Ladybrille® Blogazine

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Tuesday, November 6, 2007

What to Look for in a Wedding Planner

This month is about weddings on Ladybrille, inspired by the many Ladybrille women that will be headed, in December, to Africa to attend or be in destination weddings across the African continent. Jumpstarting the wedding series this week is the BIG decision whether to hire a wedding planner for your wedding.

Congratulations!!! You are engaged, excited and happy about spending the rest of your life with the ONE. Your happiness, however, seems short lived when you realize there is a checklist of endless things to do. You have to select your bridal dresses, send invitations, order the cake, wedding gown, gifts, select the venue, photographer, marriage officers, make up artist, florist and more. Phew! With an already hectic schedule, thanks to your daytime job, the last thing you want to do is try to plan a wedding all by yourself. Wanting your special day to be perfect, you begin worrying. “Should I be thinking about a wedding planner?” You think to yourself. “What should I be looking for to determine if she is the right fit?”
Assuming you have concluded you definitely need a wedding planner, what do you look for during the consultation? Enter Funke Bucknor. Bucknor is the owner of Zapphaire Events, a famous event planning company based out of Nigeria, West Africa. [Winner] in 2006 [of] the Future Awards' Entrepreneur of the Year, she is known for her quality event planning and cheerful personality. Bucknor shares her insights on what to look for in a wedding planner once you decide to hire one. She touches a bit on traditions and etiquettes to keep in mind for a stress free perfect wedding, especially if you will be getting hitched in motherland Africa.

[Funke Bucknor left with makeup artist colleague Tara Fela-Durotoye]

LADYBRILLE.com:
Hi Funke! How are you?
Funke Bucknor: I’m fine!

LADYBRILLE.com: Funke how long have you been an event planner?
Funke Bucknor: Since 2003 0fficially.

LADYBRILLE.com:
I hear you are very good when it comes to planning weddings. How did you get into planning events [and then] weddings?
Funke Bucknor: Well, right from University I always loved organizing and helping people out. So I started with helping my friend’s senior sister with her wedding and then after that, everyone said to go into it full time. I actually enjoyed it. It was so much fun.

LADYBRILLE.com:
Very nice! Let me get straight into various aspects of planning a wedding. Today's professional woman, the Ladybrille woman, is busy, very busy. Her soon to be hubby just proposed. She is excited and has begun planning for her wedding. She does not want to manage or micro-manage the details. She wants to hire a wedding planner. What should she be looking for in a wedding planner?
Funke Bucknor: [F]irst of all, your wedding planner has to be someone that comes highly recommended; someone that understands your vision for your wedding. [S]he has to be someone that thinks you are the most important person. She has to be dedicated, pay attention to details and is [unwilling] to compromise on standard and quality e.t.c. She has to be warm and at the same time firm.

LADYBRILLE.com: Assume a bride has been able to select a wedding planner,you, based on the attributes you mention. She now tells you she expects 300-800 guests. What are the things you would want her to consider?
Funke Bucknor: [She should] know that the number of guests would determine what venue and which vendors we would be using. At Zapphaire Events, for example, we send the bride pictures and samples of all vendors [cakemakers, DJs, photographers, florists e.t.c.] we propose or recommend. She [can] then decide what she wants. We also try and come up with an estimated budget based on all her ideas and theme. With that every other vendor falls into place. Communication is key.

LADYBRILLE.com:
Speaking of communication being key, how important is it that a bride and her wedding planner [h]ave compatible personalities?
Funke Bucknor: I think, for me, very important. But, sometimes, it doesn’t really matter so long as the wedding planner [m]akes the bride as comfortable as possible.

LADYBRILLE.com:
I want to get more into the vendors you talked about. For you as a planner, how do you pick the vendors?
Funke Bucknor: [I pick] based on my relationship with them. I usually like to work with vendors that are reliable and deliver quality service. You know when you have worked with them for a while, you begin to know who is [reliable] and who to [avoid].
It is not easy though because some of them can disappoint you sometimes.

LADYBRILLE.com:
A lot of my Nigerian friends based here [the USA] get married and then they go home and have this elaborate weddings. One is what is called a “White Wedding" and the other “Traditional." Could you tell our readers what that is all about?

[One of Bucknor's clients in traditional fashion designs]
Funke Bucknor:
[I]n Nigeria, we are still guided by culture and traditions a bit.
The traditional wedding is what the families recognize as the real wedding. To them, the church or ceremony is just a formality. With the traditional, it involves a lot of family, traditions e.t.c. Both families must be involved. There is a lot of singing, dancing and the families are introduced like they are just meeting for the first time. Sometimes the couple is not even present.

LADYBRILLE.com: That is very interesting. I can't recall ever attending a traditional wedding. How much does it cost to have such weddings?
Funke Bucknor: The cost of weddings in Nigeria really varies. It can be as low as 500,000 naira [$4,000 +] and as high as 10million naira [$83,000+] .

LADYBRILLE.com:
Let me ask you real quickly about something I have been so curious to know. Can you tell us about proper wedding etiquettes especially where African weddings are concerned and in this case specific to Nigeria?
Funke Bucknor: Well on etiquette, it depends on the tribe of the couples. In the Yoruba [Southern part of Nigeria] tradition, for example, the bride’s family pays for the reception and the traditional part. [In contrast] in the Ibo [Eastern part of Nigeria] tradition, the groom pays for everything.

LADYBRILLE.com: Hmmm . . . one last question for you. Weddings can be pretty chaotic. How, as a wedding planner, do you make sure things do not go wrong on the actual wedding day?
Funke Bucknor: For the reception and as wedding planner, you just have to make sure you pay attention to details and pray it all goes well. Even if it seems like something is wrong, you have to act like it is all okay. That is what we are paid to do.

LADYBRILLE.com: Thank you Funke!
Funke Bucknor: Thank you so much.

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Monday, November 5, 2007

Catwalk the World- 'Fashion for Food,' South Africa



Update: The event is actually in South Africa, not London.
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Saturday, November 3, 2007

Ladybrille Woman of the Month, Estella Ogbonna



Nigerian born, Washington DC based, Estella Ogbonna, owner and Senior Fashion Designer for Estella Couture, LLC, is the Ladybrille Woman of the Month! A fresh face both in the Nigerian and American fashion scene, Ogbonna is steadily winning fans over with her charm, personality and design skills.

Her signature is the ability to cut richly textured African fabrics into sexy wearable chic silhouettes perfect for the very cosmopolitan African and/or Western woman. While she began designing at six years old, it was only in 2005 Ogbonna decided to pursue a career as a full time fashion designer. Within a year of her official arrival on the fashion scene, Ogbonna, in 2006, snagged the Nigerian Entertainment Awards as the Fashion Designer of the Year. Since then, Ogbonna has shown her collections at DC Fashion Week and was also the only African, this year, to show at New York’s Couture Fashion Week. She is currently a cast member for the upcoming Nigerian reality TV show, Green Passport-- a show which showcases the lives of Nigerians in America as they straddle and reconcile two distinct cultures.

Random Questions with Estella Ogbonna

LADYBRILLE.com: Do you have a middle name?
Estella: Yes, I do. My middle name is Ijeoma. Only my immediate family, childhood friends and very close friends call me that.

LADYBRILLE.com: Do you know why your parents called you Estella? It sounds Spanish.
Estella: Truth is, my parents named me "Stella" at birth, but I changed it to “Estella” when I was in high school, after I read Charles Dickens’s "Great Expectation."

LADYBRILLE.com: How long have you been a designer?
Estella: I have been design[ing] since I was six [6] years old. I still remember the first skirt I made with needle and thread when I was six [6]. I wore it for a long time. . . [laughs]. Ever since I can remember, I have been interested in clothes, in sketching clothes and mentally changing styles in my head. I took it up as a business three years ago.

LADYBRILLE.com: What is the most challenging aspect of your job? Estella: Hmmm……I would say money. There is so much to do in this business, there are so many ideas I have on paper that I know that if all my [ideas][were] implemented, [it] would explode African Fashion globally. Therefore, for now, I pick on things that are of utmost priority, but there are still a whole lot to be done.

LADYBRILLE.com: What is the most exciting part of your job? Estella: The most exciting part of my job is seeing a happy and satisfied client. It makes it worth it. [It] makes me proud that I have helped boost someone’s feeling for the day, because [a] well-dressed and confident woman is a happy.

LADYBRILLE.com: If you had a choice to pick two African celebrities to dress for an award show in the USA & or Europe, who will they be and why?
Estella: In our [Nigeria/Africa] fashion and entertainment world, I would pick Super Model Oluchi. From the MNet Face of Africa to the present, she did not lose focus! She did not embarrass or disappoint her people. [S]he stayed on course, followed her dream, her career and even got a husband and a baby as well. And she has continued to remain on top! I am proud of her.

And I will pick you [Uduak] too. Because you have provided a link African fashion designers are in so much need of. Most people may not know it now, but they will soon enough. As a fashion designer in the international scene, we are not only competing with the already established Western designers, but we are also faced with penetrating the other races and cultures; to let them know that there are beautiful fashions from Africa. To get other races to like our exotic fabrics, and styles.

LADYBRILLE is in a class of its own because you give so much information that every African Fashion designer should be soaking up. I stay in my sewing studio almost all day and when I get on the Internet, I may not have to surf all over the place searching for information related to the fashion industry. As we all have to be abreast of latest trends. But I know that if I log onto your blog, the important and up-to-date news and information would be lined up for me to read. Thanks for creating Ladybrille. It is a good resource for me.

LADYBRILLE.com: [Thank you]

LADYBRILLE.com: Who is your favorite African musician and why? Estella: Honestly, I have no favorite African Musician because I am more into Gospel/Christian songs. So, anyone that sings a song of praise or worship that ministers to me is my favorite.

LADYBRILLE.com: What African country would you love to visit most and why?
Estella: I would love to visit Kenya. And this is because of my love for Massai beads! I love those beads!! And have so much African couture I want to create with them. Kenya is on my mind, and I am looking forward to also visiting all their beautiful tourist attractions.

LADYBRILLE.com: What's the craziest thing you have ever done? Estella: Hmmm . . . I honestly can’t say, but I have been told that it was very crazy of me to chuck my job, with practically no capital and [s]tart ESTELLA COUTURE! When I quit my bank job [and] went [into] full-time into fashion designing, I didn’t know where the next pay check was going to come from . . . [laughs]. Yes, people tell me that was very crazy! They [say] I should have saved a lot of money first before starting, or just done it as a part-time hobby/business.

LADYBRILLE.com: Give us two favorite quotes you live by? Estella: God grant me the SERENITY to accept the things I cannot change; the COURAGE to change the things I can; and WISDOM to know the difference….”
"Do as you would be done by, or you will be done as you did" – read it up somewhere when I was about 9 years and it stuck since then and I live by it…

LADYBRILLE.com:Do you have any favorite African food? Estella:I love Edi-ka-ikong soup [spicy green vegetable soup originating from the Cross River & Akwa-Ibom people of Nigeria] and pounded yam. Anytime, any day.

Congratulations Estella Ogbonna for being our Ladybrille Woman of the Month. Ladybrille salutes and celebrates you!
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Thursday, November 1, 2007

Destination Weddings in Africa!!!

[Photo courtesy of http://www.gisters.com/. Models Obi, Uduak and Funmi as bridesmaids at model Ojy's wedding in Lagos, Nigeria]

Happy New Month! To say I am really excited about this month is an understatement!!! But before I spill the beans, CONGRATULATIONS to Lesha Anderson of Newburgh, Indiana who won the recent Ladybrille Contest. Also, watch out for our Ladybrille woman of the month and our Ladybrille model of the month.

Now to the cause of my excitement!!! November is about the time a lot of my friends, especially African friends, begin preparation to travel to Africa for numerous weddings, in December. Usually they attend two weddings for one couple: the "Traditional" and the "White" weddings. One of the reasons these destination weddings in Africa remain popular is that beyond involving family and friends who reside in Africa, you can have a Hollywood styled wedding at a much less expensive price than in the States or Europe.
These weddings are HUGE, FUN but they can also be quite stressful! This month, at Ladybrille,we want to demystify weddings, especially African weddings, whether in Africa, USA or Europe. We will feature lay persons and experts in and outside Africa who will tell us all we need to know about planning the perfect wedding for that special day. They'll tell us about choosing the right: event planners, florists, cakemakers, wedding gowns, bridal dresses, caterers, decor, musicians, Djs, photographers, honeymoon packages and more! We will also be having some wedding contests/giveaways throughout the month!!!!
Chatting about weddings would be no fun without you! We want to hear from you. Do you have a wedding story to tell us? Stories like the best wedding you attended? Are you the bride? How did he propose? Are you Caucasian, Asian, Indian or Black American married to an African? How was the wedding ceremony? Any traditions that you loved, found amusing or awkward? Are you African? What is it like to be married in Nigeria, Ghana, Namibia, Kenya, Tanzania, Zimbabwe or South Africa? Did your wedding involve both African and American/European traditions? Ladybrille wants to hear your stories! Send your wedding stories to weddings@ladybrille.com. You just might be one of our lucky winners for our fun wedding prizes! Word count should be min. 500 words and max. 900 words.
Speaking of wedding prizes/giveaways, a BIG THANK YOU to all of our sponsors for making our wedding month just plain brilliant!

LUTHER VANDROSS- Here & Now
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