silver can also be a nod toward winter weather colors
.
Choosing Accent Colors
When choosing wedding colors for a fall ceremony, you'll of course need one or two main colors and then a couple of accent colors. The earlier it is in the season, the more color—everywhere—you can get away with. Of course, it is your wedding, so if you want to use watermelon pink and lime
green in late November, don't let seasonal restraints hold you back. If you're looking for guidance when it comes to playing to the tones of fall, here are some tips on choosing your accent colors:
Early Fall: Even if your main color or colors are pretty vibrant (pumpkin, for example), you can get away with brighter accent colors. Small amounts of apple red wouldn't look out of place, for example.
Mid-Fall: In mid-fall, subdued, muted, and earthy tones are popular. Try accenting in colors that are also muted, cream or other pale neutrals, and hints of metallic tones. Using a single bright pop of color, such as yellow in a cast of orange and rust, will also bid farewell to the passing of summer and still flow nicely with the color scheme.
Late Fall: Late fall calls for rich, warm colors and metallics. Light gold makes a beautiful accent color whether your color scheme consists of light neutrals or the deepest, velvety colors available. If you choose a darker palette, bring light to the decorations by adding in hints of cream or champagne
. For other accent colors, don’t be afraid of red and pine green.
Fall wedding colors are rich and vibrant, celebrating both the fruitfulness of the season and the blossoming of your nuptials.