Synopses & Reviews
There is a new breed of bride who comes to the altar looking to blend families and cultures, status and style, sophistication and mores, and who wants celebrations that appeal to her own unique real-life expression of values, background, customs, and romance.
Diane Meier Delaney was one such bride. While planning her own wedding, she grappled with wedding guides, magazines, and books that spoke to the clean slate of a wasp-waisted, twenty-two-year- old bride who had her whole life ahead of her. But she shared the frustrations of countless brides who couldnt find anything that spoke to a grown-up woman with a richly lived life to be proud of.
The New American Wedding is the first book that acknowledges and speaks to this authentic American idea of the bride and groom and points the way to:
creating their own ceremony with their own distinctive ritual
looking for symbols of union that may or may not fit around ones finger
integrating children and families from previous relationships
considering new issues of style and status
managing the challenges of interfaith, interracial, and cross cultural partnerships
balancing family expectations with the couples own desires
A comment on the good news of the changing culture that includes beautiful photographs and insider advice from top fashion and jewelry designers, florists, caterers, planners, and photographers who set the trends for American weddings, along with Delaneys savvy, been-there-done-that tips, The New American Wedding will be the must-have guide for the modern bride.
Synopsis
For the new breed of bride comes this lavishly illustrated guide to creating a wedding with a unique sense of style. 230 full-color photos & illustrations.
About the Author
Diane Meier Delaney opened her own marketing agency, MEIER, in New York City twenty-five years ago. Her work for clients such as Elizabeth Arden, Neiman Marcus, Maximilian Furs, and Esquire magazine has won her agency virtually every award in the advertising and marketing industry. She recently married BBC broadcaster and writer Frank Delaney.