Monday, April 19, 2010

Lights


In the key of Journey's "Lights"

When the lights go up at the reception
and they brighten up the spaaaaaace...
Do I want to set them up at my wedding?...

Oh oo oh
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh oooo ohhhhhhhhh
Oh oh oh.

So you think renting's costly...
well my friend I think it's costly too.
Do I really want to DIY it on the dayyyyyy?

Oh oo oh
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh oooo ohhhhhhhhh
Oh oh oh.

It's sad, oh there been mornings
where I thought I could set up you
without a harm

Oh oo oh
La La Lights
La la La
Oh oo oh
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh oooo ohhhhhhhhh

When the lights go up at the reception
and they brighten up the spaaaaaace...
Do I want to set them up at my wedding?...

Oh oo oh
Ohhhhhhhhhhhh oooo ohhhhhhhhh
Oh oh oh.

SO, right now these twinkle string lights for our outdoor reception are at the forefront of my mind. If you follow my tweets or facebook statuses you know for the last few months I've been either bitching about lights or stressed about them. These beautiful little bulbs of illumination are completely bending me over and having their way with me.

When we first started planning our wedding we decided that we wanted to decorate our reception more with lights and candles than with flowers. We thought that this would be a much cheaper option. Both Rebecca and I really love the look of string lights hanging overhead at a reception and this just seemed like a no brainer.

Flash forward a few months and we meet with our vendor who sends our world into a downward spiral. The rental companies all charge for lighting per the foot. Additionally, built into the cost of the lights is a set up fee. It really makes sense, and I completely understand it, but it's something we completely overlooked (see: no shit moments in wedding planning). It makes something we thought would be relatively cheap a rather large expense.

We made the executive decision to buy the lights and set them up ourselves the day before the wedding. The price difference (not including the poles) put a couple hundred dollars back into our pockets. Not to mention we can most likely resell our lights after the wedding. We enlisted the help of our family to set everything up with us. My side of the family is Jewish and has never strung lighting before, but I felt totally confident when Rebecca's uncles were going to help us out. I know it's a total stereotype to think that all Christians know how to string lights because of Christmas, but they HAVE to have better knowledge and experience than I do! I got really excited that we had this dilemma figured out!

UNTIL the contact at our rental company graciously gave us tips on securing the poles, something we hadn't even thought of. She could have said "good luck guys!" and sent us on our way to eff this up, but she was nice enough to guide us.

Unless we drive each pole into the ground (something we hadn't asked our venue if we could do) each pole holding lights would have to be weighed down. Suppose someone bumped into a pole early in the evening and yanked down the lights because we didn't weigh it down properly?! I know that's a pretty big "what if" but when alcohol is introduced into the equation, those "what if" scenarios become exponentially more likely. It's more like "when someone bumps into it" not "if".

So at the end of the day, do I want to be on a ladder driving a 10ft high pole into the ground the day before the wedding a few hours before the rehearsal? No. Well, I take that back, I think I'd definitely do it, but the question is, do I have the ABILITY to do it?! You're reading a blog written by the guy that... wait, that sentence says enough... "you're reading the BLOG of a guy..." I'd venture to guess most male wedding bloggers aren't exactly handy at manual labor.... but anyway, yes, you're reading a blog written by a guy that 3 months ago fell through his pool shed roof as he was trying to tie a tree up in his back yard. Enough said. Okay, so driving the poles into the ground, while a sturdy option, may not be allowed or feasible.

Second option is weighing down the base of the poles. This is what we'd have to do. I've spoken to many people (including our rental contact) and they all suggest weighing down each pole with 100-150lbs of weight. Wow, really? Maybe I can have friends just man a pole throughout the night. I'll be sure that servers bring them food & drinks if they just stand on the base of a light pole all night. Even though it's MY day and my guests should WANT to do this for me, I guess I'm not going to ask anyone to do that. So we've got to get sandbags. Heavy expensive sandbags. We either need to buy them, rent them, or make them.

It was at this point in the light dilemma contemplation that I realized the expensive fee for the string lights is worth the price. By the time we factor in purchasing lights, poles, sandbags, and factored in the stress of hanging the lights it seems like we're just overmatched. Were we really going to make our own sandbags? I mean we're across the street from a beach so there's plenty of sand, but carrying burlap sacks of 100lbs of sand the day before my wedding sounds more like a cruel bootcamp story than the day before a wedding.

I'm all for DIY when it saves you money but doesn't overload you with anxiety and stress the day before the wedding. For instance we're still doing our own centerpieces. Brilliant - we've got this! Our invitations - done, by us! We're taking on a lot. The lights I just saw as a wedding day disaster waiting to happen.

At the end of the day I feel like I was a little defeated by the lights, but I also feel such a sense of relief from laying down and letting this one go. I know that this solution may not work for everyone because budgets are too tight to rent. Believe me, we're kind of there ourselves. At this point we're robbing Peter to pay Paul with our budget. We decided to go even smaller with our already cheap centerpieces to help pay for lights. We made our own invitations to help pay for the lights. It was just important to us, and at the end of the day it's something that I don't want to have to stress about the day before my wedding.

By the way, this is not the first project/dilemma that's gotten the best of me and beaten me. Stay tuned to hear how the Gocco bent me over as well!

10 comments:

  1. This is the best news I've heard!!! Don't feel defeated. Now we know that the lights will be perfect and stressless for all of us. That's the outcome I've been praying for!!

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  2. Hah, alcohol definitely increases the propensity for disaster! Also, sometimes DIY really can be more hassle than its worth, so I think you've definitely made the right decision.

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  3. i feel a huge sense of relief now...sad we couldn't do it, but in the end, MIUCH better!! we have enough DIY things to do that adding this huge stress just isn't worth it!

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  4. Hey man... the less you have to worry about, the better. Totally worth the expense, and don't worry.. the lights may have won the battle, butthe war has only just begun. And by war I mean... uh, your... happy wedding... okay, terrible analogy.

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  5. This killed me. Um, in a good way. Thank you.

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  6. Ha! Love the parody. The lights will be brilliant, they will be your decorating shining star!

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  7. Ok so as your future sister in law here's my question....are the lights even worth it?? It's August, it doesn't get dark until 9 and the reception is over at 10. I definitely agree that the hassle of doing it your self is DEFINITELY not worth it in this case...but is the expense?? Are you willing to pay hundreds of dollars so your twinkle lights will shine for an hour??? Just a thought!!

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  8. YES! it's the ambiance!!!! plus even when the sun is low in the sky, they will still be twinkling!

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  9. Ok sissy don't yell!! lol Just trying to be the voice of practicality and reason so you have no regrets of spending when you look back on it!! Shouldn't you be working????? lol

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  10. I'm glad you guys came to this decision Dave. This is one to leave to the experts and leave the worry out of it for you... Can't wait!

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