traditions and superstitions part 2

More wedding traditions and superstitions coming at you in the second part of our series. If you’re curious, this is for you!


The first kiss after the I Dos comes from a Christian tradition that says that the bride and groom should kiss as an “exchange of souls” fulfilling the script “the two shall become one flesh.” It’s also just a great way to cap off the ceremony and cue everyone to cheer the newlyweds.

This is a good one, because the rings are the symbols you wear long after the dress has been wrapped for preservation and the thank you cards written. The bands represent the commitment a couple has made and mark them as taken for the rest of the world to see. Or the origins and types of rings over the years, see our blog about wedding rings.

In the middle ages, having a piece of the bride’s dress, veil or bouquet was considered very lucky and this managed to devolve into people aggressively running at the bride to tear off a scrap of gown. She began throwing her garter as a way of saying “here you go,” and later tossed the bouquet as well to distract other guests. Want to know more? Here’s an entire blog about it.

From centuries ago until this very day, ringing church bells is a way to announce that something important has happened in the community. You’ll know if you are a royal watcher that the 10 bells at Westminster Abbey pealed a specific “tune” called “Spliced Surprise Royal” when Princess William married Katherine Middleton. It took 3 hours and required over 5,000 orchestrated changes to make the joyful noise. More modest civilians married in churches can ring the bells themselves or request that a church volunteer do it to signal that they are celebrating a happy occasion. As with many other wedding traditions, ringing the bells is said to bring luck and happiness.

Dancing the Horah (hora, oro in some cultures) is common at receptions in Jewish cultures. Said to originate in the Balkans, dancing in a circle to Hava Nagila brings people close to the family together to celebrate a marriage or milestone. If you’ve never been to a Jewish wedding and gotten swept up in this dance and frivolity, try to before you die. It’s pretty amazing!


The wedding veil is no longer a must for the bride’s attire and often brides decide to forego wearing one if it doesn’t go with their dress, theme or season. Veils date back to Rome, when a bride wore one to ward off or confuse any evil spirits that might be lurking around trying to ruin her future happiness. Some brides in the middle ages wore them because marriages were arranged and if she wasn’t ……. a looker, let’s say …. her father wanted to keep that fact from the groom until the vows were said. Others wore veils as a sign of purity and chastity. Regardless, when worn well, they can be truly gorgeous.

bridesmaids

And bridesmaids? Well, we think of them now as the collection of relatives and closest friends you want by your side on your big day, but originally asking people to “stand up” for you was about the legality of the ceremony. In ….. wait for it …… Rome, the law required that you have at least 10 witnesses by your side when you said your vows so that there was no disputing that you were married later.

And there is safety in numbers. With 10 bridesmaids and 10 groomsmen all dressed the same can confuse villains, evil spirits, and vendors you haven’t yet paid.

Amanda Walling and Bonnie Hostetler On The Windfall outdoor Wedding West Jefferson NC
carrying the bride over the threshold

Carrying the bride over the threshold always makes me think of movies and TV shows in syndicated from the 1950s, when the husband would scoop up his “Little Lady” wife and carry her into the home that she would be cleaning like June Cleaver for the next 40 years. Cynical, I know. But this custom actually originated before the middle ages and again it was about warding off evil spirits that might come into the home on the soles of her feet. Later, it was to protect the bride’s reputation – ie she didn’t want to appear too eager to consummate the marriage.


Why have a best man? Because every guy needs a wing man, someone to hold the ring, help him to stand up straight and show support. Originally, the best man came on the scene in the 16th century with those wacky Germanic Goths. But seriously, the best man’s job was to steal the bride from the neighboring community or disapproving family and get her to the ceremony on time. He was usually the best swordsman too and would watch over the couple during the ceremony.

Barnett / McNeil Pixels On Paper Photography Event Center at Summit Square Winston Salem 50th Wedding Anniversary Photo

Wedding cake toppers are sort of mysterious as to how they came to be popular as part of the celebration, but one story that has been repeated is this one:

“Around 100 years or so ago a baker’s daughter who was about to get married asked her father to create a symbol of the unflinching love between her and the groom for the world to see.
After mulling over several ideas, the father decided to make a unique creation – a lovely wedding cake, with two fabulous figurines on top of it. The figurines that the cake top featured were obviously of his daughter and her groom-to-be. The baker had conceived the cake topper as the perfect symbol of their love and bonding. On the wedding day the daughter was moved by the sight of the cake made with love and affection by her father.”

These days, wedding toppers have become a LOT of fun with the inclusion of the couple’s dog, favorite activities, and personalities.

Saving your wedding cake

And finally, why do we keep the top tier of our wedding cake? To create a bacterial, freezer burn experience in the freezer! [BA-DUM, CHING!]

Actually, this tradition dates back to the 19th century when couples would save the top to celebrate the birth of their first child. We can no longer keep to such tight schedules and couples in the modern era are having children much later after their I Dos. These days, newlyweds save a big slice or the top and enjoy it on their first anniversary.

For more on wedding traditions and superstitions, check out Part 1 of this mini-series!


We love family portraits whether they are set in the studio, the great outdoors, a specific location like the mountains or high country, or on our property in our outdoor portrait garden. Pixels on Paper photographs, engagements and weddingsbrides, and special events and portraits  of all kinds in our Wilkesboro, NC studio. We would be honored to meet with you, learn about you and your family and be a part of taking special portraits that will become, we hope, family heirlooms.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License All photos are ©2019 Pixels On Paper. Do not copy, crop, or remove watermark.

wedding traditions and superstitions | part 1

Why do we do what we do? Seriously. We’re grown-ups. We can think for ourselves! We make micro-decisions daily and huge life-changers sometimes weekly without looking at what others before us have done. But there are some customs that are old that we stick to.

Weddings bring all sorts of traditions and superstitions with them and some mean precisely nothing, but are so tender and metaphorical that we just keep doing them. There’s nothing wrong with that, I think, so let’s explore a few in this little 2-part series.

The coin in the bride’s show…. the Royal Mint in the U.K. has some insight into this tradition:
“In Great Britain, the bride traditionally wears ‘Something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue.’ But what is less well known is that the rhyme ends ‘and a silver sixpence in her shoe.’ For many years, the father of the bride would slip a sixpence into his daughter’s shoe before she walked down the aisle. The sixpence stood for good luck, and to show that the father wished his daughter prosperity in her marriage.

Sweden has its own version of this tradition. Before a wedding, the bride’s mother gives her daughter a gold coin to put in her right shoe. The bride’s father then gives her a silver coin to put in her left shoe. The coins symbolize their wish that the bride will never go without money.”

Not only is “something old, something new, something borrowed and something blue” a tradition in Britain, we took it with us when the colonies told King George that we’d have enough. This tradition still stands in the US, but why? Each of these was considered to be lucky. Something old was said to ward off “the evil eye” when children were young, hence older relative and nannies. But more generally, it represented continuity and family. You were taking something old with you into the future.

Something new simply meant a token of hope and optimism. For brides these days, it can be anything new that was purchased for the bride to wear, like her veil.

Something borrowed literally meant that the bride should borrow an item from a happily married woman, something that would stand as a item of luck. Want lots of kids, borrow a slip or an undergarment from a prolific mother. Seriously!! I’m not saying that you have to, but people did back in the day. Maybe a bracelet would work…….

Something blue was again about warding off evil, because blue was a color said to do this. But blue is also a color that represents love, purity and fidelity, so brides would pin a blue ribbon to their garter or inside their hemline just in case.

Why does the Father “give the bride away” by walking her down the aisle? Traditionally this was about arranged marriages when the combining of families meant more land, more property, more power and resources. The daughter was given to her husband and the two clans or families were joined. She was property – there I said it. But these days, fathers walk their daughters with great tenderness and affection, as if to say, “I raised this amazing creature and now she’s ready to make her own life.”

Rain on your wedding day is dreaded, because you worry that people will be inconvenienced, you’ll all be wet and droopy and outdoor weddings will be ruined. Rain is actually considered for centuries to be good luck. It’s a sign of fertility and cleansing and it can make for some pretty amazing photos. We promise.

Jumping the broom is said to describe a marriage of doubtful validity. Whether is was referring to a civil union instead of a church sanctioned affair, it has origins in Wales, Britain and African culture and was later adopted by African-Americans as part of their wedding traditions. Slaves in the US took it up when marrying on estates where they had no rights. These days, jumping the broom occurs when a couple has said their vows and is headed down the aisle. They are committed to each other and the future.


Breaking a glass at the altar and saying “mazel tov” is a distinctly Jewish tradition.

“Modern explanations have focused on a more solemn theme, claiming that the broken glass reminds Jews assembled at a joyous occasion of the Temples and recalling those individuals, Jew and non-Jew alike, who do not have the freedom to celebrate either religiously or publicly. A more mystical explanation of the ceremony is that the glass represents the couple and that just as the glass, when it is broken, enters a state from which it will never emerge, it is the hope of the community that this couple will never emerge from their married state.”

Some couples bury bourbon as part of their celebration. This one is easy… and fun. Southern wedding tradition claims that if you bury a bottle of bourbon on the spot where the wedding will take place, then it won’t rain. Rain or shine, dig up the bourbon and raise a glass!

Seeing each other before the wedding

This tradition is actually more about the excitement of seeing each other in the modern era than anything, but it didn’t begin that way. Originally, this practice was related to arranged marriages and a fear that the groom would back out if the bride was less that desirable to look at… buyer’s remorse. Now, brides and grooms enjoy the anticipation of seeing each other the day of as the bride makes her way down the aisle. An improvement, I’d say.


We love family portraits whether they are set in the studio, the great outdoors, a specific location like the mountains or high country, or on our property in our outdoor portrait garden. Pixels on Paper photographs, engagements and weddingsbrides, and special events and portraits  of all kinds in our Wilkesboro, NC studio. We would be honored to meet with you, learn about you and your family and be a part of taking special portraits that will become, we hope, family heirlooms.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License All photos are ©2019 Pixels On Paper. Do not copy, crop, or remove watermark.

Senior Portraits & Graduation

One minute you’re holding them in your arms and staring at them like, “where did you come from?” And the next, they are about to graduate from high school to start the first big chapter as an adult. As we prepare for spring weddings, proms, wrap up Merlefest and a dozen other annual happenings, we are also gearing up for the senior portrait season.

For this blog, it seemed appropriate to share some words of wisdom with those about to graduate. I know we’re still a couple of months out, but congratulations!

“Before you act, listen. Before you react, think. Before you spend, earn. Before you criticize, wait. Before you quit, try.” – William Arthur Ward

“Do not follow where the path may lead. Go, instead, where there is no path and leave a trail.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

“The important thing is not to stop questioning.” – Albert Einstein

“Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goal.” – Henry Ford

“The unfortunate, yet truly exciting thing about your life, is that there is no core curriculum. The entire place is an elective.” – Jon Stewart

“Obstacles are those frightful things you see when you take your eyes off your goal.” – Henry Ford

“The future belongs to those who believe in the beauty of their dreams.” – Eleanor Roosevelt

If you have a senior ready to graduate this year or next year and want to capture this moment for keeps, contact us. We do not specialize is awkwardly posed studio shots. These shots of seniors showoff their personalities and style.


We love family portraits whether they are set in the studio, the great outdoors, a specific location like the mountains or high country, or on our property in our outdoor portrait garden. Pixels on Paper photographs, engagements and weddingsbrides, and special events and portraits  of all kinds in our Wilkesboro, NC studio. We would be honored to meet with you, learn about you and your family and be a part of taking special portraits that will become, we hope, family heirlooms.

88x31 lucy & glens valle crucis wedding photography | pixels on paper boone wedding photographers

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License All photos are ©2019 Pixels On Paper. Do not copy, crop, or remove watermark.

bouquet & garter toss

I read recently that brides and grooms are getting away from certain wedding traditions and surprisingly or not, tossing the garter and bouquet are just such traditions often being abandoned.

The reasoning: removal of the garter is a little on the risqué side as people stand around while a new husband disappears under his wife’s gown to fetch the lacy item. Brides have been making this easier over the years by having a second garter to toss and by making sure that it’s low enough on her leg. But it’s still a component of receptions for most weddings and here’s why….

The wedding garter tradition originated in the Dark Ages. In Wedding Customs Then and Now, published in 1919, Carl Holliday paints the following picture of medieval England: “The brides-maids start with the weary bride to the wedding chamber when suddenly the cry arises, ‘Get her garter!’ If the woman has been thoughtful, she has fastened it loosely to the bottom of her dress so that it drags in plain view of the scrambling ruffians; if she has not been a wise virgin, she may find her clothes in rags after the struggle.”

For a guest, having a tatter of the bride’s dress was considered good luck. Traditions around this stuck. Women in the middle ages also gave away the flowers in their hair and sometimes handkerchief-sized pieces of veil. For the recipient, it was indeed a good omen for their own matrimony.

While considered good luck, the sense of being under attack was NOT popular with brides, so they began throwing their bouquets into the crowds to distract people. They could then make a break for it with their husband to the bridal chamber. The groom would open the door and toss out the garter once the couple was inside.

Over the years, this act of distraction has turned into a tradition meant for the bride to pass on her good fortune to one single lady. Whoever catches the bouquet at a wedding is thought to be the next lady in line to wed.

The reason that brides are getting away from this tradition has more to do with saving time and embarrassment. As couples wait longer to get married, their single friends do NOT want to stand around in that posture of “please Lady Luck, shine your light on ME!” And with the bouquet, so is going the garter toss. Couples would rather keep dancing than interrupt the reception fun with another planned moment.

All of that said, those who decide to keep these two traditions alive at their ceremonies tend to keep it fun ad tasteful. They don’t over-imbibe and then go garter diving in front of grandparents and distant relatives. And DJs don’t necessarily call out the single ladies – it’s just a light moment toward the end of the night. Regardless, what happens with both of these traditions at people’s weddings is talked about long after we’ve packed up our cameras. Weddings are a celebration, after all, right?


We love family portraits whether they are set in the studio, the great outdoors, a specific location like the mountains or high country, or on our property in our outdoor portrait garden. Pixels on Paper photographs, engagements and weddingsbrides, and special events and portraits  of all kinds in our Wilkesboro, NC studio. We would be honored to meet with you, learn about you and your family and be a part of taking special portraits that will become, we hope, family heirlooms.

88x31 lucy & glens valle crucis wedding photography | pixels on paper boone wedding photographers

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License All photos are ©2019 Pixels On Paper. Do not copy, crop, or remove watermark.

Wedding Traditions | the rings

“With this ring, I thee wed.” So begin the vows that we recite at wedding ceremonies in one form or another. It’s a tender moment and is one of the most important aspects of the joining of two people. But why rings? Why give them and why wear them and what do they mean? Here’s a little history tour with some of our favorite images of Pixels couples and their wedding rings.

Historians say that the first rings were probably given around 3000 years ago in Egypt. Scrolls depict a man and woman giving each other braided rings of hemp or reeds to show commitment, love and a circling of each other without end. These soon were made from bone or ivory or stronger substances that would last longer.

It was the Romans, however, who fashioned them out of metal for the first time. Leave it to the Romans, right? What DIDN’T they devise? In ancient Rome, a groom would place a metal ring on the hand of his bride to symbolize strength and endurance as well as commitment. And it was the Romans who chose the fourth finger of the left hand. They believed that that particular finger contained the vena amoris, or the vein of love.

Christians are said to have chosen the fourth finger, because as the priest completed the vows he would say, “in the name of the father, son and holy spirit,” touching the ring to the thumb, pointer and middle fingers. When he said “Amen” he would then slip the ring on the bride’s finger to complete the vow. In Europe, rings are worn on the right hand, but most people believe that the left hand made more sense, because most people were right-handed and the ring would be damaged less.

During the Renaissance, gimmel rings were popular, as they are a two-piece set that go together. After the couple became engaged, they would each wear one piece and then at the wedding, the groom would give his wife his ring as a sign of their commitment and the complete joining of their lives. Rings became more ornate during this period too, containing more intricate designs and jewels.

For many centuries, it was customary for the wife to wear a wedding ring, but not the husband, but war fixed that. Men who went off to fight wore wedding bands as a show of fidelity to their wives while away and civilians then took up the practice leading us to today. A ring is a sign that you are committed to another and the world should know.

In 2019, rings are made of everything from tungsten (the world’s strongest metal) to silicone (you heard me) for couples who are active and worry that metal will get damaged or their fingers while mountain biking and climbing. Most couples stick with gold and platinum while others have their rings tattooed on, but they still all mean the same thing: “I Do. Forever.”


We love family portraits whether they are set in the studio, the great outdoors, a specific location like the mountains or high country, or on our property in our outdoor portrait garden. Pixels on Paper photographs, engagements and weddingsbrides, and special events and portraits  of all kinds in our Wilkesboro, NC studio. We would be honored to meet with you, learn about you and your family and be a part of taking special portraits that will become, we hope, family heirlooms.

88x31 lucy & glens valle crucis wedding photography | pixels on paper boone wedding photographers

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United States License All photos are ©2019 Pixels On Paper. Do not copy, crop, or remove watermark.