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The lost tooth Kristian Leven , photographer I was capturing a shot of the groom before the ceremony, tying some ribbon to the wedding car, when all of a sudden he popped up looking concerned. He had been trying to cut the ribbon with his teeth, and his capped front tooth had fallen off. The groomsmen managed to find the tooth and a dentist who could reattach it – not easy on a Saturday.

The groom and I raced there. He was super nervous, looking at his watch the whole time. It took the dentist five minutes to do it, and he didn’t charge! The groom did the big reveal about the tooth during his speech.



The bride’s face was a picture! Do go “unplugged”, asking guests not to take photos. It means the bride and groom get to see faces rather than phones when they’re walking down the aisle. Don’t share a Pinterest board with your photographer of wedding photos you like.

If you’ve chosen one, you should be confident in their style. The dropped cake Corduroy Moustache , band It was the most lavish wedding we’ve ever played at. We were soundchecking when we heard the most humongous crash.

One of the staff had dropped the four-tier wedding cake from the top of the stairs – an almost 10-metre drop. There were five or six people cleaning frantically. Miraculously, a new, massive, ornate wedding cake appeared within the hour.

Do choose music for the drinks reception that will fit nicely in the background: it needs to create an ambience without being a main focal point. .

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