Hello lovelies, hope you had a wonderful weekend! Ours was quite busy, so once Sunday night rolled along, I was excited to curl up and chill out. At the request of photographer Peter Forman, I tuned into TLC's new show, DC Cupcakes. The six-part series follows sisters Sophie LaMontagne and Katherine Kallinis as they run a small DC bake shop called Georgetown Cupcake... Coincidentally, the duo also played a role in today's real wedding feature. Suzanne and Ryan met while getting their MBAs at Georgetown University's McDonough School of Business, and chose to get married on the university grounds at Dahlgren Chapel. According to Suzanne, "Our wedding was meant to be city chic yet approachable," so they planned an 85 guest reception with an intimate dinner party vibe.
The couple chose a beautiful sampling of small desserts by Georgetown Cupcake, and welcomed the DC Cupcakes film crew to shoot their wedding. All the {delicious} details were absolutely gorgeous. Here's a peek {and some behind the scenes from their upcoming episode}...
Bride: Suzanne Stumpp
Groom: Ryan Ona
Ceremony: Dahlgren Chapel at Georgetown University, Washington, DC
Reception: Hotel Palomar in Arlington, Virginia
Floral Design: Helen Olivia
Dress: Sophia Tolli, from Jay West Bridal
Cupcakes: Georgetown Cupcake
Lead Photographer: Peter Forman Photography
Second Photographer: Piper Watson
Program: DC Cupcakes
Time Slot: 10pm EST on TLC
About the Photographer: Peter Forman is a professional photographer experienced in wedding and engagement photography, fashion and beauty photography and commercial photography. His work has been published in the New York Daily News, Fox News, Extra, Inside Edition, and is also featured in the major motion picture "Away We Go." Peter is based out of New York City and available to travel as needed. For more information visit his Web site.
All photos courtesy Peter Forman Photography
Related Site
-Wedding Magnets
-Wedding Website
Related Videos :below I show related videos and not so related to this article.
Jan 2005
Two months after the US launched its biggest ever assault on Fallujah, what exactly happened inside the city has, until now, remained a mystery. Now, for the first time, Guardian films reveals the true story.
It was billed as a resounding military success. Over 1,200 insurgents were meant to have been killed and another 2,000 trapped inside Fallujah. But now this version of events is being challenged. Far from being crushed, rebels claim they left the city in an organised withdrawal. "It was a tactical move," explains insurgent leader Alazaim Abuthe. "The fighters decided to redeploy to Amiriya." Before they left, fighters booby-trapped many bodies. People are too scared to move them so the corpses lie rotting all over the city. Rabid dogs feed off them and then attack returning residents. Far from stabilising Iraq in preparation for this month's election, the assault on Falluja has fanned the flames of civil war. Today Fallujans are too busy trying to stay alive in freezing refugee camps to worry about ballot papers that haven't arrived for an election they have no intention of voting in. As one resident comments, "We're not interested in this sort of democracy."
THIS BEST SONG OF THE LEGEND EAZY E
0 comments:
Post a Comment