Choosing Your Wedding Colors….
How to Choose Your Wedding Colors
Your color scheme for the wedding
has the power to set the vibe – so choose wisely. Focusing on the color theme
early on is important to ensure that everything else obtained for the wedding
is well coordinated and suited to the wedding as a whole. The colors are
completely up to you but you will need to take into account where you're
getting married, and the formality or informality of your ceremony and
reception.
The complexity or simplicity of
color schemes are another part of your decision and these will depend on your
personal preferences, budget, and patience!
Here are the top determining
factors to selecting your hues.
1.
Paint Swatches
Are Very Useful!
Use your favorite shade. You’ve been in love
with pale lavender since the first grade, so this is a good place to begin –
with what you love. You can tastefully incorporate any color into your wedding
decorations by selecting the right hue, and combining it with the right
accents.
Which colors are you drawn to most? Is there
one particular color or several? If there are several colors, are they
compatible? Check your wardrobe. Leaving aside the standard office black, what
are the other colors that emerge the most? These colors are a good indicator of
your general color preferences. Make a color inspiration or mood board. Get a
piece of thick card and place images you like from magazines on the board,
images that highlight the colors you're keen on. You can also use color paint
charts to help you match the hues and to get subtle shade variations.,
2. Dark Colors In Older Venues Need To Be Accounted For
Consider the setting. Look at the
colors used in your venues' carpeting, drapery and decorations. If the site has
strong colors, you’ll need to select a color scheme that complements. If you
already have your heart set on a certain color, you may need to select a more
neutrally decorated site but this needs to be sorted out very early on or you
may miss out on a good location! However, keep an open mind about colors until
you've chosen the venue, because the setting may well suggest the color scheme
for you.
Older buildings can have very
rich, over-patterned curtains and carpets. Check these with care because they
can clash badly with your color scheme.
If the colors of the venue are
very strong and you have your heart set on that venue, consider predominantly
white and/or cream for the color scheme as this will be both effective and
matching. This will allow you to add a touch here and there of a favorite color
without overdoing it, but these splashes of color will tone down any Spartan
feel of the white theme.
For outdoor weddings, look for
fresh and light colors that suggest the brilliance of outdoors.
3. A Church May Not Allow You To
Go Wild On Colors...
Be prepared to have two different/distinct
color themes if your church or wedding building and reception venue are very
different in tone. In general, it is probable that you will have more leeway to
use colors with the reception than where the wedding ceremony itself is held.
However, you can still carry the color theme in clothing and flowers from the
place of marriage to the reception, even if you can't decorate the church, town
hall, or register office as much as you'd like.
4. Enlist Your Favorite Bloom.
Enlist your favorite bloom. If sunflowers are
your thing, there’s no reason why they shouldn’t make it into your décor
scheme. Incorporate your predominant flower color – either making it the
dominant shade or using it as an accent – and it will all come together.
See How to choose wedding flowers for more
details on the floral side of your wedding. Click here www.kweendeplannercom
5. Consult The Season.
Consult the season. Decorating is simple when
Mother Nature is your guide, so let the natural colors of the season be your
inspiration. That doesn’t mean that you’re stuck with prissy pastel decorations
during spring or brown and orange during fall/autumn. Just make sure that the
wedding colors you choose complement the blooms and foliage that are naturally
available during that time of year.
Be wary of combinations that
usually go with other celebrations, unless it's the right time of year. For
example, red and green is associated with the holiday season. While that would
be fine for a winter or holiday season wedding, it would be less suitable for a
spring or summer wedding.
Pastels are best for warmer
weather; otherwise they can appear too cold.
When thinking about seasonal
colors, think of variations of shades and not just the commonly recognizable
colors. For example, for fall/autumn, consider maroon, russet, gold, amber, and
ochre as well as the usual brown, orange, and red colors.
6. Remember The Bridesmaids'
Dresses.
Remember the bridesmaids' dresses. If you want
your bridesmaids decked "head to toe" in your color, you’ll need to
make sure it’s an appealing and flattering shade to wear. You may need to
accept variations in the shades to keep each bridesmaid happy, especially if
it's a color that one or more of them are not happy to wear.
7. Get the groom and best man
involved.
Get the groom and best man involved. The
cummerbund, waistcoat, and tie can all be in the color theme of the wedding.
And don't forget the buttonhole.
8. Incorporate color with care.
Incorporate color with care. It is common to
have a color palette with up to five main colors for many weddings now but you
do need to be careful that the colors don't overwhelm the wedding or create a
sense of disjointed themes. Also, an exact color match on everything is
overwhelming; instead, go for shade variations on the original colors. Rely on
small touches here and there for getting across the wedding color scheme rather
than huge bold displays of it, such as the font color on invitations, and
little ribbon touches here and there. Use
the color theme on the invitations, the place cards, the ribbons around flower
arrangements, the flowers, in the flower girl's hair or waist sash, and on the
wedding cake. If the color of flowers you really wanted is not in season, rely
on white flowers and use the ribbons and other decorative elements in the color
of choice instead. This will still indicate the color theme without losing the
beauty of the floral arrangements.
9. Take Care With Color On The Wedding Cake.
Take care with color on the wedding cake. Aim
for simplicity of color with the wedding cake, as brightly colored food is not
very appealing. Use a good cake maker who is familiar with color matching, and
also consider adding flowers to the cake to reflect the color element.
Colors that work well with white include:
gold, silver, black, pastel pink, fuchsia pink, lilac, and blue.
Even the bride's dress can be a
different color. White isn't essential, it's a tradition from Victorian times
but not one you have to follow. There are variants on white (such as ivory, alabaster,
cream, and so on) or change the color completely and wear gold, pink, blue,
red, or whatever takes your fancy.
One warning: it is important to
let members of the immediate family know you're not wearing white, so that they
can be careful with their own colors.
Don't forget that culture plays
an important part in wedding colors. Make sure not to choose colors that will,
even though they mean nothing to you, have an unpleasant meaning to those
around you.
Another consideration when
deciding on color is to know the effects that colors have on people's moods.
This can help you to decide what sort of "mood" your color theme will
suggest or create and may be an important factor for your wedding plans. There
are plenty of sites that discuss colors and their mood effects or meanings,
just do a Google search, or speak with KweenDeplanna Events for more
information.
In western cultures it is
traditional to avoid black at a wedding. Female guests should also not wear
black to a wedding. Black is associated with funerals, and can be perceived as
sending the wrong message at a joyous wedding.
Congratulation on your Wedding Planning Journey.This Write-up has been put together by the Event Guru - Winifred Oye Of KweenDeplanna Events.







No comments:
Post a Comment