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How To Make Weddings Your Hobby

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Here's an uncool thing: I am obsessed with weddings.

I gorge myself on wedding TV as though it were a complimentary cake tasting. When I first discovered Say Yes to the Dress I blitzed 70 episodes in a fortnight, and there's no episode of Don't Tell The Bride I can't gleefully recount from memory. In fact, weddings have become a recreational hobby – like bird watching, only with more tulle and slightly fewer tits.

I read bridal blogs ‘ironically’, peer into the windows of bridal shops to thumbs-up the good fittings, and stalk strangers' weddings on social media with all the fervour of a be-anoraked trainspotter. Last year I was a bridesmaid at two weddings in two weeks, and a guest at three more. During the second half of my 20s I’ve danced in a rustic barn conversion more often than I have in club.

But – and here's where my inner Katherine Heigl character dies with a whimper – I can't be arsed to actually get married. My boyfriend and I have been together for five and a half happy years now, we're both very pro-marriage in general – and yet, nah. The thought of doing a wedding ourselves makes me feel twitchy and exhausted.

Because the downside of being a recreational wedding-watcher is the overwhelming choice. I’ve admired country weddings and city weddings and seaside weddings and mountaintop weddings, weddings on trains, weddings on boats, weddings that looked like adverts for incredibly stylish cults, and weddings where everyone involved was clearly miserable but my GOD, the lighting design. If I suddenly ended up betrothed tomorrow, it would either be a wondrous Greatest Hits compendium of a wedding featuring all the best bits of everyone else’s – the weddingest wedding that ever did wedding – or I’d go in to meltdown and end up trying to hold an urban chic Greek Orthodox ceremony in an abandoned lighthouse wearing half a hoop-skirted taffeta meringue and half a directional jumpsuit.

And let’s not forget that a wedding lasts a day, while the anticipation could last forever. If I never have a wedding then we can never have had a wedding, which means I will never have to sit at someone else’s thinking “ffs, if only we’d had a hundred origami flamingoes suspended on ribbons from the ceiling of a yurt. Now we will NEVER GET THE CHANCE AGAIN.”

So for now, I’m happy to keep my seat in the spectator stands and do my bit for making wedding-appreciation a socially acceptable hobby. Overpriced, overhyped, and riddled with morally dubious messages they might be, but so is football and you don’t see anyone at the Emirates looking ashamed.

If you too would like to study weddings from an academic distance, these are the set texts I’d recommend.

Say Yes To The Dress

Imagine some of the worst women in the world. Now imagine their mothers. Now imagine the women and their mothers and their fiancés’ mothers plus five other assorted women who may or may not be trying to sabotage the wedding from the inside, all sharing their opinions on wedding dresses in New York’s premier bridal store. That is all. Except that it isn’t all, at all– it is everything.

As well as the vital difference between a ballgown, a mermaid, a trumpet and fit-and-flare, Say Yes To The Dress (and advanced-level viewing Say Yes To The Dress Atlanta, Say Yes To The Dress Canada and Say Yes To The Dress: Bridesmaids, all on YouTube) has taught me that while money can’t buy you taste, it can buy a man in a fancy waistcoat to tell you you look like a princess every three minutes. Which is maybe better than marriage.

Pinterest

Oh, Pinterest. You lovely dream-weaver. You folk poet. You peddler of beautiful, beautiful whimsy. Like Willy Wonka’s factory for flower crowns and lanterns, Pinterest is a world of pure bridal imagination – so impossibly pretty, all of it pretty impossible.

It probably won’t be long before MPs campaign for tighter regulations on Pinterest, requiring it to clearly specify which images are actual real-life weddings (all three of them), and which involved models, green screen and a glossy magazine’s art department. But until then, I want to believe in the fairy lights, the trestle tables under the trees and the bridesmaids who get up at sunrise to pick wildflowers from a nearby meadow. I really do.

Hipper-than-thou bridal shops

There’s very little joy to be had from a standard bridal designer’s site – just a lot of models looking stiffer than a day-old crostini and a heavy air of ‘you’re not getting married, you shouldn’t be here’ – but head to an alternative or vintage supplier and you can feast on flower crown sand wafty lace co-ords for days. I love Halfpenny London, or the achingly hip Stone Fox Bride (American sites are better for al fresco fantasy, because apparently they don’t have rain there.)

The blogs

When blurry confetti shots by people’s aunties just won’t cut it, you need to go pro. I have lost entire afternoons to flicking endlessly through photographers’ galleries and ‘real-life’ (IS IT THOUGH?) wedding blogs, vaguely high on love, arty sun flare and photos of people’s Nans throwing shapes on the dance floor. I’d recommend Babb Photo, Joanna Nicole Photography and Mister Phill for the dreamiest displays, and as well as the usual blog suspects – Rock My Wedding, Love My Dress, Pull My Finger (no, I’m lying) – I love Green Wedding Shoes for maximum hipster moodiness, and Whimsical Wonderland Weddings for the highest chance of pom-poms.

Wedding hashtags

Here’s a fun game for modern times – on any Saturday from May to September, go to Instagram and find a wedding hashtag. If nobody on your feed is at a wedding (rare), do a lucky dip by choosing two names at random and searching #NameandName until you find a wedding currently in action. Scroll. Absorb. Revel in the joy of crashing a strangers’ wedding from the comfort of your own sofa.

For extra fun, comment “omg it’s been such a magical day!”and “this cake was delicious!!”. They’ll always wonder.

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