Jessi & Dan's small queer thrifty hippie wedding
Jessi & Dan will head the third day of Pride Week. Jessi is a bi-woman and Dan is a transman. So they had a civil union in a beautiful garden and threw a killer celebration afterward! -Coco

The offbeat bride: Jessi, Nonprofit Development
Her offbeat partner: Dan, Baker
Location & date of wedding: The Temple Gardens, Sayen House & Gardens (public nonprofit park), Hamilton, NJ — May 18, 2009
What made our wedding offbeat: Dan and I are a nontraditional couple. I'm a bi woman, he's a trans man, I'm almost a foot taller than he is, and we're Unitarian Universalist hippies and activists who color outside the lines. We had a New Jersey civil union, which is separate-but-NOT-equal to a legal marriage, but we still call ourselves "married" and "husband and wife." 
We had two Best Women and no Best Man. We "marched" down the aisle together as bride and groom, facing our guests by walking towards them instead of entering from the back (as a "feminist/queer equality" walk). We had our wedding outdoors at a public park, followed by a reception at our church, the LGBT-friendly Unitarian Universalist Church at Washington Crossing. Most people get married at a church and have a reception somewhere else: we did it backwards.
Also… we got married on a Monday!

Everything for our wedding (except the clothes) was DIY. We made our own invitations using a paper-making kit we found at Goodwill, blank cardstock, and ribbons from a dollar store. The invitations included an RSVP post card that asked people to list any food allergies, requirements or preferences (vegan, vegetarian, kosher, gluten-free, etc.). Two books, Offbeat Bride and The DIY Wedding: Celebrate Your Day Your Way, were my major sources of inspiration!
To go along with the invitations I created a website called Married on a Monday, mostly to give people decent driving directions and a THOROUGH primer in trans etiquette. We wanted to give people an idea of what to expect from our weird wedding and to answer the most frequently asked questions (like "Why the **** are you getting married on a MONDAY?"). We also put our "gift registry" on there, encouraging people to give us fair-trade or used items instead of new or expensive things.

While the thirty people we invited are our closest friends and family, I wanted to make it clear to everybody involved that attending our wedding meant following our rules about queer etiquette. It was also very important to me that everyone who wasn't invited knew exactly WHY they weren't invited:
a) We're queer, and we didn't want any haters there who wouldn't respect us or our friends;
b) We're introverts who don't make much money – hence the need for a small, inexpensive wedding;
c) We'd rather take pride in stuff we did on our own than spend tens of thousands of dollars to put on a big show to meet other people's expectations;
and
d) We had no plans to follow traditional etiquette about who was invited from the "bride's side" and the "groom's side."
We didn't care that, by not inviting, we might offend the the people who would probably offend us. We wanted everyone to feel comfortable! So, unfortunately, most of our blood-relatives and extended-family-members missed out. We queers create our own families when the ones who are supposed to love and accept us… don't.
Dan and I self-catered EVERYTHING, beverages and booze included. We made our own homemade wedding cake. Dan decorated our cake with vegan butter cream icing and professional tools at his workplace on the day of the wedding. Our friends helped out in many roles: one coworker's husband took professional photos; one of our Best Women played guitar; the other Best Woman managed the "gift registry"; and at the reception five friends heated and set up the food while another friend entertained everyone waiting to eat with the piano.
All costs included, we spent less than $3,000 on our wedding and honeymoon (which we spent at home with the phones turned off, taking day trips). It was awesome. I loved my "small queer thrifty hippie wedding."

Our biggest challenge: Our biggest challenge was planning how to deal with our relatives and co-workers who might react to "this civil union business" (as my Dad, still uncomfortable, referred to it) or to the fact that the groom and one of the Maids of Honor are transgender. Dan and I are "out" and open about ourselves, but that doesn't mean everyone who "knows" us, knows he's a female-to-male (FTM) transsexual man and I'm bi.
My favorite moment: My favorite parts were the song Julie wrote, that Dan and I "marched up the aisle" to; the Unitarian Universalist candle-lighting ceremony with my mom and Dan's friend-who's-like-a-mom, Cathy, that symbolized our families' and friends' acceptance and welcoming of our union; the cake-cutting and cake-eating; and creating our wedding website to go with the invitation, because it gave me the opportunity to set rules for guests about trans etiquette and to be open about who Dan and I - and our friends - are.

My funniest moment: When we kissed after being declared "husband and wife," and someone in the crowd shouted at the top of their lungs, "WOOHOO!"
When it was revealed to everyone that, underneath my traditional white wedding dress, I was wearing black running sneakers, knee-high rainbow-star-striped socks, and a dollar-store garter belt. Also, I took it off myself when no one was looking and handed it to Dan. When everyone realized this, they made me put it back on to "pretend" he was removing it the traditional way. It was so funny.
My advice for offbeat brides: Do your own thing and don't worry about offending other people. If you don't want someone at your wedding, because they're going to say or do something stupid to hurt you and ruin your day, just don't invite them. If you're shy or introverted like my husband and I are, don't guilt yourself into inviting many more people than you would really want. I have no regrets about keeping our guest list to thirty people.
Care to share a few vendor/shopping links?
- Dress: I bought my dress from my high school [ex] boyfriend's mom's bridal shop in historic Bridgeton, NJ.
Enough talk — show me the wedding porn!
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Carrie said
Your website kicks some serious ass. Way to have your wedding be wonderful and educate! I love the clothing FAQs! The bridal shop thought I was on drugs when I listed out countries from where I would not buy my dress. (Mine was due to child labor, but I think everybit of consciousness helps) Congrats!
jx Ü said
lovely wedding and really really awesome wedsite!
CONGRATULATIONS on your Marriage!
cynzia said
Wow great wedding, I would pick a weekday wedding because my favorite day is Wednesday. Congrats to you two and best of luck too…
JB said
I wanted to applaud you for your website. Great job!! I hope you keep the site up so that other people might find you and be encouraged.
And – Congratulations!!!
Don't Kill Me, But... said
Uh, is the server for the website just acting screwy, or did my comment get unjustly deleted?
Ariel said
If you want to leave a constructively critical comment, please don't post anonymously. And be sure you review the commenting policy.
Don't Kill Me, But... said
I am posting as Anonymous because I know a lot of people are not going to like what I had to say.
Don't Kill Me, But... said
And frankly, I don't understand what was wrong with what I wrote.
I'm not bashing them for being gay. On the contrary, I support what they stand for.
I'm merely saying that it came off as a tad aggressive to a 3rd party reader!
Ariel said
If you don't understand what's wrong with what you wrote, then it post under your real name. End of discussion.
Sarah Ekateryna Barnes said
I think the website was a fantastic idea and it was well executed. I'm also loving the bouquet (and I'm not normally a bouquet kind of person!) Congratulations to the gorgeous, happy couple!
Tamara said
Such a lovely wedding! Congratulations!
jlt said
I really appreciate the lengths you went to in educating your guests. A lot of times it's not an issue of tolerance, but of simple ignorance. When I know how people prefer to be addressed, etc. it makes me feel so much more comfortable and helps me immediately bridge that "we are different from each other" gap. Thanks!
Emmalyn Corman King said
Amen to that! I also love the list of "go-by" items, like not listening to traditional rules about bride's-side and groom's-side, calling yourself married even if others might argue (my partner and I do this). The officiant's robes and both of the wedding outfits are awesome too. Amazing wedding!
J said
Thank you for sharing your registry page!! I was really wondering how I am going to get across that we prefer to re-use and recycle over new dishes!! I just saw someone on Etsy Alchemy requesting a set of handmade dishes for them to put on their registry for people to buy and then they would buy any un-purchased pieces themselves. All great ideas!!!
Shoshana said
Wow! Your wedding website was at once inspiring and extremely informative. I have always believed in constructing family out of the people who love you and support you without question or qualm, even if blood never factors into the equation. Good on ya for knowing exactly what you wanted your celebration to be and to reflect. Best wishes for years of romance and happiness!
Sonia said
PROPS TO YOU!!! Looks like you had a unique and lovely affair to mirror your relationship. I'm always a fan of requesting money towards a honeymoon in lieu of wedding gifts. The few weddings I have been to recently all used MyRegistry.com to create Honeymoon Funds. I also love how you did your honeymoon…sometimes a staycation can be more memorable than an actual vacation.
Joey said
congratulations and well done to the beautiful couple xxx
rchype said
You guys are AWESOME!!!!!
Taylor said
I have to say that the "Bad Questions" video on your wedsite is AWESOME! One of my best friends is trans and people ask him the dumbest questions (most of them listed in the video) when they find out he "used to be a woman." Of course, excellent wedding! Looks like you had a lot of fun!
Anna said
Could you point me in the direction of that video? I think I have friday-itis because I cannot seem to find it. Thanks!
KatietheClassicist said
Thanks for posting the link to the wedsite! I am trying to create mine as we speak and I love looking at other people's for ideas: What works, what doesn't work, what is really, really cool and I should have it too.
P.S. Working in education has taught me that there are DEFINETLY dumb questions. The trick is only having to answer them once or twice.
Jessica_Iowa said
Congratulations!
The cake looks great!
Cooker said
Ooh, ooh, ooh! It looks like you guys got a BEAUTIFUL day for your beautiful event! So awesome. I haven't looked at your wedsite yet but I look forward to it… it is kind of amazing how many jacked up assumptions people (I am talking queer-i.d'ed, laid back people who fancy themselves quite progressive) still have about trans issues. Oh, I just love your post and wish you all the best!
Dina E said
I definitely agree with your stance on inviting relatives who would be offensive to you – my partner and I taken a similar stance with our (same-sex) wedding. There are parts of both of our families who will not be attending for this very reason!
My reasoning on this is that a wedding is a celebration of our commitment and relationship, and people who have not supported us during the 10 years we've been together cannot be a part of that celebration. So when my mother asked me to invite my homophobic uncle because it "might make him change his mind", I had to say no, since he still has anti-marriage stickers on his car and has told my mom she should send me to "one of those camps." (Ugh!) I know my partner wouldn't be comfortable having him there, and I certainly wouldn't, either.
I know it might sound harsh, but… our wedding is for us and the people who love and accept us for who we are.
(Also, Unitarians rock!)
Jon Bassinger-Flores said
Congrats on your beautiful wedding! I'm so looking forward to being an officiant at a wedding like yours! Much peace and loving blessings.
Vän said
Aww, you guys look so happy!
Leebee said
Your ceremony looks GORGEOUS!! I'm totally envious of your invitations, and can't believe that you DIY'd them! And the cake!!! And for all under $3000?!
Kudos to both of you!!
Jessica Mirch said
OMG…the whole thing brought tears to my eyes…beautiful! I am so curious about the sneakers and socks under the dress ^_^ Congrats on a beautiful Married on Monday!
hinakuu said
amazing job on the cake!
Nelle said
I LOVED your website…great job!
Nicci said
Your friend Amanda shared this link with me and it is amaaazing! What a fabulous source of inspiration, great tips (especially the books you recommended, I just ordered them!), and grounded perspectives reflective of the black sheep experience. Congrats on your wonderful affair and on doing it your way through and through! It always takes courage to stay true to yourself which may often mean going against the status quo
But you only get to live once and you have to do it your way!