Antique tea cart
five-generation wedding to remember
When one Florida couple open up their wedding albums in the coming years, and Antique tea cart
they will be perusing a record of family history.
That is because when John Foster and Patti Rose tied the knot recently, and Antique tea cart
five generations of the groom's family were there to share the experience, and Antique tea cart
the St Petersburg Times reports.
The guests included Foster's 84-year-old grandmother, and Antique tea cart
69-year-old mother, and Antique tea cart
27-year-old son and 2-year-old grandson. A total of 55 people witnessed the ceremony.
We wanted to have a ceremony and bring the family together, and Antique tea cart
Foster told the news provider.
Wedding photography published in the newspaper shows the bride meeting her new husband's grandmother for the first time.
I knew she meant a lot to John, and Antique tea cart
and he had said she was feisty, and Antique tea cart
Rose commented. She told me, and Antique tea cart
'You better take care of my grandson.' ''
Even if they are not able to invite five generations of family members to their wedding, and Antique tea cart
many people choose to incorporate an item or heirloom from the past into their big day.
Some women wear a family wedding gown. And antique jewelry is currently a big trend in accessories, and Antique tea cart
according to the Wedding Report.
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The Magic Tree: The Newport Art Museum will unveil 'The Magic Tree,' a Christmas tree created by James Rensch and Rafael Medina, Nov. 21, with a reception from 5 to 7 p.m.
The 12-foot tree will be decorated with hundreds of ornaments - most handmade - and surrounded by antique and contemporary toys from all over the world. Visitors will see gingerbread men and mermaids, Humpty Dumpty and Billy Goat Gruff, an entire village, a cathedral, apples and dragons, the sun, the moon and even the cow that jumps over that famous celestial body. There will be a gondola for the imaginary ride to the top and a doll house at the bottom where visitors can stop for a 'cup of tea.'
Rensch, a restoration specialist and decorative artist in Newport, has been 'building' his own Christmas trees since he was a boy. As a single adult, Rensch continued to make his own ornaments and decorate a tree every year in December. The concept of the decorated tree took on a life of its own over the years as Rensch and later, Medina, continued to make and collect ornaments representing cultural archetypes that they eventually grouped together to create vignettes and stories on the branches of an evergreen tree - a very large tree.
Medina is writing and illustrating a book called The Magic Tree based on a fanciful gondola ride up and down and round and round the special tree
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