As you start to plan your wedding, flowers become an important part of the preparations. One decision that you have to make is whether you want to use fresh or silk wedding flowers. Often a bride will decide to use both.
A fresh bridal bouquet can sometimes be accented with realistic silk wedding flowers, especially when the bride wants a particular type of flower in her wedding bouquet that simply won't hold up throughout the day. That's when a silk substitute can blend in perfectly and no one even notices!
Here's an example. Suppose you want the following flowers in your wedding bouquet:
* Lavender spray roses
* Purple status
* Purple pansies
Your florist explains that purple pansies simply won't last in the bouquet. Before you accept the fact that you can't carry your favorite flowers, shop around for silk pansies that look just like fresh ones. Ask your florist to work the silk pansies in among the fresh spray roses and dried status. The effect will be stunning and you'll be quite happy with the results.
Another appropriate time for using silk flowers in your wedding bouquet would be if you plan to marry outside on a day that will likely be very hot and sunny. Using silk flowers relieves you of the stress of worrying about wilted bouquets.
Today's silks are so realistic that it's sometimes nearly impossible to tell the difference between the silks and the fresh flowers. If you're planning on carrying a hand-tied wedding bouquet, obviously silks will hold up better than fresh flowers that will be out of water all day! A grouping of calla lilies looks elegant when hand-tied with ribbon, whether the lilies are fresh or silk.
Another good example of a wedding bouquet that lends itself to silk flowers is when the colors that you want aren't standard colors for fresh flowers. You can't walk into your local florist's cooler and find navy blue roses or carnations. Of course floral spray can be applied to any flowers, but an easier choice that will guarantee that you get the exact shade of blue that you're looking for, is to opt for silk wedding flowers.
If you're planning an early spring wedding, a bridal bouquet of brightly colored crocuses would be darling. But the only way that you'll get one is if you decide on silk! A silk crocus and fresh tulip combination is one way to celebrate this new beginning. Be aware, however, that fresh tulips can be tricky too, so you might want to make it an all silk wedding bouquet.
The scent of the flowers is sometimes missed with a silk arrangement, so why not spritz them with a floral-scented spray, or with the perfume or cologne that you wear that always brings compliments from your fiance? Not only will you stand before him looking more beautiful than ever, but you'll surround him with the aroma that he can't seem to get enough of. Consider it an early wedding present and I'll even let you take the credit for the idea!
Bonnie Goodwin Ray has more than sixteen years experience in the wedding industry. She is the author of Wedding Planning Made Easier and has become a leading expert in silki wedding bouquets. Visit her site at http://www.mysilkweddingflowers.com
Bonnie Goodwin Ray has more than sixteen years experience in the wedding industry. She is the author of Wedding Planning Made Easier and has become a leading expert in silki wedding bouquets. Visit her site at http://www.mysilkweddingflowers.com
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Honey, I shrunk my wardrobe
Caragh McKay never liked the idea of a capsule wardrobe. But a vastly over-flowing wardrobe indicated that perhaps it was time...
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Alex Dimitriu Photo: MICHELLE BEATTY
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Helen Hibbird Photo: MICHELLE BEATTY

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Recently, upon peering into the tangled graveyard of clothes past that my wardrobe had somehow become, I decided I needed to lay some fashion ghosts to rest. Getting dressed every morning was becoming a lengthy process, while my 'look' was defaulting into the kind of fashion mish-mash that Helena Bonham Carter might struggle to get away with. The time had come, I realised, to create a 'capsule wardrobe' .
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The thing is, I have a bad reaction to that bandied-about phrase, with its bland commandments about the 'ultimate' mac, the 'classic' white shirt, the 'perfect' pair of jeans. Like constant references to Audrey Hepburn and Grace Kelly as style icons, it just seems so dated. In this era of fast fashion, that mix of haute and high-street fashion we're all meant to aspire to, can there be such a thing as a capsule wardrobe? Is it really possible to depend on a select number of garments without looking - or feeling - the same every day? After all, dressing up and being inventive with clothes is a daily mood enhancer.
But the mélange of cotton graduation dresses graduation dresses, leather, silk and goodness-knows-what facing me every day forced me to put the notion to the test. Pushing through the rails, I decided there was still a lot in there that was wearable. The glaringly obvious candidates for the charity shop were the high-street pieces that have not stood the test of time. But the mid-market basics and 20 years of cherished designer pieces proved much harder to sort.
I remembered Gok Wan, whose Channel 4 show, prom dresses
Gok's Fashion Fix
, revolved around devising a capsule wardrobe of 24 pieces for a style-confused guest each week. Was honing my wardrobe down to a magic number the way to do it?
'Devising that capsule wardrobe was one of the hardest things I've ever done,' the stylist admits when I track him down. 'And that was because we were trying to break down old notions of basic style - the mac, the white shirt, the little black dress little black dress - which seem to me to have been around since the 1960s. Fashion has changed so much in the past 10 years, with layering and trends hitting the high street super fast - there's so much choice now that the capsule wardrobe is a really tricky thing to pin down.'
But Wan maintains that it's still style-savvy to pare back the number of garments you have at your disposal. 'The idea of a list of basic items has its place,' he says, 'but see them as the foundation of your wardrobe not of your style because if you simply stick to them you will end up with a very generic look. The way to do it is to pick one or two trends every season and introduce elements of these to your wardrobe to bring your key pieces up to date.'
Wan's advice makes my task seem less overwhelming and reassures me that my wardrobe doesn't have to be made up of boring, do-all classics. But still, is it really possible to pare back to only 24 pieces?
I ask a couple of women with what I'd consider a signature style how they put their looks together and what their magic capsule number might be. Alex Dimitriu, 40, a buying director for House of Fraser, claims that the number on her items-
I-couldn't-do-without-list was an impressively lean 16.
'I've never owned any of those basic style items that people talk about - the pencil skirt, the little black dress black dress , great jeans,' she says. 'But I do have quality pieces that I bought five or 10 years ago and that I always get use from, such as a pair of palazzo pants from Joseph, which I pulled out again last week.' Dimitriu's way of dressing also adds an important creative touch: 'Rather than start with a piece of clothing, I'll pick a colour or a favourite accessory and build around that.'
Another friend, Helen Hibbird, 34, the merchandise editor of
Vogue
, works a luxuriously casual look. Her uniform of well-cut jeans, shirts and knits mixed with carefully chosen high-street finds has that soupçon of French chic that seems so effortless. Not only is it stylish, it works on a day-to-day level, so I am not surprised when Helen comes in with a relatively skinny list of 19.
So how does she do it? 'I spend as much as I can afford on the simple, black bridesmaid dresses foundation pieces, such as a coat, black trousers and knitwear, because the fabric and cut will be so much better and stand the test of time,' she says. 'The outlay might seem steep, but if you think in terms of cost-per-wear it makes sense. I go back to these pieces year after year. Also, as I've got older I've worked out what works for me, which means each season I only buy things that are my style and avoid fashion pitfalls.'
As long as I have known her, Hibbird has had a knack for discovering those Topshop and H & M gems that look like designer labels and that fit in effortlessly with her style. Her secret? 'I'd say just because high-street pieces seem affordable don't feel the need to go in and buy everything. Have the patience to seek out the one thing that chimes with you. If you like something don't buy it there and then. Have a think and go back if you really want it.' Another of Helen's high-street tips is to head for the menswear department. 'You'll often find simpler, cleaner-cut shirts and jackets there with less fussy details, which might otherwise make them recognisable as a current fashion item.'
Time to go back to my wardrobes and have another look. I start with a general clear-out of anything too old, cheap-looking, ill-fitting or not in tune with my current style. Then, like all the other women I've spoken to, I make a list of the pieces that I really do go back to and look at my signature style on the page. Luxurious fabric is key - there are a couple of silk pieces that I wear from season to season and have had for about five years. And, like Alex Dimitriu, I'm surprised at how colour is more of a benchmark of my look than I realised. Writing it all down is a brilliantly revealing way to learn about your own style, while giving you a better idea of what to hang on to and let go of.
My final count? 20. Not bad. I realise that I do actually shop quite well - I buy mostly all my quality designer pieces, such as dresses and shoes, at the sales. And, rather than stick to the old adage of opting for neutrals that you can 'wear every day' , I have trained myself to go for bold colours, such as a turquoise Miu Miu dress or a lilac silk Whistles blouse that are a look in themselves.
Shoes are also an important element. My trick is to pick the styles that most people would deem a bit off-key - such as Christian Louboutin yellow-gold T-bars and Prussian-blue lace-ups with gold heels - which I then offset with casual pieces,
such as jeans.
Ultimately white dresses white dresses, it is these elements that give my foundations a personal kick dresses summer 2011 ; it's the basics that I have been hanging on to that look tired and in need of the bin. And while I don't know if I'll ever stick to wearing only 20 pieces for the rest of my life, so far I'm pleased by how much wear I actually get out of my new, capsule look. And my wardrobes look blissfully organised, too.

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