From PopEater.com
By Zach Dionne Posted Nov 23rd 2010 09:12AM

prince william and kate middleton announce wedding date and venue

Prince William and Kate Middleton Engagement

Prince William and Kate Middleton have set a wedding date, according to the British Monarchy Twitter. (Yes, the British monarchy has a Twitter.)

“Prince William and Miss Catherine Middleton will be married on Friday 29th April 2011,” read a tweet early Tuesday morning.

The account also made use of a TwitPic (so savvy!) to announce Westminster Abbey as the locale for the nuptials.

PEOPLE notes Prince William’s grandmother, Queen Elizabeth, was wed in the same spot in 1947. The magazine also hears through sources that William and Kate, both 28, enjoy the Abbey’s “intimacy,” despite the fact it seats 2,000 people.

The wedding will be a holiday in the UK. PopEater’s Naughty But Nice columnist Rob Shuter heard yesterday the royal wedding could be the most expensive celebrity ceremony of all time.

Danny Bonaduce weds in Hawaii


Amy Railsback and Danny Bonaduce

Amy Railsback and Danny Bonaduce

From Wonderwall.msn.com

WENN, Friday, December 3, 2010, 5:27pm (PST)

Former “Partridge Family” star Danny Bonaduce is a married man again after exchanging vows with his manager girlfriend in a surprise ceremony last week.

The actor, 51, proposed to Amy Railsback in March 2009, less than six months after finalizing his divorce from his wife of 16 years, Gretchen.

Bonaduce recently treated Railsback to a vacation in Hawaii, but she was left stunned when he revealed they were actually in Maui to wed in a surprise sunset ceremony.

amy railsback and danny bonaduce sunset wedding

Danny Bonaduce and Amy Railsback share a kiss at sunset

The couple became man and wife on 22 November, reports the National Enquirer.

Railsback, who, at 28, is 23 years his junior, is Bonaduce’s third wife.

Prince William Is Engaged to Be Married

FROM: NYTimes.com

prince-william_kate-middleton_engaged

Prince William and Kate Middleton at the wedding of a friend in Northleach, England, last month.

By SARAH LYALL

LONDON — Years of fevered speculation ended on Tuesday, when Prince William, the heir to the heir of the British throne, said that he plans to marry his longtime girlfriend, Kate Middleton.

In a brief statement, William’s father, Prince Charles, said that he was “delighted” to announce the engagement between William and Miss Middleton, both 28, and that they would be married next spring or summer.

“Prince William has informed the queen and other close members of his family,” the statement said. “Prince William has also sought the permission of Miss Middleton’s father.”

The statement added that the couple would live in North Wales, where William is stationed with the Royal Air Force.

Their engagement is a break from longtime royal tradition for a number of reasons. Unlike other future queens, Miss Middleton, who comes from Bucklebury, in Berkshire, is not of royal, or even aristocratic, lineage. Her father is a former airline pilot and her mother a former flight attendant; together they run a successful mail-order business that sells paraphernalia for children’s parties.

Also — in contrast to couples like Prince Charles and his first wife, the late Diana, Princess of Wales — they have been conducting their relationship openly for years. When Charles proposed to Lady Diana Spencer, the daughter of an earl who was deemed a suitable match for him, the two barely knew each other.

Miss Middleton and Prince William have been dating since they met as college students at the University of St. Andrews in Scotland, and have virtually lived together in the last year or so.

The long wait between the beginning of their romance and the announcement of the engagement has provoked a great deal of mean-spirited commentary, with some tabloids referring to Miss Middleton as “Waity Katie,” a reference to the fact that she has supposedly been waiting around for William to ask her to marry him.

The romance has had its setbacks. The pair split for several months in 2007, amid speculation (always denied) that the royal family was dismayed by the lower status of Miss Middleton’s family and that Mrs. Middleton had chewed gum and used un-aristocratic words like “toilet” and “pardon” in front of Queen Elizabeth, William’s grandmother.

But the couple then reconciled, and Kate has been a regular presence next to William at royal events, such as when he became a Knight of the Garter last June. Her parents went shooting with the Queen this fall.

With speculation about an engagement now over, a new round of speculation will replace it. What is the date of the wedding? Who will design Miss Middleton’s wedding dress? Who will Prince Harry, William’s younger brother, bring as his date?

FROM: NYDailyNews.com

BY Shari Weiss
Daily News Writer

jessica-simpson-ruby-engagement-ring

Jessica Simpson's ruby engagement ring

It’s not the most traditional engagement ring.

In fact, if it wasn’t on Jessica Simpson’s left ring finger, it might not have even raised eyebrows.

But the ruby jewel the singer sported Saturday is indeed a token of love from boyfriend Eric Johnson and the two plan to wed, her rep confirmed to the Daily News.

According to People.com, the ring actually has three stones: “a central ruby flanked by two diamonds,” from jeweler Neil Lane.

Simpson, 30, debuted the bling at a Dillard’s department store in Kansas City, where she signed autographs and promoted her eponymous clothing line.

jessica-simpson-engaged-eric-johnson

Jessica Simpson engaged to Eric Johnson

The singer and Johnson, a 31-year-old former NFL player, began dating in the spring. This will be a second marriage for both of them.

Simpson’s father, Joe, shared his approval on Twitter Sunday.

“So very happy for Jess and Eric,” he tweeted. “May they have a lifetime of joy and happiness.”

The singer herself has yet to comment on the news – but then again, the ring says it all.

sweiss@nydailynews.com
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/gossip/2010/11/15/2010-11-15_love_or_loathe_jessica_simpsons_ruby_engagement_ring_singer_set_to_wed_eric_john.html#ixzz15MofpVMj

Royal Rocks: the Engagement Rings of Princess Brides

FROM: InStyle.com

Until Prince William pops the question to Kate Middleton, here’s a look at the most memorable royal engagement rings from over the years.

princess fergie, diana, grace

Fergie, Diana, and Grace

Photos: Getty Images; Everett Collection

With Royal watchers speculating that Prince William will soon propose to girlfriend Kate Middleton, the next thing everyone wants to know after when it will happen is who will design the engagement ring? The odds-on favorite is Garrard, jeweler by appointment to the Crown (Diana and Fergie’s rings both came from the British institution). What kind of design will Wills choose for his bride-to-be? We predict the classic but fashionable Middleton will like an elegant square shape–like an Asscher or a cushion-cut–in a beautiful platinum and diamond boxter setting.

Princess Grace

Princess Grace

Princess Grace

Photos: Everett Collection; Courtesy of Sotheby’s

Prince Rainier III of Monaco originally proposed to Grace Kelly with a Cartier eternity band of rubies and diamonds, as I wrote in my book With This Ring, co-authored by Penny Proddow. When he saw other leading ladies in Hollywood were flashing bigger rings, he quickly ordered this 12-carat emerald-cut diamond flanked by two baugettes.

Queen Elizabeth II

Queen Elizabeth the 2nd

Queen Elizabeth II

Photo: Corbis

The diamonds for Queen Elizabeth II’s engagement ring from Prince Philip have a special history: They came from a tiara belonging to Philip’s mother, Princess Andrew of Greece.

Princess Diana

Princess Diana

Princess Diana

Photo: Tim Graham/Getty

Lucky Princess Diana, she got to choose her own ring from a selection presented by Garrard Jewelers when Prince Charles proposed. There are a few different theories on why Diana selected the 18-carat oval sapphire surrounded by 14 diamonds: the color matched her eyes, the Queen may have actually selected it, or as Diana was later quoted as saying, “It was the biggest.”

The Duchess of Windsor

The Duchess of Windsor

The Duchess of Windsor

Photo: Everett Collection

Fitting to the epic love story of Wallis Simpson, the Duchess of Windsor, and Edward VIII, who abdicated his throne for her, the 19.77 carat emerald engagement ring bore a personal inscription. It read: “We are ours now 27 X 36.” That’s shorthand for the day Edward proposed, October 27, 1936.

The Duchess of York

Duchess of York

Fergie, Duchess of York

Photo: Terry O’Neill/Getty

After Prince Andrew proposed to Sarah Ferguson with a ruby from Garrard Jewelers, it set off demand for ruby engagement rings in England. It is said he chose the unusual color because it matched his betrothed’s fiery red hair.

Marie Chantal Miller, Crown Princess of Greece

Mariee Chantal Miller Crown Princess of Greece

Mariee Chantal Miller Crown Princess of Greece

Photo: Getty Images

When Crown Prince Pavlos of Greece proposed to Marie-Chantal Miller, reportedly on a ski lift in Switzerland, it was with this ring featuring a family heirloom sapphire and a heart-cut diamond that was his personal touch.

Sophie, Countess of Wessex

Sophie Countess of Wessex

Sophie Countess of Wessex

Photo: Getty Images

Following in family tradition, Prince Edward also proposed with a ring from the British royal jeweler Garrard. He presented his bride Sophie Rhys-Jones with a two carat oval diamond, flanked by two smaller heart-shaped gems–the ring is worth an estimated $150,000!

Maria Sharapova and Sasha Vujacic

Sasha Vujacic and Maria Sharapova

By Alison Schwartz    FROM People.com

Looks like a match made in athletic heaven for tennis star Maria Sharapova and her now-fiancé, L.A. Lakers shooting guard Sasha Vujacic.

The three-time Grand Slam champ’s rep confirmed the engagement to CNBC.

“Maria Sharapova’s agent Max Eisenbud has confirmed to me that she is engaged to the Lakers’ Sasha Vujacic,” sports reporter Darren Rovell Tweeted.

Maria Sharapova Engaged to Lakers Star Sasha Vujacic

Maria Sharapova Engaged to Sasha Vujacic

Vujacic, 26, popped the question to Sharpova, 23, Tuesday night at his Manhattan Beach, Calif. Home, reports Yahoo! Sports.

The couple were first spotted last November cozying up at a U2 concert in L.A. They have been dating for nearly a year.

Crystal-Bowersox

Crystal Bowersox

Published : Monday, 11 Oct 2010, 8:25 AM EDT

FROM: MyFoxDC.com

(NewsCore) – “American Idol” runner-up Crystal Bowersox married musician Brian Walker in an environmentally-friendly wedding in Chicago Sunday, People magazine reported.


Bowersox, who rose to fame this year on the talent show, wore a hemp and cotton gown by Vermont designer Tara Lynn that featured macrame, seashell and bead detailing and was created in the designer’s solar-powered studio.

The ceremony was held at a club where the couple met during Open Mic Night six years ago.

“Our lives have never made more sense than they do right now,” 25-year-old Bowersox told People.

The pair announced their engagement in September and planned their reception to feature a laughing Buddha cake from Bleeding Heart Bakery, a local organic and sustainable business.

Bowersox’s 18-month-old son from a previous relationship, Troy, was ringbearer.

The reality show songstress was one of thousands of couples to choose the 10-10-10 wedding date thought by many couples to be extra lucky.

FROM TodayShow.com

10-10-10

LAS VEGAS — Churches, banquet halls and other wedding venues across the country were extra busy Sunday as couples seeking a perfect 10 rushed to tie the knot on a once-in-a-century milestone: Oct. 10, 2010.

In Las Vegas — long a destination for weddings — one marriage license bureau extended its Sunday hours from 6 p.m. to midnight to accommodate the rush. Hotels and churches in New Hampshire’s Seacoast area were booked long before Oct. 10.

Wedding-related businesses said the day was perhaps the most sought-after wedding date since July 7, 2007, when the lucky 07-07-07 marked the calendar. Some 10-10-10 couples even chose to take their vows at 10 a.m.


One pastor in Nevada took the rush airborne by planning to join 30 couples at various venues Sunday and aboard a helicopter through the buzz of a headset.

“This is kind of a neat way to spend my retirement years. It keeps me in good health and keeps my mind alert,” the Rev. Jim Hamilton of Henderson’s Sunrise Community Church told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.

Renee Fletcher, hostess at the Arch of Reno Wedding Chapel, said it was staging more than 40 weddings on Sunday.

Megan Powell, a 26-year-old who married a nightclub and restaurant operator, said her Las Vegas wedding was “a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to get married on 10/10/10.”

“That day will never happen again,” she added.

Some say 10-10-10 is lucky, and couples by the thousands are rushing to the altar. Glynis McCants, numerologist and author of “Love by the Numbers,” speaks with TODAY’s Jenna Wolfe about its meaning.

Her new husband, Scott Frost, called it “fun” that “we’ll have something unusual in common with a big chunk of people. We’ll have a much greater probability of running into couples with the same anniversary.”

Tamara Tom, 28, of Fairfield, Calif., was following a tradition when she married Robert Harper at the Atlantis Casino Resort Spa in Reno. The couple said they will celebrate 10 years of being together on Dec. 10.

“We thought it would be fun to have all 10s as our anniversary,” Tom told the Reno Gazette-Journal.

At the Antique Angel Wedding Chapel in Reno, owner Beverly Van Dusseldorp said all dates with multiple similar numbers bring out more newlyweds, but especially on Sunday.

“It’s just like Valentine’s Day,” she said. “It’s a magic day.”

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/39606098/ns/today-today_weddings/#

Casual Wedding Style Ideas

romantic_casual_wedding

FROM TheKnot.com

by Amy Elliott

These days, everyone seems to want relaxed, understated elegance. Do you have what it takes? We’ll show you how to pull-off a wedding that’s done to the nines … but with ease.

It’s the new obsession. As many social circles have collectively declared the traditional pomp and pageantry of workaday weddings to be too much, couples are now choosing a more laidback approach that’s elegant in essence but never stilted or overblown. It’s a beautiful breed of informality that allows for a carefree aesthetic, as well as expressions of personality, wit, and style. In rejecting cookie-cutter conventions, many brides and grooms are discovering “casual elegance.” Luxe with less is definitely more, but exactly how do you plan a played-down party? Here’s how we’d do a cool, casual wedding.

The Litmus Test

First things first: Ask yourself, do you really want a casual wedding? The term speaks to simplicity and a dressed-down ambience. For some, informal means stripping the wedding of all the bells and whistles in favor of more free-spirited fancies: “We envisioned something out of a Robert Louis Stevenson poem,” described a bride who married in Sonoma County. Or, as a bride who married amidst a copse on a Colorado mountaintop put it: “It was as if Gatsby had set up a tea party in the forest.” Sometimes “simple elegance” conjures up a sophisticated, understated soiree, probably set in a chic hotel ballroom, but with a minimalist, less-is-more theme driving the decor. We think contrast is key — tuxedoes and bare feet; beach grass in cut-crystal vases; Texas-style barbecue served on luxurious white linens….

Whatever your interpretation, committing to casual usually means forgoing the voluminous gown, the dramatic ice sculptures, the sprawling buffet, and towering centerpieces. That said, you never want to be in the position of having to reject certain details or concepts that are important to you in an effort to appear stylish, or because someone tells you they aren’t in good taste. Many wedding consultants tell their couples to close their eyes, imagine the scene of their wedding, and then describe the specifics as best they can. In fact, this is how you’ll find the answers to all of your vibe and formality issues.

The Invitations

The look and language of your invitations typically prescribe the degree of your wedding’s formality, cluing guests in as to what to wear, the mood of your celebration, and who you are as a couple. While the classic ecru, engraved invitation is straightforward and elegant, we prefer the use of handmade papers with soft, sumptuous surfaces, textured or detailed ribbons, echoed motifs (bumble bees, butterflies, snazzy monograms), and imagery for a casual wedding. Color also helps to create an evocative picture of the fun to come: for ink, instead of black, think copper or burgundy. Or, better yet, incorporate unexpected color combos — lime with raspberry or hunter-green with burnt orange — into the design scheme. Personal, imaginative wording is another way to flaunt your casual style. Hip invitation designers urge their clients to compose the text of the invitation in their own voice, as if they were writing a letter to their guests. Your own handwriting might work well; otherwise, ask your designer to see samples of type styles that are not too flourished.

The Setting

Basically, you want a location that allows for stretching legs, letting down hair, and leisurely, unpretentious partying. You want a place where guests can feel free to throw a Frisbee after dinner, or where children could comfortably set up a picnic on the grass. Meanwhile, just as easily, other guests could be twirling parasols or sampling oysters from a nearby display. Frolicking dogs are charming, too. Rustic but refined is a good rule of thumb: a meadow, a ranch in the desert, a white tent on the beach, a clearing in the forest…all of these settings will provide a fitting and welcome sense of informality. City slickers might head for a small town in the country, appropriately equipped with pared-down peace and quiet. Likewise, pastoral bed-and-breakfasts offer unbeatable seclusion and intimacy. Still, such venues don’t mandate a rough-around-the-edges kind of revelry. For instance, no aspect of the decor should look styled; instead, the scene should seem spontaneously decorated. For table linens, ditch the demure ivory damask and go for heirloom lace tablecloths, toile, plaids, Provencal patterns, or cheery checked cloths.

Flowers — Gerbera daisies, sunflowers, or gathered wildflowers — can be displayed in eclectic containers like jars and pitchers. The lighting’s as au naturel as possible, subtly illuminating the fete in the form of clean, white candles, antique candelabra, or rustic metal railroad lanterns.

The Look

Simply put, a casual-but-elegant bride may wear whatever she likes. It might be a streamlined sheath with crisp, columnar lines, a strapless sundress with a straw hat, or a smart, retro pantsuit. While plush and princess-like are never entirely out of place, the wear-again potential is often a priority. We love the idea of revamping a vintage gown, transforming a lace-heaped creation with multi-tiered petticoats into something more runway-worthy: maybe a fresh, flirty, above-the-knee masterpiece. Her relaxed groom can sport an East Coast ensemble: tan trousers with a navy blazer, perhaps, with a colorful grosgrain belt and bow tie. A jacket might not even be necessary — we love un-tucked white dress shirts worn with neckties partly pulled undone. As far as wedding party attire, abandon the matchy-matchy urge. Let the guys get gussied up in their own gear, and dress the girls in flowery “summer-at-the-seashore” cotton frocks. Bouquets have only to show some stem, while stalks of wheat or sprigs of rosemary make beautiful boutonnieres.

The Menu

In the midst of multiple toasts and other blissfully unstructured reception moments, guests can enjoy a grand gourmet feast or a pleasant picnic repast — both are fair game. We envision guests dining family-style at long wooden tables, passing stoneware platters piled with oak-smoked meats and aromatic grilled vegetables back and forth. Anything you can eat with your fingers is appropriate. Think olives, ripe raspberries, imported cheeses. Rustic loaves of bread served with sweet butter and an assortment of homemade preserves are ideal accompaniments. Pitchers of ice water, lemonade, or sangria might grace the tables, along with carafes filled with wine from local vineyards.

The Parting Gesture

Say goodbye graciously: Give out thoughtfully chosen favors, modest and meaningful. How about a perfect pear, apple, or white peach? An assortment of penny candy makes a kitschy keepsake, while indigenous delights like wax-sealed jars of honey from a local farm are deliciously quaint. Making a donation to a local charity or historic property is yet another way to show good taste. Finally, a few words about presentation: Think twice about tulle pouches and pearl-edged ribbons. Instead, look to the powers of antique handkerchiefs, dried herbs and flowers, raffia, burlap, and other unexpected materials.

how to cue the reception end

Your easy-breezy, informal wedding still needs formal closure. If you let the reception run too long, your band and venue might slap you with steep overtime fees. Adhere to the timeframes and then conclude the night by inviting everyone back to the bridal suite or hotel bar for an after party.

http://wedding.theknot.com/wedding-planning/wedding-styles/articles/casual-weddings.aspx

FROM: AndhraNews.net

Christina Aguilera’s wedding dress has been voted the best bridal gown in a 2008 poll.


The Spanish-style Christian Lacroix gown, which the pop star flaunted when she tied the knot with Jordan Bratman in November 2005, has beaten Desperate Housewives star Marcia Cross’s wedding gown to the top the In Touch magazine’s new list, reports Contactmusic.

Third on the list was the gown donned by Avril Lavigne followed by Christine Baumgartner’s (Mrs Kevin Costner) wedding dress.

Rounding off the top five was Gwen Stefani’s wedding gown.

The top five is:
1. Christina Aguilera

Christina_Aguilera_Jordan_Bratman_dance

Christina Aguilera wedding dress

2. Marcia Cross

marcia_cross_tom_mahoney

Marcia Cross wedding dress

3. Avril Lavigne

avril lavigne wedding dress

Avril Lavigne wedding dress

4. Christine Baumgartner (Mrs. Kevin Costner)

christine_baumgartner_wedding_dress

Christine Baumgartner wedding dress

5. Gwen Stefani

gwen-stefani-wedding-dress

Gwen Stefani wedding dress

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