Other Services 
These prices will change after the 31st December 2024

Discover more about our extensive range of professional services. We constantly update this page, but if you still can’t find what you’re looking for, please feel free to get in touch with us – we will be more than happy to help.

Master of Ceremonies
 What does this mean and what do I do?

I, at a wedding reception am the point person and with a microphone in hand, the loudest person in the room. As the master of ceremony, my job is to guide the guests and inform the wedding party of what’s happening, what they can expect to occur in the near future and when.  Most times, we will use the sound equipment of the bands’ or the DJ at the reception to make the announcements of the information to be relayed.

If formal photographs are to be taken, I will request that relevant guests are present at the correct time. 

Following photographs, the I will then announce that the wedding breakfast is the be served, and if a receiving line is taking place, I will arrange that with the help of the ushers.

 

See more...
 

Baby Naming
 (Christening)
£350

This is a unique alternative to the traditional religious baptism or christening. 

Celebrate the arrival of your baby by having a beautiful naming ceremony.  

This is different to a Christening, because the focus is on welcoming your child and introducing them to your family and friends, rather than on the religious aspect.  

Every naming ceremony is different, and I will work with you to create a truly memorable day.  You could have it themed around a special book or poem, or even your child's favourite character or toy!  

The service will start with an Introduction and welcome, readings, poems,

For that 'Extra Sparkle', a Unity ceremony might be included, such as candle lighting for your child. I am always happy to help you create something unique to you and your family and for your baby.

Renewing your Vows

£350

Renewing your vows provides an opportunity for you to re-affirm the promises you made on your wedding day or make new ones and to celebrate with friends and family old and new. 

The Renewal of your Vows ceremony that we create together has no limits so you choose how you want to renew your vows.

It can be quiet and intimate with just the two of you, or a large event with speeches from friends and family, music, and readings. It can be funny, romantic, sentimental, themed or a combination of all of those things. 

The following gives you an idea of some of the content of a Renewal of vows ceremony but essentially the content is your choice.

The service will start with an Introduction and welcome, readings from family and previous wedding guests such as Bridesmaid or Best man. You can also have musical interludes, that mean something to you both. 

You can choose an enhancement such as unity candle or hand blessing or hand fasting. 

If you wish a re-dedication of rings, or giving of new rings or gifts. 

To finish off a marriage blessing and a signing of a certificate, and closing words.

Commitment Ceremony 
£450

Would you like to celebrate or affirm your commitment to each other, without the legalities of a marriage or civil partnership?

Maybe you are intending to have a legal ceremony later, but for now, would like to celebrate your love and show commitment to each other in front of your friends and family.  

A Commitment or Promise Ceremony is a great way to do this. 

As there are no legal constraints, you have complete freedom to hold this ceremony anywhere and at any time that you like, and to be as creative with the content as you like.  

I would love to meet with you to chat through your ideas and work with you to create a truly memorable day that shares with your guests just how much you mean to each other.

The service will start with an Introduction and welcome, readings from family and previous wedding guests You can also have musical interludes, that mean something to you both. 

You can choose an enhancement such as unity candle or hand blessing or hand fasting. 

If you wish a re-dedication of rings, or giving of new rings or gifts. 

To finish off a marriage blessing and a signing of a certificate, and closing words.

 

 

Sand Mixing Ceremony
Please contact for price

This unique way to symbolise two lives becoming one is also a great way to incorporate children or family into the wedding ceremony. It’s symbolic and meaningful, easily customised, and the couple are left with a unique keepsake of the day.

It is an unexpectedly lovely moment for your guests to witness – remember, they will most likely be expecting just the usual vows, ring exchange and a kiss.

 It makes the ceremony unique for the couple. Not only is it a visual symbolisation of the bride and groom joining together in marriage, but if other family members are involved, it’s a beautiful representation of two families coming together. The sand-filled vase becomes a beautiful and meaningful keepsake.

The Loving Cup Ceremony
Please contact for price

The Loving Cup or a Quaich ceremony is a Scottish tradition.

The cup is often a beautiful silver/pewter two handled traditional cup.  It’s often referred to as the love cup as the bride and groom each take a handle to take a drink. Often the groom’s father or another important member of the bridal party is chosen to fill up the cup. 

The Quaich contains within it a whisky that is sweet (or it can be any drink you prefer), it is symbolic of happiness, joy, hope, peace, love and delight. 

This same whisky also has some bitter properties that are symbolic of life’s trials and tribulations, and “Loves Journey”. 

The Quaich can be engraved and kept a treasured keepsake.

The Wine Ceremony
Please contact for price

This is very similar to the Loving Cup or Quaich ceremony above. 

The bride and groom drink from a single glass of wine. This symbolizes drinking from the cup of life and sharing all of its experiences together, both bitter and sweet.

The glass contains within it a wine that is sweet and is symbolic of happiness, joy, hope, peace, love and delight. 

This same wine also has some bitter properties that are symbolic of life’s trials and tribulations, and “Loves Journey”. 

The glass can be engraved and kept a treasured keepsake.

Jumping the Broom
Please contact for price

Jumping the broom is a phrase and custom where the couple jumps over a broom. The tradition of Jumping the Broom symbolises sweeping away the old and welcoming the new–a symbol of a new beginning. 

The Bride and Groom are sweeping together in a circle to signify the sweeping away of their former single lives, their past problems and their previous cares. The broom represents a threshold between past and present, and jumping the broom symbolizes the crossing of this threshold into a new relationship as husband and wife.

The broom can be kept a treasured keepsake.

Love letters and Wine Box
Please contact for price

A Love Letter and Wine Box ceremony will serve as a lasting reminder of the commitments made by the couple to each other. 

Heartfelt letters, encapsulating thoughts and feelings are locked away in a wine box to be revealed several years into the marriage. This box contains a bottle of wine, two glasses, and a love letter from each to the other. 

The letters describe the good qualities they find in one another, the reasons they fell in love, and their reasons for choosing to marry. The letters are sealed in individual envelopes and they do not see what the other has written. 

The idea behind this is that should the Bride and Groom ever find their marriage facing hardships, they will open the box, sit and drink the wine together, then read the letters they wrote to one another to be reminded of the reasons why they are together. 

The hope is, however, that they will never have a reason to open the box,  if they are to open it, it is to share and enjoy on their 5th year wedding anniversary, replenish and open on their 10th anniversary, and so on.

Bubbles
£35

Bubbles are a fun way of ending the wedding ceremony.  

This takes place just before the bride and groom walk back down the aisle as husband and wife.

Bubble Blessing – All of the gathering are given bottles of bubbles and are asked to momentarily believe in magic, they then wish all of their blessings on to the couple. 

They should then be asked to take a deep breath and blow their bubbles out into the Universe and ask that the marriage be blessed and sacred for eternity, whilst sending their wishes, blessings and prayers to the couple.

Unity Candle Ceremony
£75

Lighting a Unity Candle during a wedding ceremony is a special way to symbolise two lives joining together as one. Children can be involved; ceremonial candles and stands are available and can be kept as a memento.

“Bride and Groom, the two separate candles symbolise your separate lives, separate families and separate sets of friends, in other words, your lives before today. Lighting the centre candle represents your two lives are now being joined together as one.”

There’s a great deal of flexibility within this ceremony, usually you would light the candles after exchanging vows but parents can be involved and children too, they can have their own mini-candle.

Your unity candle can be personalised with scripture, vows, or a photo from your wedding, so it becomes a beautiful year-round keepsake. Many couples choose to relight the candles each year on their anniversary.

Tying the Knot
Please contact for price

This was a means to get married, but the knot tying ceremony is symbolic: as pressure is applied to the knot it strengthens, just like marriage. Some even believe the rope/ribbons will break before the knot comes undone.

It’s an ancient wedding tradition that can help to make your ceremony feel more meaningful and personal. 

Your guests probably won’t have seen it before and it gets a great response of awe and wonder as you tie your knot, it makes a great series of photographs too. Don’t worry it’s not complicated and we practise it together.

 Once the knot is tied, it’s a lasting keepsake of your wedding day and can be displayed in your home. 

Most people choose coloured ribbons or cords as the colours have various meanings or they just choose colours to match their wedding theme colours.

Handfasting
Please contact for price

This is from an ancient Celtic origin is a slightly different to ‘Tying the Knot’ ceremony 

The very word Hand fasting got its origin in the wedding custom of tying the bride and groom’s wrists together. A cord or a binding tied in a knot around their hand while the ritual takes place. This is where the term “tie the knot” came from when referring to getting engaged or married today.

Handfasting at one time was the only way that couples could be engaged and/or get married because the church let the civil government of the period take care of these matters. In the British Isles, Handfasting was the old pagan ritual of marriage and it remained legal in Scotland all the way up to 1939.

One custom is that while facing each other, the couple placed their right hands together and then their left hands together to form an infinity symbol while a cord is tied around their hands in a knot.

Many couples feel the traditional marriage service is too restrictive or just doesn’t reflect who they are as a couple. Handfasting is a way to very visibly acknowledge your connection and add a truly intimate element into your wedding day. Others like to acknowledge an ancient tradition that has been performed by couples as far as anyone can remember.

Mother's Rose Ceremony
£35

This is a great way of honouring the Bride & Groom’s mothers or other family members during a wedding ceremony.

This signifies the bride and groom showing gratitude for the love bestowed upon them, this is done by asking their mothers to come forward so the couple can thank them and give their respective mothers a rose. 

Warming the Rings 
£25

Before the vows are said and the rings exchanged, the wedding officiant will ask various selected members of the wedding party to participate in a ring warming. 

The rings are tied together with a short ribbon and the warming is an opportunity to send the bride and groom good luck and love through a silent wish to the rings when passed to them. 

The participants are advised as follows “As you hold them in your hands, pause for a moment, and make your wishes for the couple and for their future before you pass them on to the next person". 

These rings will not only be a gift from one to another but will be given with the love, support and wisdom of their family and friends.”

Hand Blessing
£25

A beautiful unity ceremony, usually this is in a wedding ceremony right after the couple exchanges rings. It flows beautifully as the celebrant says “while you are holding hands, take a moment to appreciate the gift you are to each other…” Some wedding officiants will do the hand ceremony before the exchanging of rings.

The two of you hold hands and appreciate how you will change over the life of your marriage through the actions you take with your hands. Examples from the ceremony include

Celebrant: [Bride], please hold [Groom’s] hands palm up, so you may see the gift that they are to you. These are the hands of your best friend, young and strong and vibrant with love, that are holding yours on your wedding day, as he promises to love you and cherish you through the years for a lifetime of happiness. 

Several other sayings may follow and then after these vows the groom does the same with the bride’s hand.

The Breaking of Glass (Adapted Version)
£35

The breaking of glass at the end of a wedding ceremony reminds us of the fragility of life, the uniqueness of the moment, the shattering of the old and the beginning of the new. It can also symbolise the breaking down of the barriers and help create a world based on love, unity, peace, & understanding.

The breaking of the glass is permanent; so, too, marriage should last a as long as time–as long as it would take to reassemble the broken pieces of glass.

The best man will place the incandescent lightbulb (adapted) before the groom in a small bag or wrapped in a piece of material and when the Celebrant declares the bride and groom to be “husband and wife” and says “congratulations, you may kiss your bride!” the groom then smashes the incandescent lightbulb (adapted) with the heel of his foot and kisses the bride.

Applauding and shouts of “Mazel Tov!” (congratulations or good luck) are appropriate in Jewish ceremonies at this point.

(Adapted, means usually it a bottle but that maybe cause harm)

There are many other ways to give a ceremony the wow factor, some couples now have owls or birds of prey to deliver the rings during the ceremony, others include their dogs or pets within the ceremony, and often the couple themselves have special ideas some of which may involve family rituals.

There are Others

There are many other ways to give a ceremony the wow factor.

Some couples now have owls or doves, some have a bird of prey to deliver the rings during the ceremony, others include their dogs or pets within the ceremony.

Often the couple themselves have special ideas some of which may involve family rituals.

If there is something different you would like then by all means ask and if it can be done depending on the venue then it will be.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Back to Home

We need your consent to load the translations

We use a third-party service to translate the website content that may collect data about your activity. Please review the details in the privacy policy and accept the service to view the translations.