Australian Civil Marriage Celebrant officiating at weddings in Brisbane, Caboolture, Petrie, Redcliffe and Redland Bay.

Wedding and Baby Naming celebrant performs ceremonies any day of the week, and will arrange an appointment location convenient for you, at no extra charge. 

Telephone: (07) 3283 8567, Mobile: 0415 324 982

PO Box 394, Redcliffe. Qld, 4020. 

Email: vlady_celebrant@ yahoo.com.au

  • Member of: Australian Federation of Civil Celebrants (AFCC) 

  • Australian Civil Marriage Celebrants of Queensland (ACMCQ)

  • Justice of the Peace

Authorised Marriage Celebrant, Registration Number A.888, Vlady M Peters

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A Deeper Meaning

 

Seeing a good film, or hearing a great choir, or a wonderful film, we are often touched by the beauty of the whole, without actually thinking about all the details that go into making that perfect whole.

And nowhere are small details more important than in the production of a royal wedding dress. It is not just a matter of a sprinkle of pearls here, and a sprinkle of a few diamantes there and here’s the wedding dress. A royal wedding is a concoction that usually has some larger meaning behind it’s attractive façade.

Sometimes the individual bride will have a personal input as to how she wants to present herself to people at large. Self-styled Princess of Hearts, Princess Diana, chose a dress to fit her title. It was largely evocative of romance.

Often, the features of a royal dress will be based on the historical roots of either one or both partners. Sometimes it might be the historical facts that are part of the person’s destiny. A bride who is to rule a number of countries, might have those countries’ insignias woven into the fabric of her dress.

In the case of the wedding dress created for the then Princess Elizabeth, the dress was designed as an expression of time and place of the era in which the Princess lived. Externally, the most impressive thing about the wedding dress of the then Princess Elizabeth, was the beauty of the design. Over the whole of the dress, embroidered with white crystals and pearls, are garlands of orange blossoms, and rose buds, with trails of jasmine and syringe.

While the details are beautiful in themselves, the design is based on Botticelli’s painting Flora. The setting of the painting is a lush garden, profuse with flowers to establish it as a bountiful spring. The garden belongs to Venus, the goddess of love, and cupid hangs somewhere above it to show that he is actively promoting love in a setting so fit for it.

In this garden there are also the three graces, the very personification of beauty, grace and charm. As Zephyr, the god of the wind, pursues the nymph Chloris – as they had a very bad habit of doing in Greek and Roman myths - she turns into Flora, the god of Spring and flowers.

In 1947, when this wedding dress was designed, there had been little of spring and flowers in the lives of most people, and the design was a deliberate evocation of a the promise of beauty and hope for the future. The very abundance of decoration on the dress, establishes the desire to leave the scarcity of yesterday, and enter vital prosperity full of grace and charm.

 

Wedding Library

Wedding Traditions and Customs

These are Their Stories
The Greater the Dowry, the Greater the Love
The Dress that Dreams are Made Of
Weddings, the Pioneering Ways
I Feel Pretty
Till Death Us Do Part
If You Really Loved Me
When Gifts Simply Won't Do
Wedding Toasts
Wedding with a Difference
A Priceless Pearl
Look, Don't Eat!
Virginia is for Lovers
Robbing the Cradle
Who Needs a Marriage Certificate?
And a Never-Ending Good Fortune to You
Rice or Rice Balls
Padlocks of the Heart
Honeymoon or Honeymead. It's Sweet.
Did Casanova Really Need Those Oysters
Gretna Green Wedding
Best Man at a Wedding
Catch that Bouquet!
Wedding Cake - Is There Anything New Under the Sky?
The Night They Invented Champagne
Courtship in a Cold Country, Coffee Anyone?
Wedding Day - No Greater Love
Bride's Wedding Dress
We're On Our Honeymoon, But We're Not Alone
Wedding Engagement - And How to Prepare for It
Wedding Extravaganza
Wedding Flowers
Throw a Garter or Two
Wedding Gifts
Wedding Gifts - Wanted and Unwanted
Wedding Guests
Wedding Hospitality
Love on the Internet
What's A Goldfish Doing at a Wedding?
One Word More or Less
Words you hate to hear at a Wedding
Lucky! Lucky! Lucky! Bride and Groom!
Is She the One?
Staging a Wedding Play
Unaccustomed as I am to Public Speaking
Marriage Reforms
History of the Wedding Ring
Ring on her Finger and one through her Nose
When Alexander Met Roxane - and Barsine
By the Light of the Silvery Moon
Always a Bridesmaid, Never a Bride
For Worse No Matter How Bad
Wedding Attendants
The All Important Colours
A Deeper Meaning
Often a Fiancee, Barely a Wife
Here Comes the Bride
Silence is Golden at Some Weddings
And You Thought You Had Problems
Come One, Come All
L is for Love
For Better or Worse
Please, Please, Please Marry Me
A Lock of Hair
Mother-In-Law
Wedding Speech
The Girl Who Refuses to Marry
I Take You to be My Second Husband