More and more couples seem to be going the DIY wedding route when it comes to their special day.
Some want to save a little money, some want to be more involved in their wedding, or some have a certain plan they want to follow and DIY is the only way for them to do that.
There are many things you might want to think about before you decide to go the DIY route for your wedding.
You will want to think about why you want to DIY the project, how much money it will save or cost you, how much time it will take, whether you actually have the time to complete the project, and if you are even creative enough to do it.
The last part is what stopped me from DIYing too much for my wedding because I know I’m not creative enough.
I often have Pinterest fails when I try to DIY so I knew for a fact that many ideas I found online would look like garbage if I tried to attempt to do the same. Oh well, at least I am honest with myself! 🙂
There are many different areas you can DIY with a wedding. You can have a DIY wedding dress, DIY bridesmaid dress, DIY wedding invitations, DIY wedding hairstyle, DIY wedding desserts, DIY wedding cake toppers, DIY wedding bouquets, and more.
Below are some of the different areas you may be thinking about DIYing for your wedding:
Outdoor Wedding On Private Property.
Okay, so this isn’t exactly a DIY, but having an outdoor wedding on private property does mean you have to do everything yourself. It can be a DIY wedding nightmare or a DIY wedding dream.
We had to plan the event rentals (such as tent, tables, chairs, linens, dance floors, etc.), weather backup plans, maintaining the property, coordinating everyone and everything, planning the best times for everything, setup and locations of everything, the bathroom situation, and more.
There are a TON of things to think about when having an outdoor wedding. All things wedding related will be the only thing on your wedding. We ended up hiring a wedding coordinator to help us with everything because the stress was mounting quickly and I didn’t want to forget anything important.
I think having an outdoor wedding on private property is more about having the wedding you want because you can usually have everything your own specific way. We were able to choose our own event rental company, caterer, coordinator, music, and more.
Usually an outdoor wedding is not a way to save money, so having a DIY wedding for that sole reason may not work out for you.
I don’t regret our wedding at all. It was a great day and we still have people telling us that it was the best wedding ever.
It was a TON of stress though planning everything for the amount of people we had. I also knew that having an outdoor wedding wouldn’t mean we would save money. The amount of people we had come up to us (during the planning process) asking if we were too poor to have a “real wedding” was ridiculous!
DIY Wedding Invitations.
We did not DIY our wedding invitations. I calculated the possible cost savings, and it was very minimal for us. After calculating the time and money, I decided it wasn’t worth it for us.
Instead, I found an awesome website called PaperStyle that has many affordable invitations on it. They do have expensive invitations on there as well, but we found ones that we loved for cheap.
Our invitations, including envelopes and our address stamped on each one, cost around $160 altogether, which was equivalent to the cost of making them ourselves in the style I wanted.
I know that many DIY their wedding invitations but it just wasn’t for us.
DIY Wedding Flowers.
We DIYed our wedding flowers and saved a decent amount of money by using FiftyFlowers. I can’t remember the exact amount we paid, but I believe we paid around $350 for over 2,000 flowers. We were able to save so much because we used discounts, bought at cheaper times, and they accidentally messed up the address on one of our orders and gave us a 50% discount.
The address mix up was where they sent the flowers to the wrong address (my home instead of the wedding location). It wasn’t a big mix up, but I did have to have someone drive 1.5 hours to make sure the flowers didn’t die.
FiftyFlowers gladly refunded 50% of my money for the mix up without any questions asked. Their customer service is great and they apologized for the mix up. My tip to avoid this is to confirm the address with them after you book.
I looked at many different wedding flower wholesale websites, and FiftyFlowers won hands down for me for many reasons. They had many, MANY flowers available, they have flower combo packs, you can choose flowers by wedding color, and more.
Another big reason is because FiftyFlowers has someone there who helps you choose your wedding flowers for you depending on the theme and colors of your wedding. This was awesome and it was nice having that help. She gave me different flower suggestions and she also helped me choose flowers that would do well sitting outside during a HOT and HUMID summer wedding.
You might be wondering “But I always kill flowers!”
Fifty Flowers has a really easy to use guidebook on how to take care of your flowers once you receive them. I didn’t kill any flowers and I am a known plant killer. I was afraid of the same thing but I didn’t have any problems.
Arranging the wedding flowers was a lot of fun too. My bridesmaids and I all got together the day before the wedding and arranged them. It wasn’t stressful at all and it as a lot of fun.
DIY Wedding Lighting.
The place where we rented our wedding supplies (tent, tables, decorations, dance floors, etc.) also offered to hang up the lighting for our wedding. We said no to this because like with all of the other even rental companies in the area, they charged $0.75 per FOOT. Considering we had hundreds of feet of lighting to hang, that price just seemed insane.
This is something I do not regret doing myself at all.
We hit up Target right after Christmas and bought a bunch of Philips Christmas outdoor lights for something around 75% off. These were supposed to be the best lights out there, but sadly they only lasted about an hour and then everything died. I’m not sure what happened but I was extremely upset since we hung it all up and they all went out.
Luckily we still had backup lighting. We got the rest of our lighting from the Paper Lantern Store (affiliate link, but I only joined their affiliate program because I liked their products), and surprisingly those worked the best. Not a single one of those lights went out!
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there are some items that are worth the extra effort because it’s fun and saves money. but there are some things that you shouldn’t skimp on.
I agree!
Awesome!
I would imagine that will all the great cheap stuff you can find on Etsy that DIY isn’t really all that necessary anymore. I’ve been to some really nice weddings recently that had great centerpieces that really didn’t seem to cost a whole lot.
Yeah our centerpieces were cheap and really cute!
I’m not very crafty either. My DIY projects usually look like Pinterest fails. We had a lot of customization with our wedding that we took on ourselves, but I wouldn’t consider it DIY. For instance we purchased our own paper online and printed invitations at a local print shop, but we paid for a design. We wanted a groom’s cake that looked like the periodic table of elements, so we bought and unwrapped a bazillion starburst candies and gave them to the baker. I bought reception decorations at various places to save money, but still paid someone to set up the reception while the wedding was taking place.
Aww I love the groom’s cake idea!
We DIY’d our invitations more because we wanted a certain “look” that I knew we wouldn’t find anywhere (teal Celtic knots, that can be found in regular stores, right?). In the end, it cost about the same it would have if we had bought them in a store. I bought all the paper/envelopes in bulk online which helped with the costs. We also DIY’d flowers but bought them from a flower wholesaler, that was a great money saver 🙂
Yes, wholesale flowers saved us a ton!
We DIYed several elements of our wedding – cake, centerpieces, invitations, save-the-dates, DJ, and probably more I am not thinking of. Honestly, the advice I’d be inclined to give is to consider skipping the element in question rather than DIYing it – not for every element, but for the ones you really don’t care about. I’ve been to a lot of weddings with a range of (apparent) budgets, and it is usually evident when things are DIYed or skimped on. On the contrast, it’s more difficult to notice when something is just not included (favors, centerpieces, what have you). We don’t all need to have cookie-cutter weddings with all the same elements, DIYed or professionally done!
Yes, that is important. Not everything needs to be done.
So I may be a bit of a curmudgeon…but I think spending too much money on a wedding is a waste of money. I hope no one hates me for saying that. But, it is just one day, your family and friends love just being there to celebrate because they are happy for you and don’t need to be completely wowed by everything. We had a beautiful wedding but kept things pretty simple and saved the money for a house.
I agree, an expensive wedding is definitely not a need.
No qualm the ideas you mentioned above are good but I have 6-7 years for wedding, will surely remember your ideas during my marriage. Hope so. 😀 😀
🙂
My wife and her newly immigrated Italian family made ALL the wedding plans, as per their customs, so I was not involved much. But it was great.
Sounds great Ronald 🙂
Good job on saving money on the wedding cake. They can be so costly!
We did not DIY anything for my wedding but it was 24 years ago and people didn’t DIY so much back then. I have definitely seen some gorgeous DIY weddings, but I agree – you have to have the time/passion/creativity to make it work. And sometimes, as you noted, the savings isn’t always huge when you factor your time.
Yeah, the savings isn’t always worth it. Too many people assume that DIY always means it will be cheaper.
I DIYed a lot of wedding details and saved a bunch of money by doing so. We bought the stationery and printed our own save the dates, invitations and programs (with our University print credits that were about to expire!); I did all of the flowers myself and I made my own veil (with saved $350 on the veil that they tried to sell me with my dress). But I had the design training and sewing skills to do it.
I think a lot of brides end up with an inflated DIY confidence because Pinterest and don’t take into account their own creative aptitude, or they falsely believe that their one or two crafty bridesmaids can do it all. Thankfully Pinterest wasn’t a thing when I was planning our wedding! DIY can definitely save money when done well and in moderation. I know a bride DIYd a lot of aspects of her wedding and through a bunch of trial and error wasted a ton of money.
Wow that’s awesome that you did so much!
Thanks for the link love!
My best friend was a bridesmaid for one of her college friends about a year ago and her friend decided to DIY like 75% of her wedding stuff, but she was super disorganized and waited till the last minute. She pretty much turned her bridal party into a DIY-ing sweat shop for the week leading up to the wedding. It was insane!
Ahh that sounds crazy!
I’ve seen horrible results with DIY wedding photography. Although digital cameras are omnipresent, a talented professional photographer is hard to replace.
Yes, I think a professional photographer is well worth it.
worth it for most of the parts