Romantic Phuket’s perfect for sweethearts looking for love

Underwater weddings, roses and chocolates will be on the menu all over the island as Romeos woo their Juliets
LOVESTRUCK couples around the world will spend next Saturday, Valentine’s Day,  celebrating with flowers, chocolates and anonymous love letters signed ‘From your Valentine’.  And it will be more of the same here on one of the world’s most romantic holiday island. Phuket is the perfect place to fall in love.

Every day, young lovers meet and fall in love on the beaches and in the nightclubs. The island is always full of honeymooners and married couples who fall in love with each other all over again while they are here. In Phuket, the local shopkeepers jump on the love bandwagon and card stalls, florists, and markets burst with pinks and reds.  The Flower in Love store on Thepkrasattree Rd, has stocked up on flowers, cards and Valentines Day gimmicks in readiness for the big day.

Owner, Khun Fern, said the English language Valentines cards were always big sellers as were the red, white and pink roses she imports especially from the famed Pak-Khlong Talaad flower market in Bangkok. She is expecting to sell almost 5000 roses this year.  Eight couples and 25 pairs of honeymooners from Taiwan will come to Phuket for a traditional Baba mass wedding ceremony in Phuket Town on Valentines Day. Sirinee Lelanon, Assistant District Officer at the Phuket Provincial Muang District Office said 130 couples signed their wedding certificates on Valentines Day in Phuket last year, and she is expecting even more this year.

“Thai people like the idea of Valentine ‘s Day and we want to support the significance of Valentines Day and welcome it into our culture,” she said. Phuket’s Governor, Dr Preecha Ruangjan, will open the day’s ceremonies and is expected to give away a swag of gifts to the newlyweds. Continue reading

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Wedding dresses take the plunge

Brides around the world are trashing their outfits

A BAREFOOT bride in a gorgeous white wedding gown walks into the foamy ocean at sunset.  Within seconds, the waves have done their work, and the expensive dress is now nothing more than a dripping, shapeless mess. It sounds like a scene from a movie, but it is the latest real-life bridal fashion trend sweeping the world called Trash the Dress. Couples everywhere are queuing up to pose for wedding photos in unconventional situations, and TTD is booming.

One of the most popular places to pose for the wedding photos, especially in Thailand, is the beach, but couples can choose from any number of locations to trash their outfits, such as deserted railway stations, an abandoned building, a forest, or an urban junk yard. The trend, which is also known as Drown the Gown, started in 2001 when American photographer John Michael Cooper set out to take some quirky wedding pictures.

The fad quickly took off in Europe and Australia, but only recently has it become a ‘must’ for modern brides in Asia.

Phuket-based photographer Gina Smith says more and more of her clients are choosing to stretch out the wedding day celebrations with a fun TTD session. “It is a great way for the couple to relive the excitement of their wedding day without any stress, and to create some unique and beautiful photos for the wedding day album,” she said. “People no longer want the focus on formal portraits with the wedding party lined up and staring at the camera.  “The modern-day bride wants candid, documentary-style images that capture the un-staged moments of the day.
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