Highlights from New York Spring 2016 Bridal Fashion Week

April 21, 2016

It has been a whirlwind week here in New York as NY Bridal Fashion Week stormed the city with dozens of designers, editors and buyers. I saw several runway shows for Spring 2017 collections, met with friends at bridal magazines, and attended an industry panel event.

Bridal Markets, which happen in April and October, are a great time for networking with wedding industry influencers. Even if you aren’t in fashion, this is a great time to get access to the top people in weddings. And if you want to attend bridal shows, you can get an invitations as long as you have a decent social media presence and a blog where you’d willing to post about the shows.

The first show I saw was actually a presentation style – or essentially a party with bubbly and hors d’ouvres – hosted by Galia Lahav. Designers Sharon Sever and Galia Lahav posed along with two groups of models in Spring/Summer 2017 Collection.

Galia Lahav Bridal Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2017

Photo by Eugene Gologursky/Getty Images for Galia Lahav

The next day, I visited my friends at Group 868, a NYC-based sales showroom that represents several exciting international designers. Here, I spent some time practicing my Italian with the amazing Milan-based designer Elisabetta Polignano. Apparently, she just made a dress (in my favorite color yellow) called Sashi! 🙂

Elisabetta Polignano and Sasha Vasilyuk at Group868

Elisabetta Polignano and Sasha Vasilyuk at Group868

Another great Group 868 designer is Francesca Miranda who hails from Colombia. I saw her show and can talk for hours about how her dresses have a unique combination of statement with airiness. She is definitely another name to watch!

Francesca Miranda Spring 2017

Francesca Miranda Spring 2017

Two years ago, I went to the first U.S. show by Italian designer Peter Langner, known for his use of incredible fabrics. It was great to return and see how much his recognition among American press has spread since. He showed his Spring 2017 Collection at a much bigger (and pretty gorgeous 3 West Club), where besides the impressive chandeliers we found the show program along with a tulip on each chair.

Peter Langner Spring 2017 Italian designer

Peter Langner Spring 2017 with editors from Martha Stewart Weddings in the background.

Outside the runway shows, cherry blossoms and tulips were in full bloom on the streets of Manhattan, so it was especially fitting to see flowers play a huge role in many of this year’s collections. Ines di Santo put on a magnificent show with a long runway that opened up from a pink flower-filled gate. Unsurprisingly, the final dress of the collection, seen below, was a spring garden dream!

Ines di Santo Spring 2017

Ines di Santo Spring 2017

Pink and 3D floral appliques two big themes on the spring runways this year. On the last day of Bridal Fashion Week, the legendary Kleinfeld showed the collection of Project Runway‘s winner Christian Siriano, which ended on this head-turning pink ombre gown.

Photo Apr 18, 10 25 04 AM

The week was capped off with Wedding Market Live, a great industry event with a luncheon at the gorgeous National Arts Club and a panel that included Justin Delaney of online tuxedo rental company Menguin; Sandy Hammer of AllSeated; event designer David Stark; cake queen Sylvia Weinstock; and Darcy Miller, Editor in Large of Martha Stewart Weddings. The panel talked about trends in wedding planning, fashion and technology to a savvy group of wedding industry leaders.

Justin Delaney of Menguin, Sandy Hammer of AllSeated, David Stark, Julie Albaugh of Wedding Market News, Sylvia Weinstock, Darcy Miller of Martha Stewart Weddings

Left to right: Justin Delaney of Menguin, Sandy Hammer of AllSeated, David Stark, Julie Albaugh of Wedding Market News, Sylvia Weinstock, Darcy Miller of Martha Stewart Weddings

After the event, we got a private tour of the National Arts Club along with Justin from Menguin and my good friend and amazing photographer Nadia D. It’s a beautiful building with an impressive collection of art (particularly American Impressionists) and art deco blown glass. We all (almost) joined to be members.

Photo Apr 19, 3 19 38 PM

And that’s a wrap, folks. If you’re looking to take your business to the next level and network with influencers, I recommend you go check out New York Bridal Fashion Week, which is about so much more than fashion. The next one is in October, so start planning ahead!

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Don’t Miss These April Industry Events in NYC and SF

April 11, 2016
Wedding industry events

With New York Bridal Market Week about to burst everyone’s Instagram seams, April has a lot going on. But there are two not-to-be-missed wedding industry events in particular that I wanted to share with you.

Next week in New York, please join me for the grand finale of Bridal Market week at Wedding Market Live, a panel discussion of weddings, fashion and tech with Darcy Miller of Martha Stewart Weddings, Justin Delaney of tuxedo rental site Menguin, Sandy Hammer of AllSeated, the queen of cakes Sylvia Weinstock and event planner and designer David Stark. The panel will be hosted in New York on Tuesday, April 19 by Julie Albaugh of www.weddingmarketnews.com.

If you aren’t going to be in New York, you can still follow along! Wedding Market Live NY will be broadcast live on Twitter and Periscope under #weddingmarket from 1-2pm EST.

Wedding Market Live New York Menguin


 

The second event that I’d like to invite you to my talk “How to Get Publicity for Your Wedding Business” at San Francisco NACE on Tuesday, April 26 at Blu Bungalow. I will be speaking about the power of publicity and give tips from my upcoming eBook Build Buzz for Your Wedding Business on how to craft your brand story, how to pitch to editors and what to do with publicity once you get it.

SF NACE and I DO PR

If you’re in San Francisco on April 26, don’t miss this event! And I’m not just saying it because I’m speaking… Ok, maybe I am 🙂

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Meet the Press: Brittny Drye of Love Inc.

April 5, 2016
Meet the Press: wedding pr

Welcome to Meet the Press, where every month we introduce you to one of the top wedding editors. On today’s segment, I’m excited to interview my good friend Brittny Drye, the fearless Founder and Editor-in-Chief of Love Inc. Magazine.

Brittny Drye

Photo by Ryan Carville Photography

 

Name: Brittny Drye

Title: Editor-in-Chief, Love Inc. Magazine

Follow her on: Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Pinterest

About Brittny: As a lover of all things wedding and a fierce cheerleader for marriage equality, Brittny decided to marry her two passions and create a resource where all couples—gay, straight and lesbian—can be equally represented. Armed with seven years in both print and online lifestyle journalism, she dove headfirst into this passion project in 2013 and Love Inc. was born.

What do you love about covering the wedding industry?

What I love about the wedding industry is that it has multiple lifestyle beats within it: food/drink, beauty/grooming, design, fashion, travel, profiles. Being able to navigate all of these different topics keeps my day-to-day writing and content production from feeling stagnant.

What’s been your all-time favorite project to work on?

Our V3 issue’s fashion spread made a strong statement for the LGBTQ community. Shattering gender barriers, we worked with male model Dylan Stephens to create a gorgeous editorial that showcased him in outfits across the spectrum — from a classic tux and a chic red velvet dinner jacket to a sleek bridal pantsuit and elegant wedding gown. The shoot went viral and earned us recognition in top media outlets such as OUT Magazine, The Advocate, Refinery29, Cosmopolitan, MSNBC, NY Daily News, MTV and others.

Love Inc. transgender wedding fashion shoot

Photo by: Ryan Carville Photography

Yes, I remember all the attention you got for that shoot! But what’s the best way to get your attention?

Knowing my brand. As editors, we get hundreds of pitches each week, many of which have nothing to do with our publications and are obvious mass emails. Quality over quantity reigns my world, so if I can tell that you’ve researched my site and still feel like your product/client would be a good fit, I’m eager to hear what you have to say.

How do you usually find sources if you have your own story in mind?

I’m blessed that at this point in my career, my virtual Rolodex is stocked with experts on a variety of topics, but if I’m in a pinch, I’ll turn to a couple of professional Facebook groups that I’m a part of that have a plethora of sources as well as reach out directly to experts whom I feel would be a good fit.

Can you share one piece of advice with wedding professionals looking to get publicity?

As I mentioned above, knowing the publications that you’re pitching does wonders. Pick five dream publications that you want to be featured in and create tailored pitches to each rather than sending 100 mass emails.

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Meet the Press: Erika Hueneke, Destination Weddings & Honeymoons

March 3, 2016
Meet the Press: wedding pr

Welcome to Meet the Press! Every month on this new segment, you will get to meet a prominent editor from one of the top wedding magazines and blogs. Too often editors are hidden behind closed doors and email addresses and seem unapproachable. I’m here to help change that. Because the truth is, these are some of the hardest working women and men out there and they would love for you to get to know who they are and what they do.

To start off the series, please meet my good friend Erika Hueneke, Editor in Chief of Destination Weddings & Honeymoons.

Erika Hueneke

Name: Erika Hueneke

Title: Editor in Chief, Destination Weddings & Honeymoons

Follow her on Twitter: @erika_hueneke

About Erika: Erika has been with Destination Weddings & Honeymoons magazine, the leading travel source for destination couples, for a decade, wearing many hats, including copy editor, managing editor, brand ambassador and travel writer. She had enjoyed roaming the world from Aruba to Zanzibar to spot trends and report on the best wedding and honeymoon locales. In her current role, she oversees all aspects of DWH’s editorial development, including print, Web, social, events, digital guides and vendor partnerships. She has been a featured expert at multiple travel and wedding panels hosted by organizations such as Engaging Concepts, the Saint Lucia Tourist Board, SAVEUR, Anne Chertoff Media and the Panama City Beach CVB. Erika also regularly contributes to publications including Islands, Caribbean Travel + Life, Florida Travel + Life and Jetsetter.com. She unknowingly planned her own destination wedding in 2005 and is saving her “Tahiti virginity” for a 15-year-anniversary vow renewal in Bora Bora.

Erika, how do you feel writing about the wedding industry is different from other topics?

The wedding audience is constantly turning over. When people are planning their weddings, it’s their biggest priority; they can barely think of anything else. But then once it’s over, they don’t care at all. So you have to keep covering the same exact topics over and over again for new batches of couples. Still, you don’t want to just keep churning out the same content — you want to keep it fresh and modern and interesting for yourself. If you’re bored with it, your audience will be too. So the challenge is to keep telling the same story in a new, compelling way. I’ve been doing it for 10 years and still get excited to find a different spin on gowns, cakes and invites!

What has been your favorite project to work on?

I’ve been blessed to work with some of the most creative people in publishing, and we’ve done so many innovative projects, but one I’m really proud of is a digital destination-wedding guide we recently created specifically for the LGBTQ audience. It was a joy to celebrate marriage equality, share real couples’ stories, and connect LGBTQ readers with locations, hotels and vendors that are excited to help them bring their wedding dreams to life. My hope is that soon we won’t need special editorial dedicated to this audience, as a wedding will just be a wedding and won’t need to be qualified as “same-sex” or otherwise.

How do you usually find sources for your stories?

The sources we use most are destination-wedding planners, travel specialists and hospitality professionals. A Google search, while it brings up zillions of results, is usually my last resort. I prefer to turn to professionals I’ve met at industry events such as Engage summit! and out in the field on FAM trips.

Destination Weddings & Honeymoons cover

What’s the best way to get your attention?

True destination-wedding expertise will always get my attention. Lots of wedding professionals do a little destination-wedding business on the side, or would like to break into travel. But we’re looking for insight from people who work on destination weddings every day and really know the ins and outs of pulling off a wedding far from home. Show me that you and my audience are a match made in heaven.

Recently I received a mailing from a travel specialist — she had gorgeous, modern branding, and the high-quality letterpress card showed she was investing in her business. But there wasn’t some trite saying on the card like “love what you do”; there was real information demonstrating that she genuinely understands the destination-wedding niche. We quoted her in an article in the very next issue of the magazine.

What one piece of advice would you give to wedding professionals looking to get publicity?

Connect and collaborate. Go to industry events and meet people. Invite them to do creative work with you. Share that work with editors. If you plan ahead, you can solicit editors’ input on the front end to align your efforts with their editorial needs.

Thanks, Erika! We love your magazine, so keep it up! And don’t forget to invite us on the next fun FAM trip with you 🙂

– Sasha

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Success Stories: Harmony Walton of Bridal Bar

February 22, 2016
Harmony Walton Bridal Bar

I’m so excited to introduce our newest segment “Success Stories”, where I’ll be interviewing wedding industry influencers that have had a lot of success with public relations. My hope is that you can learn from their experience and see how your brand can successfully work with the media.

To start us off, we’re talking to Harmony Walton, who has one of the most impressive press portfolio in the industry with hundreds of media features!

Name: Harmony Walton

Find her on: www.bridalbar.com | www.jetfeteblog.com | www.harmonywalton.com

Check out her Press Page: http://www.bridalbar.com/press

About Harmony: The founder of The Bridal Bar and host of Bridal Bar Radio airing on America’s Talk and iHeartRadio, Harmony Walton has over a decade of marketing, consulting and brand representation experience in the luxury wedding industry. She began her weddings career as a contributing editor to a national bridal magazine, at which time she discovered the need to support engaged couples and wedding professionals through a more diverse and hands-on approach to marketing, advertising, and connecting.  And thus, The Bridal Bar was born. With much media attention and a vast celebrity clientele (including Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes, Kendra Wilkinson and Hank Baskett, Katherine Heigl and Josh Kelley, among others), in 2011, Harmony expanded the brand with a destination weddings and honeymoons blogsite, Jet Fete by Bridal Bar. Harmony is also the host of Bridal Bar Radio, the only talk show about weddings powered by Clear Channel and airing weekly on iHeartRadio, and speaks frequently around the world.

Harmony Walton wedding planner

What publicity have you received for your business?

My business has been fortunate to receive a variety of media mentions, including news sources like The New York Times, The New Yorker, The Associated Press, and USA Today to entertainment and celebrity television shows like E! News and Access Hollywood and most bridal media outlets, including Martha Stewart Weddings, Brides, and many more.

Our first important feature came from Daily Candy and many more media opportunities quickly followed. Perez Hilton even gave me a nickname in one of his articles, which actually stuck among my friends.

One recent success has been the number of times I’ve been quoted as an expert in The New York Times this past year. I’m fortunate to get regular mentions on a variety of wedding topics and that’s something I’m proud of, when an outlet or writer comes back to me more than once as a trusted source.

Harmony Walton plans Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes wedding

Was getting publicity a deliberate part of your marketing strategy?

I had worked in celebrity PR and then as a contributing editor for a bridal magazine before launching The Bridal Bar, so the bulk of my marketing strategy was publicity driven.  I was lucky in that I had a unique business model, a good story, good branding, and I knew what I was doing so getting great placements came quickly.  And it’s still an important part of the business today.

How were you able to get featured?

Since I had experience in PR, I ran (and still run) my own PR campaign.  When I started my company, I created a media kit, targeted the outlets and editors I wanted to work with, and through my campaign, made myself known to everyone in wedding media and many in lifestyle too. I do my own outreach, I have built my own relationships over the years and in the end, made a lot of friends because of it.  I think that’s helped me be a repeat source because I’m not going anywhere!

Harmony Walton in Martha Stewart Weddings

How has media attention changed your business?

In the early years, a media mention in the right place could fill up our voicemail in one hour of a show airing and overnight change our scope of influence in the market.  I would not be where I am today without the ongoing support of the media. It’s likely the single best thing I’ve done for my company.

What one piece of advice would you give to wedding professionals looking to get publicity?

It’s important to be an asset.  That can mean a lot of things.  If you’re quick to reply to a press inquiry, you have artwork ready to support things you speak about and are quoted on, and you have the ability to tell a great story for that specific outlet and audience without feeling the need to be a commercial for yourself, then you’re on your way to being a great asset.  Once the editor or writer trusts you and knows they can rely on you, they’ll come back to you time and time again, even when they move jobs – giving you even more exposure across multiple platforms.  My very first story on The Bridal Bar was with a freelance writer who still includes me in a variety of outlets today, 12 years later, and it’s because she can count on me to be an asset – to help her, to better her story and not just better my bottom line.

Thank you Harmony! Stay tuned for more How They Did It features on our blog.

     - Sasha Vasilyuk

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