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Part 1: How to environmentally ‘green’ your wedding

Antique Wedding Accessories

Tips for your green wedding

Without costing the earth you can easily include green choices in your event planning. Incorporate the mantra – Recycle, Renew, Reuse in your wedding planning process and you’re on the right path to reducing your event carbon emissions.

Wedding dress

Today it’s environmentally “eco chic” to hire, borrow, buy pre-loved or wear a vintage wedding dress. And it’s not just brides snapping up these vintage gowns to wear or restyle, couture wedding designers are buying pre-loved gowns for their antique lace, crystals and beading treasures as well.

Include visits to your local ‘op’ shops and secondhand shops, buy pre-loved on-line or ask if you can wear your mother’s or grandmother’s gown – what an absolute honour.

Wedding dress fabric

Did you know synthetic fabrics are made from non-renewable petro chemicals creating greenhouse gases? Use natural fabrics such as silk, hemp, cotton, linen or bamboo.

Zero carbon your wedding

WeddingWire has partnered with carbonfund.org website to determine the level of carbon emission your wedding event will emit into the air. To Zero Carbon your click on the site above site. If not sure of your exact figures they offer pre-set offset options.

Also greenweddingguide.com.au has developed an emissions guide in association with the Carbon Reduction Institute.

If you choose these sites or others always thoroughly check their authenticity and certification.

Part 2: How to ‘Green’ Your Catering, transportation and wedding rings



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Category: Green Weddings

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3 Responses

  1. Brigitte says:

    Vintage wedding gowns are all the trend and very “green.” A large selection of them are here if you don’t mind me sharing. =D

  2. I couldn’t agree with you more Lee. We are such a throwaway society and this activity of recycling even wedding dresses should be encouraged.

    A tip if you should find a small pin hole on silk fabric (that it you hold up to the light you can see through) is to dab a bit of white vinegar to the back of the fabric and it should close up.

  3. Lee Cass says:

    How fascinating and a great tip! Thanks.

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Lee Cass

The Lenore K. Blog is run by Lee Cass from Lenore K. - a wedding & event planning business servicing Sydney, the Hunter Valley and other regional areas of NSW, Australia. On this blog you will find tips, resources and articles that you can take advantage of for your upcoming wedding or event.

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