Recent Weddings

— Feb 19, 2011

Brooklyn Botanic Gardens

A winter wedding at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden’s white and glass Palm House seemed to call for flowers in deep, bright, rich shades. Rebecca’s creations for this bride seemed to stand out even at the Botanic Gardens. She used grey and white...

— May 28, 2011

Bohemian summer wedding at Ramscale Lofts

Ramscale Loft offered the perfect backdrop for this bohemian bride. She wanted to bring in a sense of freshness, earthy-ness, and color, we used a variety of floral hues in small, simple vessels including mason jars and bud vases. Though combining...

— Sep 2, 2011

Queens County Farm

For this tented wedding, we adorned long tables with thick sheets of butcher paper which we then covered in all sorts of fun vessels chock-full of flowers such as: whisky bottles with submerged orchids or lavender inside, old mini urns, and weck jars...

— Sep 24, 2011

The Foundry, L.I.C.

Using a dramatic yet earthy combination of very light whites and silvers, bright greens and dark browns, Rebecca’s designs transformed this venue into a statement of refined, understated elegance. When the space proved too small for all the guests...

— Oct 9, 2011

Montauk Club

This wedding was particularly fun for Rebecca because she got to help decorate a REAL cheese cake! She also very much enjoyed the opportunity to use a bunch of her props including vintage medicine bottles, wooden stumps, and a bird cage that functioned...

— Oct 9, 2011

Prospect Park Boathouse

This super-fun “steampunk” inspired wedding really gave Rebecca a chance to flex her creative muscles. The bride’s desire to use bright oranges, reds, and browns, hard edges with a vintage twist let Rebecca use unusual flowers with a huge variety...

Prospect Park Boathouse

10.09.11

This super-fun “steampunk” inspired wedding really gave Rebecca a chance to flex her creative muscles. The bride’s desire to use bright oranges, reds, and browns, hard edges with a vintage twist let Rebecca use unusual flowers with a huge variety of textures from chinese lanterns to indian paintbrushes. A raid of Rebecca’s studio turned up an old tool organizer that became the card table display with a tagged vintage clock key for each guest in each cubby. The centerpieces were made of a serpentine vase with chinese lanterns with a mix of bold, textural blooms on each side. Finally, Rebecca’s 1920's vintage typewriter was made available for guests to leave messages in place of a guest book.