Eight stories. Eight couples. One barn.
We publish real-wedding case studies so couples can see what's actually possible — the seasons, the photographers, the real guest counts, the honest budgets. Every wedding below happened on this property. Every photograph is from that wedding. The host's account (Hannah's) is the closing paragraph of each.
Maya & Jordan
Vermont–Carolina cross-country couple. Family-style dinner at long tables, banjo trio at sunset, bonfire until 1 AM. The mountain laurel boutonnieres were Maya's grandmother's idea.
Read this wedding →Sam & Amelia
Small early-summer wedding with elderflower champagne and a four-piece string band. Dinner ran an hour long because nobody wanted to stand up.
Read this wedding →Ben & Priya
An off-peak January Saturday with cider, a folk-rock trio, and four feet of snow on the meadow. The ceremony moved into the barn at the last minute. Nobody minded.
Read this wedding →Theo & Marina
A small May Sunday wedding for a couple who eloped first and threw the celebration second. The bride wore her mother's 1988 silk slip. Greek dancing until ten.
Read this wedding →Wesley & Caroline
The largest wedding we've ever hosted (we capped 200; they came in at 168 and still felt full). Both families flew in from Texas. The toasts ran past midnight.
Read this wedding →Andre & Whitney
A March Friday wedding with twenty-two cousins of Andre's flown in from Atlanta. Whitney made every guest a hand-thrown ceramic favor. Cole still has his on the kitchen shelf.
Read this wedding →James & Sophie
The bride was eight months pregnant and danced more than anyone. Wood-fired pizza in the meadow at midnight. The pizza chef left his oven on the property for two days and we kept it warm.
Read this wedding →Eli & Tomas
A small December Saturday with two grooms, four braziers in the meadow, and a brass quintet that played at the recessional. The whiskey bar got the workout that night.
Read this wedding →