Married (with honeymoon photos - 56k beware)
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- Starglider
- Miles Dyson
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Married (with honeymoon photos - 56k beware)
I got married last Saturday;
We are now going off to Ireland for two weeks of camping/hiking/B&Bs etc. I may put some more photos in an AMP thread when we get back.
I did all the lighting/music/games/fireworks myself, with my own equipment; between that and shuttling so many relatives around it was a very exhausting week. I think it went very well though.
We are now going off to Ireland for two weeks of camping/hiking/B&Bs etc. I may put some more photos in an AMP thread when we get back.
I did all the lighting/music/games/fireworks myself, with my own equipment; between that and shuttling so many relatives around it was a very exhausting week. I think it went very well though.
Last edited by Starglider on 2008-10-31 03:59pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Married
Congratulations. I love the clothes - very stylish.
And more weddings need bubbles.
And more weddings need bubbles.
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Re: Married
Congratulations The area seems to have been struck by the weather daemons, though.
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Re: Married
Smooth location. Nice tux too. Congrats to you both.
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Here's to a certain mostly harmless nutcase.
Re: Married
Wow. That's a fantastic looking wedding.
Good job, Starglider. She's beautiful, and you're surprisingly pretty yourself.
Good job, Starglider. She's beautiful, and you're surprisingly pretty yourself.
∞
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Re: Married
Congratulations man!! I just got married about a month and a half ago. Did you get as nervous as I did, once you actually saw your bride and she was coming towards you?
Awesome location too.
And FUCK! Bubbles. Man, I knew we were forgetting something cool.
P.S. See if we can get a mod to move this to AMP and post more pics.
Awesome location too.
And FUCK! Bubbles. Man, I knew we were forgetting something cool.
P.S. See if we can get a mod to move this to AMP and post more pics.
It's 106 miles to Chicago, we got a full tank of gas, half a pack of cigarettes, it's dark... and we're wearing sunglasses.
Hit it.
Blank Yellow (NSFW)
Hit it.
Blank Yellow (NSFW)
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Re: Married
Congratulations !
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My weird shit NSFW
Imperial Battleship, halt the flow of time!
My weird shit NSFW
Re: Married
Congrats!
There've sure been a whole lot of SD.net marriages this year...
There've sure been a whole lot of SD.net marriages this year...
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I'm not sure why people choose 'To Love is to Bury' as their wedding song...It's about a murder-suicide
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The slight variations in spelling and grammar enhance its individual character and beauty and in no way are to be considered flaws or defects
I'm not sure why people choose 'To Love is to Bury' as their wedding song...It's about a murder-suicide
- Margo Timmins
When it becomes serious, you have to lie
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Re: Married
Congratulations, and I have to second the comment on the slick clothing.
- Starglider
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Re: Married
Just leaving for Ireland now.
The German relatives always bring bubble blowers shaped like wedding cakes to weddings. They give the children something to do, and it's an improvement on throwing rice.Bounty wrote:And more weddings need bubbles.
Fortunately the drizzle stopped an hour or so before the ceremony. I think it was ok actually, the mist in the valley was dramatic and apparently diffuse light like that is considerably easier to shoot photos in (no inconvenient shadows).Dartzap wrote:Congratulations The area seems to have been struck by the weather daemons, though.
Thanks, I think...Phantasee wrote:Good job, Starglider. She's beautiful, and you're surprisingly pretty yourself.
No. I was feeling pretty strange on the two days prior to the wedding day though, a kind of alienated 'who is this woman and why am I marrying her?' feeling. Emotions are irrational like that.havokeff wrote:Did you get as nervous as I did, once you actually saw your bride and she was coming towards you?
Could do, otherwise I will make another thread when I have some decent photos from the photographer.See if we can get a mod to move this to AMP and post more pics.
The wedding cake was chocolate. The general agreement was that it was 'delicious and moist'...Zalborg wrote:Was there cake?
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Re: Married
Congratulations.
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Re: Married
That is the most stylish wedding I've seen in quite some time. Thumbs up!
Oh yeah, congratulations and all that too....
Oh yeah, congratulations and all that too....
The Zen of Not Fucking Up.
Re: Married
Topic moved.
I wish you both a happy future together
And you two look fantastic. The wedding dress is absolutely divine!
I wish you both a happy future together
And you two look fantastic. The wedding dress is absolutely divine!
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Me: Nope, that's why I have you around to tell me.
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Re: Married
Congratulations!
Those bubbles do look great, and so the clothes. Hope you two have some good happiness together.
BTW, where was this wedding?
Those bubbles do look great, and so the clothes. Hope you two have some good happiness together.
BTW, where was this wedding?
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Re: Married
Congratulations! Welcome to the club!
Isn't it weird? It's almost like someone else is walking down the aisle. Did you also experience a moment of sheer terror right before you said the vows?Starglider wrote:No. I was feeling pretty strange on the two days prior to the wedding day though, a kind of alienated 'who is this woman and why am I marrying her?' feeling. Emotions are irrational like that.
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Re: Married
Surlethe wrote:Congratulations! Welcome to the club!
Isn't it weird? It's almost like someone else is walking down the aisle. Did you also experience a moment of sheer terror right before you said the vows?Starglider wrote:No. I was feeling pretty strange on the two days prior to the wedding day though, a kind of alienated 'who is this woman and why am I marrying her?' feeling. Emotions are irrational like that.
Not terror I think. Rather realization of the implications of the words you're about to speak. It was the weight of responsibility settling upon your shoulders I think.
They say, "the tree of liberty must be watered with the blood of tyrants and patriots." I suppose it never occurred to them that they are the tyrants, not the patriots. Those weapons are not being used to fight some kind of tyranny; they are bringing them to an event where people are getting together to talk. -Mike Wong
But as far as board culture in general, I do think that young male overaggression is a contributing factor to the general atmosphere of hostility. It's not SOS and the Mess throwing hand grenades all over the forum- Red
But as far as board culture in general, I do think that young male overaggression is a contributing factor to the general atmosphere of hostility. It's not SOS and the Mess throwing hand grenades all over the forum- Red
- Starglider
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Re: Married
Here is a selection of photos from our honeymoon (post 1 of 2). Click on any of them for a larger version.
We started off by driving from Croydon to North Wales. We stopped for a picnic lunch in this valley, before camping near Bangor.
We packed my Audi Allroad full of stuff for the trip. It wouldn't have been feasible to take Leena's little Skoda Fabia. We took the fast catamaran car ferry from Hollyhead (north Wales) to Dun Laoghaire port (just south of Dublin).
We wandered around Dublin for the rest of the day. Unfortunately the Natural History museum was closed but we saw some other museums and landmarks, including Trinity College.
After a night in a Dublin hotel we drove down to Kilkenny, stopping at Dunmore Cave along the way.
Although relatively small, it was quite impressive, with a natural entrance, large caverns and very extensive flowstone formations.
At Kilkenny we couldn't go in the castle, as we hadn't booked, but I think the grounds were the best part anyway.
We camped at a farm near Kilkenny. Most of the camping gear was given as wedding presents; excepting the gas cylinder, which we got from a dubious looking depot in the middle of nowhere (central Wales). The salesman told us we could have the cylinder for free, no deposit - it had heavy surface corrosion but I was reasonably confident that it wasn't going to explode.
Most nights we watched a DVD on the laptop, in the tent or B&B room. The next day we drove over to Cashel, which had impressive ruins of ancient temples, devoted to a quaint religion called 'Catholicism'.
We carried on down winding country roads, through numerous small villages and up across low mountains to Nenagh, where Leena insisted on visiting a folk museum built out of a converted jail. Eventually we arrived in Portumna, at the top end of Lough Derg. It had another castle, piers into the lough that would've been very scenic if it had been sunny, and a fairly pleasant Bed & Breakfast.
Fortunately I'd brought some toys for rainy days.
The next day we went over to the west (Atlantic) coast, past Dunguaire Castle (in Kinvarra) to the coastal road, which wound its way along the cliffs.
We stopped at the Cliffs of Mohair. The visitor centre appeared to have been designed by hobbits. Frankly the 'wilder' sections of the coast were more impressive.
We started off by driving from Croydon to North Wales. We stopped for a picnic lunch in this valley, before camping near Bangor.
We packed my Audi Allroad full of stuff for the trip. It wouldn't have been feasible to take Leena's little Skoda Fabia. We took the fast catamaran car ferry from Hollyhead (north Wales) to Dun Laoghaire port (just south of Dublin).
We wandered around Dublin for the rest of the day. Unfortunately the Natural History museum was closed but we saw some other museums and landmarks, including Trinity College.
After a night in a Dublin hotel we drove down to Kilkenny, stopping at Dunmore Cave along the way.
Although relatively small, it was quite impressive, with a natural entrance, large caverns and very extensive flowstone formations.
At Kilkenny we couldn't go in the castle, as we hadn't booked, but I think the grounds were the best part anyway.
We camped at a farm near Kilkenny. Most of the camping gear was given as wedding presents; excepting the gas cylinder, which we got from a dubious looking depot in the middle of nowhere (central Wales). The salesman told us we could have the cylinder for free, no deposit - it had heavy surface corrosion but I was reasonably confident that it wasn't going to explode.
Most nights we watched a DVD on the laptop, in the tent or B&B room. The next day we drove over to Cashel, which had impressive ruins of ancient temples, devoted to a quaint religion called 'Catholicism'.
We carried on down winding country roads, through numerous small villages and up across low mountains to Nenagh, where Leena insisted on visiting a folk museum built out of a converted jail. Eventually we arrived in Portumna, at the top end of Lough Derg. It had another castle, piers into the lough that would've been very scenic if it had been sunny, and a fairly pleasant Bed & Breakfast.
Fortunately I'd brought some toys for rainy days.
The next day we went over to the west (Atlantic) coast, past Dunguaire Castle (in Kinvarra) to the coastal road, which wound its way along the cliffs.
We stopped at the Cliffs of Mohair. The visitor centre appeared to have been designed by hobbits. Frankly the 'wilder' sections of the coast were more impressive.
- Starglider
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Re: Married
Here is a selection of photos from our honeymoon (post 2 of 2). Click on any of them for a larger version.
We took a circular route back north, stopping at Aillwee Cave. Despite being much longer than Dunmore, it was nowhere near as impressive, with a man-made entrance and mostly tight featureless tunnels, with just the occasional high point such as the underground waterfall.
However there was a raptor centre at the same location, which was considerably more interesting. Leena got to fly an Eagle Owl.
Various other raptors featured in the flying demonstration.
We went on up to Galway but frankly there wasn't much to see, just a moderately quaint 'old town' area and some rusty modern art;
We continued up to Cong and camped despite the gale force winds. The tent held up but sadly the weather was too bad to visit the village's premier attraction, the mini-golf course (I was devestated, Leena was relieved). The next day we continued on up to Knock, where we discovered that the archaic 'Catholic' religion still had some living worshippers;
There was a so-called 'folk museum', which on closer inspection seemed to be a religious indoctrination centre - it was devoted entirely to the story of how some villagers had a mass hallucination during the potato famine and thus managed to save the town's economy by attracting hordes of pilgrims. The village's biggest claim to fame seemed to be that the 'pope', an Italian cleric of some sort, once gave a speech in the cathedral.
The shrine itself consisted of the back wall of an old church, which someone had built a giant conservatory around and filled with low quality plaster statues. We observed some kind of rite in progress, but a quick exit seemed advisable after I attempted to fill our camping reservoir with10 litres of holy water. This failure left Leena somewhat dissappointed; she had been intending to conduct a scientific experiment into the effects of blessed water on the taste of tea.
Finding warm food but little else of note in Sligo, we proceeded to Omagh, where both our primary and backup B&Bs turned out to be overbooked. We searched for further B&Bs, a trek which led us down increasingly narrow lanes to an abandoned farm. Eventually we gave up and drove to Cookstown, where we found a very impressive B&B converted from an old country manor house.
The next day we proceeded to the northern coast, starting with the beach at Portrush.
The weather was highly variable. We proceeded to Dunluce Castle and then to the Giant's Causeway.
The wind and the rain got severe as we ventured out onto the Causeway itself, but cleared up when we started climbing the cliffs beyond.
We camped near Ballymena that night and proceeded to Belfast in the morning. We visited the Transport Museum, but spent too long talking to my relatives to make it to the Folk Museum.
We were able to stay with some of my relatives for the very moderate cost of eight hours family talk. The next day we left Belfast and drove south, stopping at Armagh to observe more Catholicism-related ruins and then a remote lake for a picnic lunch.
We then visited a collection ancient tombs, originating from a superficially similar but somewhat older brand of supersition. One tomb had a fairly impressive reconstruction done on the facade; sadly we couldn't take photos inside the barrows themselves.
We stayed at a fairly luxurious hotel on the last night. I think Leena appreciated the free swimming and sauna.
Finally we took the fast catamaran ferry back to Wales. Thanks to widespread traffic problems, the drive home from Hollyhead took seven and a half hours, not including the two stops we made to drink tea and watch Stargate Atlantis episodes on the laptop.
We took a circular route back north, stopping at Aillwee Cave. Despite being much longer than Dunmore, it was nowhere near as impressive, with a man-made entrance and mostly tight featureless tunnels, with just the occasional high point such as the underground waterfall.
However there was a raptor centre at the same location, which was considerably more interesting. Leena got to fly an Eagle Owl.
Various other raptors featured in the flying demonstration.
We went on up to Galway but frankly there wasn't much to see, just a moderately quaint 'old town' area and some rusty modern art;
We continued up to Cong and camped despite the gale force winds. The tent held up but sadly the weather was too bad to visit the village's premier attraction, the mini-golf course (I was devestated, Leena was relieved). The next day we continued on up to Knock, where we discovered that the archaic 'Catholic' religion still had some living worshippers;
There was a so-called 'folk museum', which on closer inspection seemed to be a religious indoctrination centre - it was devoted entirely to the story of how some villagers had a mass hallucination during the potato famine and thus managed to save the town's economy by attracting hordes of pilgrims. The village's biggest claim to fame seemed to be that the 'pope', an Italian cleric of some sort, once gave a speech in the cathedral.
The shrine itself consisted of the back wall of an old church, which someone had built a giant conservatory around and filled with low quality plaster statues. We observed some kind of rite in progress, but a quick exit seemed advisable after I attempted to fill our camping reservoir with10 litres of holy water. This failure left Leena somewhat dissappointed; she had been intending to conduct a scientific experiment into the effects of blessed water on the taste of tea.
Finding warm food but little else of note in Sligo, we proceeded to Omagh, where both our primary and backup B&Bs turned out to be overbooked. We searched for further B&Bs, a trek which led us down increasingly narrow lanes to an abandoned farm. Eventually we gave up and drove to Cookstown, where we found a very impressive B&B converted from an old country manor house.
The next day we proceeded to the northern coast, starting with the beach at Portrush.
The weather was highly variable. We proceeded to Dunluce Castle and then to the Giant's Causeway.
The wind and the rain got severe as we ventured out onto the Causeway itself, but cleared up when we started climbing the cliffs beyond.
We camped near Ballymena that night and proceeded to Belfast in the morning. We visited the Transport Museum, but spent too long talking to my relatives to make it to the Folk Museum.
We were able to stay with some of my relatives for the very moderate cost of eight hours family talk. The next day we left Belfast and drove south, stopping at Armagh to observe more Catholicism-related ruins and then a remote lake for a picnic lunch.
We then visited a collection ancient tombs, originating from a superficially similar but somewhat older brand of supersition. One tomb had a fairly impressive reconstruction done on the facade; sadly we couldn't take photos inside the barrows themselves.
We stayed at a fairly luxurious hotel on the last night. I think Leena appreciated the free swimming and sauna.
Finally we took the fast catamaran ferry back to Wales. Thanks to widespread traffic problems, the drive home from Hollyhead took seven and a half hours, not including the two stops we made to drink tea and watch Stargate Atlantis episodes on the laptop.
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Re: Married (with honeymoon photos - 56k beware)
Congratulations and Mazal Tov to you both!
You should try ot visit the Nat history museum on your way back, it's more fun than the one in London and it's very impressive (some awesome fossils/skeletons there).
The Portrush beach is pretty.
Looks like you visited some awesome castles and, temples you called them? interesting things . Have fun with the costumes and the rest of your honeymoon!
You should try ot visit the Nat history museum on your way back, it's more fun than the one in London and it's very impressive (some awesome fossils/skeletons there).
The Portrush beach is pretty.
Looks like you visited some awesome castles and, temples you called them? interesting things . Have fun with the costumes and the rest of your honeymoon!
Photography
Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.
Genius is always allowed some leeway, once the hammer has been pried from its hands and the blood has been cleaned up.
To improve is to change; to be perfect is to change often.