Wednesday, March 09, 2005

The beach trip where you first talked about it.  The night he proposed.  "The Dinner", with all your families celebrating together.  Your bridal shower.

By now, you've accumulated a lot of pictures, probably digital, and keeping them organized can be a real hassle.  You'd love to share your photos with family and friends, or maybe even make a photo album on CD as a favor to your guests.  Fortunately, there are a lot of programs available that will organize your photos, help you easily touch up your photos, and even create photo albums to share.  There's a good chance your wedding photographer will be using a digital camera, too, and could provide you with even more files to fill up your hard drive.

Macintosh computers ship with a suite of software known as iLife.  Not being Mac people, we can't comment too much on the software, only that we've seen it in action, and it's nice.

For the Windows crowd, Google provides a free tool named Picasa, which you can download for free from www.picasa.com.  A comparable commercial application is Photoshop Album, available almost everywhere.  A comparison of the two is at http://searchenginewatch.com/searchday/article.php/3460061.  Each program has its good features and "I wish it had" features, but in the end, it's tough to beat the price of Picasa, especially since it will do pretty much everything the average user needs it to.  Both of these programs offer the ability to create photo albums you can burn to a CD as a favor for your guests.

If you want to share traditional prints via a digital means, there are lots of flatbed scanners available that will do a decent job of converting prints to digital files, which can be used with either of these programs just as if they were digital photos.  We typically avoind buying the cheapest thing on the shelf, but any mid-priced model from HP or Canon will do an excelleet job.  You want to look for a scanner that supports 1200 dpi or better, ideally 2400 dpi or better.  Since your monitor displays at (probably) 96 dpi, a scanned photo will look enormous.  Most scanners will come with software to help you resize your photos, and both Picasa and Photoshop album will resize as well.

Thursday, March 10, 2005 2:14:47 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, March 08, 2005

For the month of March, all Beverly Clark wedding accessories are 20% off!

You can browse by collection from http://www.bloomeryweddings.com/beverly_clark.asp, or view individual accesory categories at http://www.bloomeryweddings.com/wedding_accessories.asp.

All closeout items are 40% off.  New items have been added recently, but quantities are extremely limited.

Wednesday, March 09, 2005 3:15:12 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Monday, February 28, 2005

Did you catch the premire of Survivor?  Each season, the teams receive "buffs" of different colors.  The colors are not picked at random.  This season, the two teams wear brown and blue buffs.  We first saw this combination in January, when we dined at Prime Steakhouse in Las Vegas's Bellagio.  The color scheme was striking, with deep chocolate and creme accents on a blue motif.  Recently, Pantone (the leading manufacturer of standardized inks and dyes) released its short list of Fall 2005 colors.  Want to guess what pair was most notable?  That's right--Glazed Ginger (brown) and Moroccan Blue.

If your bridesmaids are wearing brown dresses, you could use bouquets made with hydrangea or delphinium--two flowers that are naturally blue.  Agapanthus is available in a blue-ish hue that sometimes approaches lavender.  Depending on your bouquet style, your florist could also work brown and blue ribbons into the bouquets, as well as the other ceremony and reception decor.

Pantone's Fall 2005 Fashion Color Report is available at http://www.pantone.com/articles/pdfs/FashionColorReportFall2005.pdf.

Tuesday, March 01, 2005 4:26:21 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |