Sunday, December 29, 2013

Courtyards & Cobblestones 2014


I can't believe it's that time of year again! We are less than a month away from Courtyards & Cobblestones 2014 taking place downtown Wilmington, NC. If you are a bride looking to plan your wedding in Wilmington, you won't want to miss this creative bridal event. Bring your husband-to-be and tour six historical venues while meeting and greeting our areas top wedding professionals. I hope to see you there!

MORE INFO ABOUT C&C

Courtyards & Cobblestones is an event designed to showcase historic wedding venues and wedding professionals on a downtown Wilmington self-guided tour. We aim to provide an inspirational and transitional atmosphere for Brides to tour and plan their wedding day.

On your SELF-GUIDED TOUR  you will experience six themed reception and ceremony sites in our city's oldest landmarks. Let Wilmington's history be a part of your future!

MINGLE with Wilmington’s top wedding professionals as they showcase their products and services.
ENJOY music from local artists as you sample scrumptious appetizers, lite bites and tasty treats!

HAPPY BRIDES could walk away winning fantastic jewelry giveaways from Reeds' Jewelers and other fantastic giveaways from Pressed Cotton. Attend for your chance to win!


ADMISSION & TICKETS:
www.courtyardsandcobblestones.com
Online - $18
Door - $25

TIME:
4:00 pm to 8:00 pm


CHECK IN LOCATION:
The Atrium - 15 South 2nd Street - Downtown Wilmington
Check in will be from 3:30 to 6:oo 





Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Merry Christmas! Love, The Mattis Family





  





May the Lord bless you and keep you.
May the Lord make his face to shine upon you,
and be gracious to you.
May the Lord lift up his countenance upon you,
and give you peace.

Merry Christmas to you and yours this holiday season!

With Love, 
The Mattis Family


Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Salt Dough Ornaments


I remember making salt dough figures and shapes when I was a little one in pre-school and even some in elementary school. It was a fun craft. I remember the way it felt in my hands and even the way it tasted. :) But what all of the Moms in pre-school loved and remembered was the little hand print shapes in the dough, knowing their kids would grow and if it didn't break a hand print was stuck in time and a treasured keep sake. I am now on the opposite end of this craft and one who wants to freeze these little hand prints in time and keep them on my Christmas tree... sighs.



I live for moments, crafts and adventures that take me right back to sweet memories I had as a child but what a true blessing it is to be an adult and have an opportunity to experience it all over again from a different view point and with new eyes.  I love sharing moments like this with SM & E.

Excited to pass this craft on and make some keep sakes for our 2013 Christmas tree we had to do this! In a small window of time my kids and I were able prepare the salt dough and make our shapes. We then left the shapes out to dry for several hours and then baked them for about 3 hours at a low temperature. We then painted, decorated and hung them on our tree! I hope you can pass this along to your kids this holiday!


WHAT YOU NEED: 
1 cup salt
2 cups all purpose flour
1 cup warm water


Eve adding in the salt

This does get messy :)



DIRECTIONS:
1. Mix salt and flour in a large bowl.
2. Stir in the warm water and mix well until it forms a doughy consistency.
3. With your hands form a ball with your dough and kneed it for at least 5 minutes. As you need the dough it will get smoother. 
4. Shape and press your dough onto a flat surface and either cut shapes out with a cookie cutter or shape them as you wish. We decided to shape our own circle and put a handprint in the dough and cut around the hand.
5. To add a hole in the dough use a straw to remove a small circle from the dough.




I used a knife and cut around the hand print after the impression was made.





You can paint your ornaments or shapes with acrylic paints and seal them with a varnish or polyurethane spray. The kids loved being a part of all of the salt dough ornaments steps the making, the baking and the painting.

Reindeer Hand print

Cookie Ornament for Santa

Eve's hand print Santa process

Stephen Michael with his cookie, snowman and reindeer!

Thursday, October 3, 2013

Our Real Wedding in Martha Stewart Weddings Magazine!






 We were undone and very honored to be featured as a Martha Stewart Real Wedding this past spring in a two page spread in Martha Stewart Weddings Magazine. The article couldn't have been more perfect and captured the very essence of who Michael and I are as a couple and family. The magazine also featured our wedding online which you can read in my post or click the link below.

Real Wedding: Abigail & Michael, Wilmington, North Carolina

We were so blessed to work with some of the most incredible wedding professionals in our area to create this special wedding day in July of 2011. A huge thank you to everyone who loved us, our story and were a part of officially bringing together our family.


Abigail and Michael
In December 2010, Michael proposed to Abigail with a silver cuff engraved with the French words Epouse-moi fee Abilene. Translation? "Marry me fairy Abilene" (his nickname for her). Their nuptials at The Atrium, an urban garden in their hometown of Wilmington, North Carolina, was all about family. Michael's pastor-father officiated (and made the wine served at dinner), his brother played the keyboard, and halfway through the couple's first dance, Michael's daughter, Eve, 7, and son, Stephen Michael, 6, cut in.

 The Invitations
Cream cards were printed with charcoal ink and tucked in pastel envelopes.

 The Fashions
The bride, in Watters, and groom, in Ralph Lauren.

The Boutonnieres
Hemp twine held together clusters of white flowers and green foliage.

 Mommy and Me
 Abigail's new daughter, Eve, drew a picture of the couple on their wedding day -- it now hangs framed in the family’s hallway.

 The Vows
The couple exchanged teary vows under vintage Edison light bulbs.

 DIY Family Tree
The couple hung old photographs of relatives to create a real-life family tree. (top left)
 Escort Cards
Wooden escort cards stuck out of fern boxes and supported the day's garden-party theme. (top right)
 The Ring Master
The wedding bands were tied to a succulent with twine and placed in a nest. (bottom left)
 Family Guys
Michael and his younger brother, a groomsman, and his officiant father chat before the ceremony. (bottom right)


The Tables
Atop tables covered in pale blue linen, the 80 guests dug into fried chicken, barbecued pork, corn bread, and pimento cheese before boogeying to a bluegrass band. Porcelain vases and ivory tapers in glass candlesticks sat on reclaimed-wood boards

 Wedding Cake Trio
Almond, coconut, and banana-nut cakes were iced with pastel fondant and topped with sugar flowers.

 
  Monogrammed Treats
Key-lime crisps were pressed with the initial of the newlyweds' last name.


Friendly Favors
 Guests took home make-your-own packets of wildflower, sunflower, and garden vegetable seeds scooped from turquoise mason jars. (left)
 The Guest Book
In lieu of a traditional guest book, the green-thumbed couple invited their friends and family to make colorful leaf rubbings. (right)

 The Dancing Duo
Ring bearer Stephen Michael shows his sister, flower girl Eve, how to cut a rug.

The Getaway
The bride, in Shoshanna, worked her bouquet into her getaway bike's basket.

 

 Sources

Location: The Atrium
Event Design and Flowers: Salt Harbor Designs
Stationery: Minted
Catering: A Southern Thyme
Cakes and Cookies: Flower & Flour
Photography: Millie Holloman Photography
Videography: Life Stage Films
Officiant: Pastor Steve Mattis, Myrtle Grove Presbyterian Church
Music: Jordan K. McLamb
Rentals: Party Suppliers & Rentals and Harborside Event Rentals
Lighting: High Performance Lighting
Hair: Salon Fringe
Bride's veil: aMuse Artisanal Finery
Bride's wedding band: Perry's Emporium
Bride's dress:  Watters
Bride's Getaway dress: Shoshanna
Brides's shoes: Kate Spade
Groom & Groomsmen suits: Ralph Lauren
Groom & Groomsmen ties: Brooks Brothers
Bridesmaid dresses: J.Crew
Flower-girl dress: Crewcuts
Ring-Bearer's attire: Izod


Monday, February 4, 2013

WE LOVE YOU!

One of my favorite days of the year for so many reasons is, Valentine's Day! Approximately one billion Valentines are sent out worldwide each year according to estimates by the U.S. Greeting Card Association. That's second only to Christmas! Every year we are a part of that statistic and send out our handmade love notes to our family all over the country. Here are the cards we made this year.


This project was quick, easy for the entire family and ended up being quite cute! 
Here's what you need:
Gray construction Paper
Red Acrylic Paint
White Acrylic Paint
Shelf Liner or Sponge 
Paper Cutter
Scissors
Black Sharpie

Using shelf liner (I didn't have sponges) I cut out small hearts to use as stamps

Stamped hearts on cut and folded gray construction paper

I cut the paper down to 7"x 5" to be folded into a 3 1/2"x5" card

Stamped a banner in white and outlined with black sharpie.

Final - We Love You Valentine's Day Cards!



Tuesday, January 29, 2013

I Love a Good Ruffle!

Let's make some pillows with a ruffle!

I received my first sewing machine from my parents when I was around 7 years old. It was my Christmas gift and I couldn't have been more excited. I did what most beginner sewers did... made PILLOWS! I would take my allowance, go to the fabric store, buy adorable fabric, come home, sew for hours and make as many pillows as my heart desired. There came a point that I made so many pillows that there was no more room on my bed. That little Singer sewing machine could only handle so much and hundreds of pillows later it no longer worked. I haven't sewed much since those pillow making days.

Abi & Eve Christmas 2012

This past Christmas my mother-in-law, Cynthia, gave Eve and me our very own sewing machine! It's been years but for my first project I decided to go back to my roots of pillow making and make a few 20" throw pillow covers for our bed. Here's what I did below with some help and sewing tips from sweet Cynthia.

 
I bought 4 1/2 yards of ruffle to go all the way around 4 sides of each pillow.

I bought 2 yards of fabric which is more than enough for two pillows.

To make an envelope backing I cut a 21" square for the front of the pillow which gives me a 1/2" seem allowance. I also cut a rectangle for the back at 21" by 25" - I cut the 25" rectangle in half and sewed a seem on the edges in the middle. When matched up with the 21" front side there is an overlap. The overlap makes an envelope opening for the pillow form to go in. *If I do this again I would add a few more inches and make it 27" to provide more of an overlap and room for extra fluffy pillow forms.

An envelope backing is great - no zippers or buttons needed!



To add the ruffle I pinned the ruffle facing in on the front side of the 21" square.


Ruffles are secured and complete!


Then I matched up (inside out) the 25" back side to the ruffled 21" front side
and sewed along the ruffle seem... ultimately, sewing the pillow together.


I flipped it inside out and added my 20" down pillow form! DONE!

Little Boo wanted to make a quick appearance. :)



Well, it's true. I do love a good ruffle... on duvets, table runners, scarves, little girl dresses and big girl dresses too! But more than anything, I love a good ruffle on a throw pillow.