Part 1: My Top 10 Favorite Wedding Details

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In no particular order…

1. Our toasting flutes & Door County wines

The flutes we chose were Waterford Crystal Wishing Achievements. They’re pretty tall and unusually heavy for toasting flutes, which gave them a grand and regal feeling. They sparkled beautifully in the light and the etched markings on them were so unique that they were clear winners as soon as we saw them. To go in them, we provided around 60 bottles of locally grown Door County fruit wines. The flavors were Swedish lingonberry, peach, black cherry, red raspberry, honeycrisp apple, cranberry, and cherry chardonnay. As cherry growing and wine-making is such a rich part of Door County’s tradition and economy, we’re glad we were able to treat our guests to a true Door County experience by opting to use delicious local wines made at the winery right down the street. We’re not sad that we have leftovers either :-)

2. My personal effects

Okay, so I know I’m totally cheating by lumping five details into one slot on my top 10 list, but there were just too many favorites so I had to do it! As a little girl, I’d always imagined my wedding would be in the Texas hill county, where I was born and raised. The cowboy boots were my little piece of Texas. The eyelet garter was made for me by my mother since I love eyelet and I distinctly wanted something simple and non-froofy – which, by the way, is nearly impossible to locate in the wedding world. The hair piece was an Etsy find and the essence of earthy autumn chic. It’s colorful and playful nature appealed to my sense of the anti-traditional. The little envelope clutches were custom made from another Etsy seller for myself and my bridal attendants to hold our day-of necessities. Clutches are classically functional and are much more original as a “down the aisle” hand prop than a bouquet of flowers. Most of my jewelry was a gift from Ted – he has amazing taste! I adore the simple, understated elegance of the square cut diamonds. The best part is that I can, and I do, wear them often!

3. Mason jar candle centerpieces & wood slices

Yes, another two-for-one. Might as well take advantage of the opportunity to squeeze in as many favorite details as possible, right? While I certainly like flowers, I’m not a huge lover of flower centerpieces. They’re expensive, expected, and will die in three days. Instead we picked up a case of mason jars and some pillar candles and made our own ambient-lighting centerpieces. To spruce them up I added a copper satin ribbon and baby pine cone from my mom’s pine cone collection to each jar. They were theme-appropriate, easy to make, unexpected, budget-friendly, and we have plenty left over to enjoy for years to come. On the tables they were surrounded by orange and white mini pumpkins and larger pine cones. Ted’s friends, a husband-and-wife team, engraved two large oval tree bark slices with our married names and wedding date for us. They sat on the entrance table at the reception and they now decorate our house as well.

4. Our ring bearer

You know the story. Ted proposed in a pumpkin patch at Uncle John’s Cider Mill in Lansing, MI with my ring atop “the perfect pumpkin.” The year before that he searched freezing Michigan in November for a pumpkin for me to carve after a raccoon ate mine. Pumpkins have always been special to us. Since we opted not to have a flower girl or a ring bearer, it seemed fitting to give the honors to the one who got us into this mess in the first place. Not only was this detail very personal to us, but it produced a pretty hearty laugh from our guests during the ceremony when our best man presented it. Humorous, festive, and personal is always a winning combination.

5. The flowers

Ever the one to shy away from the norm, I didn’t want traditional flowers either. Instead, we opted for mostly plants – specifically succulents (in the cactus family) and pine cones. We ordered a small bunch of cream and sunset colored mini calla lilies and 50 different waxy succulent plants from a farm in California. I used a glue gun to stick some baby pine cones to plant wire to include in the bouquet as well. My mom designed and assembled the three bouquets, two mothers’ corsages, and all the men’s boutonnieres the night before the wedding. She’s a fantastic flower arranger! We tied the bouquets together with mustard yellow crushed velvet ribbon and attached a T&L bouquet charm that I had custom made onto mine. I was always drawn to a more colorful wildflower looking bunch over a perfectly full, manicured bouquet and I’m very happy that I was able to include the succulents I’ve always liked and exclude super-girly flowers in the process. 

6. I Spy cards


I saw the idea for this online somewhere and fell in love with it! A fun, clever way to keep your guests entertained and a sneaky way get some killer photos in the process? Count me excited! Ted had already mentioned putting a disposable camera on each table for guests to capture candid shots with, and this just fit in too perfectly to ignore. On the entrance table we placed a bushel basket of disposable cameras, a sign identifying the purpose of cards, and the cards themselves – printed on heavyweight card stock with our leaves motif. Add a kitchsy little explanatory poem and list a few jazzy things for your guests to spy on and you’ve got instant wedding fun! As a guest I know I’d be stoked to see something entertaining like this at a wedding, and as the bride I can say I definitely appreciate some of the awesome pictures that resulted!

7. I Like You banner

Have you ever read the short children’s book I Like You by Sandol Stoddard? If you haven’t – get on it! It’s unspeakably adorable (as would be anything that features black and white sketches of bonnet-wearing crocodiles dancing). The text’s choppy, rambling structure captures the giddy feeling of loving someone – friend, sibling, parent, or spouse; the message is universal. The words and thoughts are simplistic, yet strikingly honest and truly heartfelt. The illustrations are sweet and eclectic. It really is just one of those lovely whimsical books that makes you smile really big and immediately plunk the book into your shopping cart at Anthropologie, not caring about the 75% markup because you need this book immediately. I gifted it to Ted once and the literature so accurately described our relationship together that we decided to incorporate into our wedding decor by photocopying each page onto beige card stock and stringing them together with clothespins onto a line of twine to create a sweet, meaningful book banner. You can read the full text here.

8. Kids’ activity booklet & welcome booklet

I think some the most fun I had during the wedding planning process was creating these two babies! I really got into designing these booklets and loved the result! I had all the creative license in the world to do what I love – write creative, informative, and fun booklets to welcome, guide, and entertain our guests – both big and small. The welcome booklet was attached to the Out-of-Town guest gift boxes with twine. This booklet contained a welcome & thank you letter, a weekend schedule of activities & events (including a winery tasting & tour, a welcome party, sightseeing at Peninsula State Park, a pizza and gelato picnic, seeing Guys & Does at American Folklore Theatre, a family & friends night, and Sunday brunch), directions, contact information, a who’s who guide of guests, a list of places to go, things to do, area restaurants, a little Door County information, a Sudoku puzzle, a personalized “about the couple” wedding crossword puzzle, an answer key, and a few funny wedding comics. The kids’ wedding weekend activity booklet featured autumn & wedding related coloring pages, a word unscramble with a secret code, a scavenger hunt, a word search puzzle, a maze, a tic-tac-toe sheet, and a family tree. The hours upon hours of work these took to produce was so worth the outcome!

9. Save the Dates

The credit for these little beauties belongs entirely to Ted. I envisioned the initial concept and mentioned to Ted that I wanted leaf shaped save the date magnets. He immediately informed me that I was crazy because cutting 75 leaves out of thick magnet paper would be unbearably excruciating at best. I persisted and whined long enough that the poor guy probably got tired of listening to me and eventually gave in. Using all kinds of software programs, Ted created the leaf, the internal pattern and marbling shading effect, and together we agreed on the wording. Once it was fully designed, Ted set to work purchasing glossy magnet paper, going through a lengthy trial and error process with his printer until he achieved color and quality perfection, printed them, and using a pair of scissors he cut out 75 leaves with their microscopic stems, twists, and curves by hand. I think it took him three days and his hand was permanently cramped. He did all this work for us and our wedding. He is a truly awesome, talented guy!

10. Our cake topper

I adored the concept of our cake topper, and in the end, I did love it and I thought it was a neat personal touch. However, the actual receiving of the cake topper was less than ideal. I ordered this custom-made cake topper back in early July from an Etsy seller and it was supposed to be finished at the beginning of October. In a nutshell, this completely wonderful seller with fantastic talent and excellent reviews fell pretty far short of our expectations. I’m sure this was just an isolated incident because all her other reviews were stellar, but we received only half of what we ordered (missing were two additional mini cake toppers in the shape of our logo helmets, and a replica of our wedding rings on the mossy grass in front of the pumpkins on the main topper that she “ran out of time” to make – she had 4 months) and I received it via overnight mail the day before our wedding. I honestly didn’t believe it was going to come at all. But in the end, it was still a beautiful, unique topper and I’m so glad we went with something more original than the standard-issue bride & groom topper.

Honorable Mentions: First off, if you’re still reading – congratulations! You’re either a real trooper or really bored; I know I’m long winded. There are so many more favorite details that I could go on for days. But that’s not the point of a quick photo recap. Instead of boring you with more details I’ll just quickly list the honorable mentions because they were all lovingly designed and handmade by us, so they deserve some credit! Doing everything yourself is no small task and we’re really proud of our work. In no particular order honorable mentions go to our postcard invitations, the envelopes & wrap-around labels, the ceremony program, mass song sheet, day-of schedules for the wedding party, signage, “just married” car banner, “Mr. & Mrs.” sweetheart table banner, the cherry sours in galvanized buckets for favors (another tribute to Door County) and the Out-of-Town welcome gift boxes for all our guests when they checked into the resort that included apple cider packets, gingersnaps, water bottles, and caramel popcorn balls – all autumn goodies! Our customized guestbook platter, the Door County coffee table guestbook, and totally awesome cutout and pop-up thank you cards for our family and wedding party were not made by us, but they were all were custom orders and truly great details. Another big hit was the glow sticks. I’m not quite sure why I was so hell-bent on having them, but I was. In my mind they were necessary. I’ve always loved glow sticks and had so much fun playing with them and apparently our guests did too! They were a hit!

Tune in tomorrow for my Top 22 Favorite Wedding Photos!

I promise it will be 95% pictures and only 5% words! :-)

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The Blog Project Proposal

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It’s my day off and I have plenty to do. There’s the library books to return and the search for new ones to borrow, things to print, forms to fill out, coupons to cut, and information to be looked up, to keep it simple. There’s also a house to dust and vacuum, laundry to be washed, and meals to be decided upon, but those can wait until the weekend. When all that’s done there’s a basement and garage to reorganize, vacations (possibly a honeymoon!) and little weekend getaways to be planned, and wedding albums to be designed and ordered. I always feel like I’m so much busier on my days off! Luckily, it’s belligerently cold outside again so I don’t have to fight the temptation to throw on shorts and a tank top and lounge on the porch with a lemonade and a good book, or take off rollerblading down the block, or shoot a few hoops like I will during the spring and summer months instead of plowing through my “this should get done eventually” list.

Before I get around to all of this though, and in lieu of the ever trendy “wedding recap” posts – which consist of D.I.Y tutorials of cutesy handmade wedding details, unending photo storyboards, and lengthy minute-by-minute descriptions of every tiny little moment that happened on w-day – that hog many all newlywed blogs for like seven weeks straight, I’d like to attempt to narrow down our nearly 1,500 wedding photos that we received from our pro photographer, family’s cameras, and disposable table cameras into my top favorites.

My blog project over the next three days will be to create a photo list with accompanying short descriptions of my Top 10 Favorite Wedding Details, my Top 22 Favorite Wedding Photos, and my Top 10 Favorite Moments from that entire weekend (10.22.10)!

This is an incredibly daunting task. A good chunk of the 900 pictures we received from our pro photographer were truly excellent, and there are some pretty amazing treasures gleamed from the disposable cameras as well. Conservatively, I probably have close to at least 350 favorite photos in about 15 different categories ranging from Details, to Getting Ready, to Ceremony, to Reception, to Portrait Shots, to Newlywed Pictures, to Rehearsal Dinner, and more! I adored so many details from our wedding since we handpicked, designed, and handmade nearly everything ourselves. I love so many of the pictures for so many reasons – some because they are outright hilarious, some because the lighting is magical or the angle is artistic, some because the emotion, whether sappy or happy, is so clearly, beautifully and prominently center stage that you just can’t help but be drawn in by it, and some because the whole image tells a great story. This is going to be a huge challenge – and I’m warning you now, if I absolutely cannot contain myself, there may be a short list of runner-ups. But I’ll try my darnedest to stick within my 10.22.10 boundaries, because I’ll eventually have to narrow them down for the wedding albums anyway.

So be sure to tune in for the next three days (Thursday, Friday and Saturday) for my anti-wedding-recap wedding-photo-recap & awards! HA!

Before I scurry off to be a productive, responsible citizen, I’ll leave you with these few gems to start us off. They don’t count for any of my top favorites as they’re not technically wedding photos, but they deserve major credit for getting the ball rolling.

These are indeed live goats lounging on the roof a Swedish restaurant in Door County affectionately nicknamed "Goats on the Roof." Ethically, how can you choose to wed in any other town in the great U.S. of A. once you've been wooed by the charms of a place where goats frequent the rooftops of such home-grown and delicious establishments!? You simply cannot. It's not possible. We had to get married in Door County. And we knew it even before we were engaged.
I'm cheating a little. This one is a pro pic taken by our photog (obviously, because my photographic talents sure as hell didn't produce this) on the morning of our wedding. It was pictures very similar to this that drifted through my mind when we decided we wanted an October wedding for the gorgeous fall colors. And where better to witness such breathtaking beauty than Door County? We were right. This tree is absolutely on fire beneath the brilliantly bright blue sky! Door County in October is the place to be.
This photo marks the official start to the rest of our lives together. On this Saturday morning, October 9, 2010, I had literally just carefully packed up all my belongings, moved away from my childhood home in Texas for the last time, loaded myself and my wedding dress onto an airplane, and arrived at the Chicago airport to meet my fiance, where this picture was snapped. We're about to drive to Cincinnati for the first time to look for a home, finish planning our wedding, get married, and then make our big move to Cincy for Ted's new job. You can just see the excitement and the nervousness in our eyes!

 

Enjoy your Wednesday and check back sometime tomorrow for my Top 10 Favorite Wedding Details!

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Constructive Criticism

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The view from my drive home this evening. As a disclaimer, I was safely parked at an extraordinarily long red light when I took this picture.

For as chilly as it is outside, it sure is beautiful! The sun was shining perfectly on this red brick building and the river as I drove home along Columbia Parkway tonight. I love this view and feel lucky to have it as my scenery for the commute home every day. I bet it’s stellar in the fall with all the colorful leaves!

To clear up yesterday’s mystery – you know, the one where I freaked the hell out because when I came home the bathroom door was closed and I know for a fact I didn’t close it when I left that morning and was convinced there was an unwelcome intruder in our house – there was indeed someone in our house. I didn’t over-exaggerate, nor am I crazy. Apparently our landlord sent over one of his workmen to fix the water pressure in our shower. He did email Ted, but with only mere hours advance notice. Ted wasn’t able to check his email until nearly 11 o’clock that night either, so neither of us knew anyone would be in the house. While I’m thankful our water pressure is fixed, I do think our landlord should have let us know several days ahead of time and waited to hear back and get the “okay” from us before sending someone into our home. Because, let me tell you, nobody likes to come home, completely terrified, thinking there’s someone in their house. The water pressure waited three weeks before he got around to doing anything about it so it could have waited another few days until he got our okay to send someone in and then have that person not leave things exactly the way he found them. I don’t mean to sound like a grouch or make a big deal out of something that’s not, but not knowing that someone will be in your house is a very uncomfortable feeling, especially when you know you’ll be home alone all night. Don’t you agree?

Tonight I think I’ll catch a few episodes of TV shows I’ve been meaning to check out, bake some brownies, and throw in a movie or two – I’m thinking Up and The Notebook – until Ted gets home.

P.S. – Have you checked out the reviews on the new musical Spiderman? It’s the most lavish and expensive Broadway musical ever made. It hasn’t even officially opened, but millions of tickets have already been sold. It has received absolutely scathing reviews for being a mess from start to finish. There have already been four serious injuries to the actors and the show hasn’t even opened yet! I think the idea is fantastic, but if the musical theatre world isn’t ready to safely pull off something of this caliber and do a phenomenal job of it, then they need to postpone it until they’re technically and artistically prepared.

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Lonely Nights

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I’m sure you’ve heard by now (unless you live under a rock, though, to be fair, I quite enjoyed the secluded comfort of my football-ignorant rock for many years) that PackerBowl Sunday was a smashing success…for the Packers. With 15 players on injured reserve, we were stoked simply to make it to the playoffs! But to finally have another SuperBowl win is awesome! Some of the pass plays were troublesome and most of our progress was made by the defense, but the Packers had some stellar teamwork and they were really spot on with their tackles. We watched the game and loved a few of the best commercials! I was pretty much horrified by every entertainment act there though – they were all awful! The sound was obviously off on the Black Eyed Peas performance (unfortunately, because it was cool otherwise!) and the Glee girl and Christina are lame choices for SuperBowl entertainment. Not to mention they both totally botched the songs they sang. But we enjoyed excellent company with the host and hostess, delicious chili, Stromboli, and seven-layer taco dip, and it feels great to say that the Packers won the SuperBowl! What a well-deserved win after a trying season!

Ted is serving as the fill-in Master Electrician for the opera Figaro this week, meaning he’ll be working from 9 a.m. – 1 a.m. every day this week, so I’ll be spending the next six nights all by my lonesome. I’m stuck somewhere between excitement and dread. On one hand these nights all to myself afford me the rare opportunity to indulge in my beloved sushi, artichokes, wine-steamed mussels, Chipotle, and other delicious savory delicacies that Ted doesn’t like. I can finish uploading wedding photos, bake brownies, watch sappy chick-flicks and romcom’s, and I don’t need to cook every night, unless I want to! The downside is that I love his companionship and look forward to hanging out with him at the end of the day. Also, I don’t really like being home alone, all by myself, at night. The unexplainable creaky-house soundtrack, wind howls, and other shiver-inducing sound effects send my imagination into overtime and by the time nightfall rolls around, I’ve thoroughly freaked myself out. It doesn’t help that when I came home from work this afternoon I immediately noticed that our bathroom door was closed tight. I was the last one to leave the house this morning and I never close the bathroom door unless I’m in there, so I’m flat-out convinced someone was in our house today because I know I left it open. See, wish my brave husband were home tonight so I can stop shaking in my boots. Hope you have a safe and happy week!

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From Packers to Plants

Happy PackerBowl Sunday! Have you selected your best Packer shirt and most spirited team accessories to wear while cheering on the Packers in this evening’s game that I know you’ll all be watching? Please forgive the assumption that every family out there does this the night before SuperBowl as we do.

Here's some of what I'll be wearing. This isn't even the half of it...

Ted is at work until 5 today for tech rehearsal, but he’s already in on the action wearing his Packer shirt, sweatshirt, jacket, hat, and Packer shoes (yes, shoes). For the big game we’ll be heading over to the home of one of his work friends (they’re Steelers fans, so this will be fun!) to watch the SuperBowl and chow on chili, bratwurst, and taco dip. Excellent! Ted is seven shades of disappointed that he’s not in Green Bay right now for all the pre-game city spirit, decorations, and the welcome home parade and day off tomorrow if they win tonight. But his sister sent him an official SuperBowl program that he’s been delicately cradling since it arrived yesterday afternoon.

Last night after church we braved the icy rain to drive over to the Kenwood shopping district (the word “mall” doesn’t seem to do it justice). After navigating the maze of a parking lot and sharking for a space for nearly 20 minutes, we were lucky to spot a singular empty space waaaaay out in the boonies before any of our fellow sharks did. We snagged it in record speed with some seriously awesome maneuvering skills and decided that kenwood is definitely not the place to be on a Saturday night. We made the trip for one purpose only – the Apple store, to drop off Ted’s Mac for repair. But I couldn’t help walking by places like Loft, Anthropologie, Gap, Forever 21, Nordstrom’s, Crate & Barrel, and the Cheesecake Factory and just sniffing in the essence of these places I somehow had spare change to shop at occasionally when I was single and that I now miss splurging at. Ah well, such is life, right? The rent on our beautiful home, heat, and car insurance are more comfortable than a new sweater anyhow.

When we arrived home we cooked dinner together, pancakes and scrambled eggs, and snuggled onto the couch with several warm blankets and some snacks to watch a funny movie. We chose the movie RV from our collection – and it was hilarious! Definitely funnier than I thought it would be, so if you’re looking for a light, carefree laugh, this one is a good pick.

Want to see what else we did yesterday? First, there’s this – the long-awaited basement shelves are finally finished!!

 

Before – clearly chaotic and in need of some serious storage help!
After – aaaah! Some semblance of organization!

Yes, those are indeed “bright ass Ikea yellow” doors. They were minimally damaged in shipping so they had to sell them for dirt cheap. Why anyone would want a door that color is beyond me, but whatever. We snatched them up immediately because they were cheaper than finished lumber and would make great shelf boards when cut to size, and we added some color to our basement in the process! Since the basement’s foundation is bowing in on that side Ted had to take a lot of extra steps to get the shelves to secure to the wall and be level enough to hold weight, but he’s smart and creative and did such an awesome job! Also, the water heater in this house is over 15 years old we’re counting on it blowing any time now, and when it does it’ll most likely flood the basement, so we’re trying to get everything in waterproof plastic storage containers or off the floor altogether – so these shelves will be really helpful if/when that does happen. After we’ve organized everything down there I’ll have to post a before and after picture from when we first moved in until now – the carpeting, the shelves, the insulation we’re adding – it looks miles better!

We also did this:

Brand new kitchen cabinets were part of the landlord’s renovations right before we moved in. But they only put one shelf in each cabinet, which was such a waste of vertical space. And though we loved how spacious the kitchen was, it was desperately lacking storage. So Ted bought some laminate board, cut it to size, and slipped in a second shelf. Just like that, we have instantly more than enough room to store all our stuff, whereas before we couldn’t store half the amount of things that are in those cabinets now.

And finally:

Sproutlings!! A few weeks ago I planted basil, parsley, cilantro and mint plants. I use so many herbs in cooking that I might as well be growing them – so I am. I hadn’t seen any growth and was worried that, between the lack of full-time sunshine and it being so cold in the house, I’d killed them already. So last week I moved them into our bedroom – the warmest and sunniest room in the house. And Friday morning look what popped up! And they’ve just been growing new sproutlings every day since! I put the pots in alphabetical order so I’d know which was which, but I somehow managed to get them out of order, so I really have no idea which one this is, but my hunch is that it’s the mint. Either way I’m happy to know they’re blossoming. I still think it’s funny how much I used to loathe spending a Saturday afternoon herb and plant shopping at the nurseries with my mom when I was a kid, and now I’m planting herbs of my own. HA.

I hope you had a happy weekend! Go Pack!!

P.S. I got another album of wedding pictures up on Facebook if you’re one of the people that’s been looking for me to post them for the past 3 months. The pro pics will be up sometime this week.

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Forgotten Cincinnati

Yesterday at the museum I overheard someone mention that the city of Cincinnati has an unused underground subway system. Apparently the subway tunnels and stations were built in the 1920’s for $6 million but the project was too expensive to complete and an additional $6 million would have been needed right around the time of inflation and the tightening of the economy. They gave up in 1927. Eventually the city got wise and sealed all the entrances to prevent illegal visitors. The majority of the completed tunnels lie beneath Central Parkway and Liberty Street – two of the streets I frequent nearly daily on my way to and from work! Who knew there was a mass transit system under those roads all this time!? Consider my interest piqued! I told Ted about it on the drive home and we spent a better portion of the evening looking up information and photographs about this illusive abandoned subway system. In the 1960’s one of the stations was used briefly as a nuclear fallout shelter – they went so far as to equip it with restrooms, ventilation, lighting, and food and water storage. Since then it has been considered for future use as a tornado shelter, underground mall, bar and nightlife district, and again for its original intended purpose, mass transportation. Rumor has it that a few times a year the city offers a rare special guided tour of it (that I desperately want to go on!), but as of now, there are no solid plans for its renovation or reinstatement. The debt and bonds for its construction were finally paid off in 1966. The result? A perfect waste of a staggering $13 million for what equates to a giant, useless hole in the ground. Excellent work Cincinnati. Wanna see?

 

This is the blueprint of what they were going for

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How it looks now

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Ahhh yes, the commemorative t-shirt.

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If you’re interested in seeing more pictures of it, Google’s got tons to choose from. The first few hits for “Cincinnati subway system” under Web and Images are especially informative and have some great pictures!

But at this point we were totally intrigued by the forgotten landmarks of Cincy, so we started looking up other abandoned Cincinnati treasures. It is simply fascinating to see pictures of amazing things that once were, and to see what they look like now.

Next we discovered Surf Cincinnati – a now defunct water and amusement park that was popular for several years in the 1990’s and early 2000’s. It faced financial difficulties and closed around 2002. When it was a flourishing fun park, it was home to a tidal wave pool, racing water slides, a sandy beach, a lazy river that circled the park, an arcade house, mini golf course, go-kart track, banquet halls, a food pavilion, and (like any good family amusement park), a night club. I can imagine it very similar to Schlitterbahn or Splashtown for you San Antonio natives out there (except with mini golf and go karts). I can definitely picture it being one of those fond memories places from your childhood. It looked quite smashing in its prime.

 

A children's play area at Surf Cincinnati in 1999. Not bad, right? Looks kind of fun actually!

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And look at it now. Mmmm, stagnant water! Appetizing, no? One of the pools back in 2007.

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This webpage and this webpage have some amazing pictures of it! The deteriorated water slides are just so creepy!!

And finally there’s Union Terminal, home to the Cincinnati Museum Center (which houses the Cincinnati History Museum, Natural History & Science Museum, Duke Energy Children’s Museum, Amtrack station, Omnimax Theatre, and a library). This one has a happy ending though, as it is now mostly renovated and extremely useful. It started out in the 1930s as a major train station with nearly 20,000 people passing though a day at its peak. But after the railroads lost popularity, Union Terminal was abandoned for nearly 20 years! The building is absolutely massive so it cost a fortune to heat, cool, light and maintain. It was so expensive that the city offered to lease it for $1 a year and they couldn’t find any takers. I think at one time it was considered for a possible hospital, but eventually a company out of Columbus took the lease and turned it into a shopping mall in the 1980’s, which was an utter, dismal failure. Luckily, after much needed renovation, the space works beautifully for the museums that inhabit it.

 

Back in the day operating as a train station

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I searched but couldn’t find a picture of it when it was empty, unfortunately. The other day we got a tour of one of the original back hallways that is still un-renovated and it was was crazy! There was probably a 4 ft. x 6 ft. hole in the wall, cracked paints and ceiling, and exposed old piping. It was definitely sketchy, to say the least. However, a vast majority of it was renovated in 1930s art deco style and is gorgeous.

 

Modern extetior view

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Union Terminal's interior rotunda today

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So there’s a small sampling of Cincinnati’s forgotten hotspots. Do you ever pass by anything like these? I know there’s an old abandoned carnival and permanent fair that used to exist near downtown San Antonio that some of my friends at the Magik Theatre remember frequenting as a child. It’s now overgrown with weeds and shells of the pavilions and rides are all that remain, coated with faded, chipping paint. I think Pear Apple County Fair sat empty and overgrown for a while too. What other abandoned San Antonio treasures can you think of (besides the monorail transportation system built for the 1968 World’s Fair)?

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Viciousness and Frivolity

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I’m spending a relaxing afternoon in the CCM Starbucks on UC’s campus. My workday ended early and since Ted & I carpool downtown for work together whenever possible, I’m hanging out waiting for Ted to finish up for the day. I love these kind of afternoons when I can sip a hot rich drink, nibble on lemon pound cake, and read a book or catch up on computer work at my own leisurely pace while listening to calming and eclectic coffee-shop music. I was only briefly disturbed by two blabbermouth costume and makeup/wig students who were picking apart the bodies of the ladies in the Evita cast, accusing them of being “the fat kind of skinny,” “flubbery,” and “kind of bitchy.” As if vocally and publicly picking apart the personalities, talents and body types of your peers in a communal location where everyone in the department congregates is any less bitchy. I shot a few menacing glares their direction, but otherwise kept to myself until they, thankfully, hit the road, probably to continue their trash talk elsewhere. Most theatre artists (and college students), no matter how skinny, pretty or talented, are self-conscious and insecure enough without their own peers bringing them down. Save the criticism and analytic commentary for the professional critics, whose job it is to pick people apart somewhat respectfully. I despise that kind of blatant rudeness.

Last night we attended the invited dress for A Little Night Music at CCM. The show is free, so within an hour of the box office opening ticket reservations for it, it was totally sold out. Lucky for us, Ted’s an insider here so we just sat in on the invited dress rehearsal the day before opening with the rest of the technical crew, students and professors who needed to see it. I really like this musical, so I basically dragged Ted to see it, although he had little no interest in it, especially since he spends all day, everyday, at CCM in a dark theatre and most likely wanted nothing more than to get away for a few hours. But he got off work, picked me up at home, drove us back to CCM, and watched the show with me because he’s just that awesome. The tomfoolery of the show gets really fun right about act 2, so not all hope was lost. He wasn’t totally miserable and even braved a few laughs toward the end there ;-) We discussed the striking musical and plot similarities between Into the Woods and A Little Night Music (both Sondheim shows), ate dinner at 11:30 p.m., and crashed.

So that was our big night out – lots of excitement going on here in our household, obviously. Low key seems to suit us just nicely right now. Hope you’re all ready to check out the Packers in the Superbowl on Sunday!

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Socially Successful

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The past two days have been, what I will call, socially successful. I didn’t write a novel, save a baby, complete a trying home improvement project, or contribute to society in any miraculous way. No, none of these achievements were intellectually profound, mentally exhausting, or really even all that insightful, but they were enjoyable.

First up, I tried a Subway breakfast sandwich for the first time yesterday morning and it was delicious. I’m really happy that fast food joints have finally caught on that people appreciate healthy options and feel much better about having to grab breakfast on the go occasionally knowing that they don’t have the blow an entire day’s allotment of calories on one meal.

I made ribs and a cake – not a huge feat, but definitely time consuming. I’d never made ribs before and you always hear people talking about how touch-and-go ribs are. They’re usually either awesome or terrible, so I was worried I’d screw them up. But I used this recipe that my sister forwarded me, and they were fall-off-the-bone perfect and flavorful! Ted ranked them in the top 10 ribs he’s ever had! They were so easy too that it was unreal. Here’s a picture of the birthday cake I made for Ted’s 4th diabetic birthday:

I did the PWC thing (kinda). In case you’re not clued into commonly used wedding acronyms (can’t blame you), it stands for Post Wedding Chop. Usually bride’s want to grow their hair out for the wedding so they can have some snazzy updo. But by the time the wedding rolls around, they’re so sick of dealing with their long hair that they immediately head to the salon to hack it all off into some short chic coif as soon as the honeymoon is over. Well, I’ve never been the one for “normal” so I never wanted a PWC. Why would I want to do something every single other bride in the history of bridaldome has done? Over 3 months after our wedding I did decide to freshen up the layers, trim off a few split ends and add a few whispy side bangs – hardly an respectable full-blown PWC, but it sure feels nice to have some sass and style back in my hair (though it mostly looks the same)! Maybe I’ll get around to posting pictures of it eventually.

I read a full book for the first time since we got engaged. Yep, a full novel. I love reading. I used to read books all the time. And have missed it dearly. It felt so nice to sit down a finish off a big ol’ book in a matter of days while on the job.

We made a trip to Sam’s and finally got me added onto the membership. Bulk deliciousness here we come! Sam’s is like the mecca of goodness. I’m pretty stoked! We plan to make it a monthly trip.

We rented and watched The Social Network and Secretariat. Very different movies, but both very good depending on what kinds of films you like.

I also finally, finally started uploading the first batch of wedding weekend photos to Facebook so my friends who couldn’t make the wedding (or who were there and just want to see the pics!) can finally see them. Only took me 3 months….but hey, I’ve been busy and photo uploading is time consuming!

So….socially successful, wouldn’t you say? Enjoy your evening and stay warm!

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The Birthday Boy

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Monday, January 31. I’m not particularly wild about Mondays, the month of January, or odd-numbered days. I much prefer Tuesdays & Fridays, June-November, and even numbers – like 26. But this Monday, January 31st is a different story altogether and a righteous cause for celebration. Today is Ted’s 4th birthday!

On January 31, 2007 when Ted was still living and working in Philadelphia, nearly a year-and-a-half before we met in Lansing, he was diagnosed with adult-onset type 1 diabetes. He’d been suffering from some unusual symptoms for several months beforehand and went in for a check-up to try to figure out what the deal was. His blood sugar was severely high and he was given strict orders to report to the hospital immediately. He was told he was diabetic and would be insulin-dependent for the rest of his life. From now on he would have to take shots or a use an insulin pump, count and measure all his foods, limit sugar and carbohydrates, and monitor his blood sugar several times a day. Essentially, everything changed. But they caught it just in time and told him he was lucky to be alive. Hence, a new birthday! I wish I had known him back then so I could have been there for him on that day and in the crazy first few months that followed. But I’m happy to be here for him now and for every one of his future birthdays!

To celebrate I splurged and bought a rockin’ card and some Southern Comfort and maraschino cherries for SoCo & Diet Coke cocktails. I also made him a special dinner of his most favorite food (ribs – it was my first time ever to make them and they turned out awesome! Fall off the bone delicious!), rented a movie he’s been wanting to see since it was released into theatres, and baked him a cool (sugar-free) cake. What a great reason (and way) to celebrate!

Happy 4th Birthday to my wonderful husband!

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Wedded Perfection

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Romance was a’brewing at the Cincinnati Art Museum when I paid an impromptu leisurely visit yesterday afternoon. Ted is working a show load-in all weekend at CCM, and left to my own devices for the day, I took off for a stroll around the museum after hearing it was the last day of the Wedded Perfection special exhibit. Let this be a lesson:  The very last day of a particularly popular exhibit, especially if it happens to fall on a Saturday afternoon, is not a recommended time to attend said exhibit. If it looks good (check!), you’ve been hearing about it for months (check!), and you know you want to see it (check!), get on the ball and go sometime, anytime, before the last day. The place was packed. We’re talking cars parked haphazardly everywhere. Complete insanity.  Since the art museum is always free and the only fee you pay is a mere $4 for parking, it was definitely nothing to complain about. The facility is gorgeous too, located right in Edan Park and across from Mirror Lake with a brilliant view of all of Cincinnati. If you’re ever in Cincy, I’d say stop in just to walk the building and check out the fabulous interior and exterior architecture and décor, though I’d probably recommend actually checking out the art as well, since everything was very nifty and interesting.

The Wedded Perfection exhibit showcased American wedding gowns throughout history.  Many were donated or on loan.  There was a fair share of Christian Dior and Vera Wang gowns – many from the 2000’s-2010. There were older frocks from the late 1800’s-1950’s with luxurious silky fabrics, fantastic lace detailing, stunning cathedral veils, and gowns of all colors and necklines. On the wall’s surrounding the exhibit there were framed black and white photographs of modern brides getting ready for their weddings. I spotted a particularly snazzy strapless silk Vera Wang with a fit and flare cut and a feather skirt. One of the most unusual dresses was a gown constructed entirely of hundreds of Latex gloves. It wouldn’t exactly jump straight to “it was pretty” but it definitely didn’t look bad and it just goes to show that you really could make a wedding dress out of just about anything.

In all her latex glory

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I also saw a veil cape very similar to one I fell in love with when I was looking at dresses and veils for our wedding. I never ended up seeing out the idea, but I still love the look, mostly for its elegance and originality.

The veil cape I had my eyes on

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As if drooling over gorgeous gowns weren’t enough excitement for one day, as soon as I stepped into the Wedded Perfection exhibit gallery I arrived just in time to witness a proposal and hear all the high-pitched squeals accompanying it. From what I heard and saw, the girl was there with a small group of her friends (who were obviously in on it) and her boyfriend was supposed to be at work. He surprised her by showing up out of the blue and proposing to her right in front of her favorite dress in the exhibit. Ted said it was lame and the pumpkin patch was a much better idea. The engagement was, of course, accompanied by hearty applause afterward. There was also a wedding reception going on that afternoon at the art museum. See what I mean – lots of romance a‘brewing. I’m not positive, but I think the exhibit might be a traveling one. If it’s coming to a city near you, I’d definitely sip a mimosa at brunch, gather up your girlfriends and give it a peek. Even after you’re married, it’s still hard to resist oogling pretty dresses.

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