Showing posts with label Wedding Vendors Cincinnati. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wedding Vendors Cincinnati. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2013

Reception Entertainment: Fire it Up!

Photo Courtesy of Circus Mojo
                                                                                                                                                                                                  
Trying to make your wedding reception or event stand out from the rest?  Try a fire spinner or fire dancer!  Cherie Dawn, the Cincinnati area performer pictured here can dance with, spin and eat fire!

Photo Courtesy of David Sorcher Metro Mix
You could kick off the dancing at your wedding reception with a fantastic performance or bring your fire artist in as a surprise in the middle of the reception. 

For non-wedding events,  a fire performance outdoors at the end of the event is a great way to signal the closing of a wonderful and unforgettable evening.  


Photo Courtesy of Nichlas Viltrakis







Monday, November 18, 2013

Thursday, November 14, 2013

Thursday, November 7, 2013

Starks/Boll Wedding at the Museum Center (September)

Feminine shades of blush and fuchsia with hearty accents of wheat and eucalyptus brought together with dreamy whites for the Starks/Boll wedding at the Museum Center in September.


Monday, November 4, 2013

Diner en Blanc - Cincinnati


(From the Website) At the last minute, the location is given to thousands of friends and acquaintances who have been patiently waiting to learn the “Dîner en Blanc's” secret place. Thousand of people, dressed all in white, and conducting themselves with the greatest decorum, elegance, and etiquette, all meet for a mass “chic picnic” in a public space.

Yellow Canary was honored to be a part of the secret for this year's Diner en Blanc. (Photo by Scott Beseler Photography)




Born 25 years ago in Paris...

Launched with just a handful of friends by François Pasquier over 25 years ago, Paris' Dîner en Blanc now assembles nearly 15,000 people each year. The French capital's most prestigious sites have played host to it: the Pont des Arts, the Eiffel Tower site, Place Vendôme, the Château de Versailles, the Esplanade de Notre-Dame, the Esplanade des Invalides, the periphery of the Place de l'Étoile, the Champs-Élysées, Place de la Concorde and this year:  Le Louvre Pyramid and the Trocadéro Esplanade at the ame time! The Paris police tend to tolerate this ‘wild' gathering, if not perhaps even wishing they could join in!

More photos by Scott Beseler Photography here.

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Dia de Muertos

Yellow Canary had the pleasure of being a part of Lizzie and Mike's Dia de Muertos inspired wedding.  It was a fresh and creative event so full of color and imagination! (More photos to come)... 





About Day of the Dead 



Dia de los Muertos—the Day of the Dead—is a holiday celebrated on November 1. Although marked throughout Latin America, Dia de los Muertos is most strongly associated with Mexico, where the tradition originated.

Dia de los Muertos honors the dead with festivals and lively celebrations, a typically Latin American custom that combines indigenous Aztec ritual with Catholicism, brought to the region by Spanish conquistadores. (Dia de los Muertos is celebrated on All Saints Day and All Souls Day, minor holidays in the Catholic calendar.)

Assured that the dead would be insulted by mourning or sadness, Dia de los Muertos celebrates the lives of the deceased with food, drink, parties, and activities the dead enjoyed in life. Dia de los Muertos recognizes death as a natural part of the human experience, a continuum with birth, childhood, and growing up to become a contributing member of the community. On Dia de los Muertos, the dead are also a part of the community, awakened from their eternal sleep to share celebrations with their loved ones.




                               The Masks


The most familiar symbol of Dia de los Muertos may the calacas and calaveras (skeletons and skulls), which appear everywhere during the holiday: in candied sweets, as parade masks, as dolls. Calacas and calaveras are almost always portrayed as enjoying life, often in fancy clothes and entertaining situations.

The mask to the right is the work of local artist Robyn Roth. You can see more of her work and masks here.