Vintage-KC-Magazine-Winter-2012

vintage events

bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb VintageKC / Winter 2012 29 A family effort “Everything else we just collected over the engagement period. We would see something that would be the right color or the right idea, and we would pick it up,” Kelsey said. “A lot of times we were just out doing normal life things and we would see something that would catch our eye.” One evening at a First Friday event in the Crossroads, the couple stopped at Hammerpress, a letterpress and design studio in Kansas City, MO. They dug through a cast-off bin of Christmas cards that were marked down because the printing wasn’t exactly right. There they scored cardboard cutout birds in red and blue that perfectly matched their wedding colors. These later decorated the walls of the barn. They also found two plant stands at Thistle, a vintage gallery and repurposing studio in Kansas City, MO, that they repainted and used to display cupcakes on the cupcake bar at their reception. “We just started incorporating things we liked and it all kind of fell together,” Kelsey said. The couple credited their family and friends with making their vintage- inspired wedding special. From a friend who refashioned Kelsey’s grandma’s vintage pearls into the necklace and bracelet she wore on the wedding day to the family and friends who spent hours hanging red and blue Chinese lanterns from the barn’s rafters, the Piersons said all of the special people in their lives worked together to make the day—as they put it—epic. “I think the weddings and the decorations and everything really brought the two of us together,” Kelsey said. “It brought our families closer, and it was just a really good way to start our life together.” “Plus, we can probably open our own antique store now.” Purchased/rented: Red Barn: $3,000 Mason jars: $120 (not more than $3 each) Plant stands/cake stands: $10 each with new coats of paint Hammerpress bird prints: $10 Typewriter: $60 Birdcage: $10 with new paint Cupcakes: Sugar and Spice Catering, Parkville, $600 Chinese lanterns: Cod Wholesale (online), $100 Flowers: Shackelford Botanical Designs, Parkville, $1,800 Free/already owned/borrowed: Wood from the alley Heirloom jewelry Some Mason jars Budget Breakdown Left: Guests typed on an antique typewriter and filled jars with can- dies. Nothing says vintage quite like old-style candy. ^ Kirsten Hudson is a professional Web writer, blogger and all-around vintage lover living in Kansas City, MO. Follow her adventures decorating her tiny Co- lumbus Park apartment on her blog, Red Leaf Style: redleafstyle.com.

Made with FlippingBook Learn more on our blog