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The
New Mexico Wedding Guide/Planner is a guide to assist you in coordinating your wedding day and
ensures you will have the most wonderful day with your loved one that you both have been looking forward to. We
have the best of the best for where to select the perfect
formalwear, the most beautiful floral
arrangements,
photographers, music, caterers, location of your ceremony, limousine services and more.
We look forward to assisting you plan for this exciting day to share with your family and closest friends, and
we commit to providing you with exceptional service. The
New Mexico Wedding Guide/Planner offers a wide variety
of professional services that will assist you in making your wedding day complete. Our guide consists of:
Personal Wedding Planners, Location of Your Wedding, where to order Flowers, Rentals & Décor. A guide in
selecting the perfect Formalwear, Wedding Cake and Invitations. And of course the right person for the
Videography, Photography, Clergy, Catering, Limousine Service, Travel, and where to go on your Honeymoon!
Marriage License
Bernalillo County Clerk 1 Civic
Plaza P.O. Box 542
Albuquerque, NM 87103 505-768-4090
WEDDING PLANNERS
Advertise with
Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
PHOTOGRAPHERS
Photographic Memory -
Photographic Memory-Photographer
www.photo-memory.com - (505) 710-0312
Advertise with
Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
VIDEO
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Live Wedding.net
Premium
Sponsor
Live Wedding.net will
travel the globe to broadcast your wedding live
on the internet. A
simple "webcast",
we have produced and broadcast over 80 weddings.
Broadcast your
wedding from Telluride to your
family and friends back
home. Visit our website,
http://www.livewedding.net Book early!
970-729-3474 |
CAKES
Advertise
with Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
ABC Cake Shop and Bakery
- www.abccakeshop.com (505) 255-5080
FLOWERS / RENTALS / DECOR
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with Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
ENTERTAINMENT
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Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
WEDDING AND RECEPTION LOCATIONS
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Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
CATERING
Le Chantilly
Fine Pastries -
lechantillyfinepastries.lbu.com - (505) 293-7057
FORMAL WEAR
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Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
David's Bridal - www.davidsbridal.com (505)
837-2800
LIMOUSINE / TRANSPORTATION
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Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
TRAVEL AGENTS
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Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
VIDEOGRAPHERS
Live Streamed
Weddings
Premium Sponsor
970-729-3474 www.LiveWedding.net
Live wedding streamed over the internet to the
loved ones that cannot attend. Secure,
private.
Podcasts also available. On-demand rebroadcasts. Call to reserve a
date.
OFFICIANT / CLERGY / PASTOR / DIRECTOR
Awakened Weddings - Wedding Officiants &
Ministers www.awakenedweddings.com - (505)
205-3520
Advertise with
Us, Get Results. 970-729-3474
Helpful Wedding
Tips:
Creating Personal Traditions:
Writing your own wedding vows may suit your
personal wedding style, but it can be a bit of a
daunting task to begin
with. If you are trying
to write your own vows, don’t let the task
overwhelm you or intimidate you. Writing your
own
vows should begin and end with how you feel,
not what others are expecting. If you are
creating your own wedding
ceremony and style and
you want to write your own vows, here are a few
questions to consider in creating the
vows you
want to make.
When and where did you first meet?
What was the state of your life before the two
of you met?
At what point did you realize you were in love?
Describe the feeling.
What inspires you about your loved one?
What life goals and dreams do you share?
What have you learned from each other?
What qualities make your love unique? What
qualities will keep it strong?
How has your view of the world changed since you
fell in love?
What do you most look forward to about life with
this person?
What are some special moments in your
relationship? Use them all, even the sad times
as well as the happy,
moving, or profound.
What happened the day you asked her to marry
you? How did you feel?
Reading the vows you have written yourself
during your wedding ceremony can be one of the
most romantic things
you’ve ever done. It’s the
kind of thing that really helps you create your
own personal wedding style. Writing your own
vows is a kind of personal touch that cannot be
replicated by any other style of vow.
advertise on this site 970-729-3474 or
info@blacktieweddingguides.com
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New
Mexico. Use of the land and minerals of New
Mexico goes back to the prehistoric time of the
early cultures in the Southwest that long
preceded the flourishing sedentary civilization
of the Pueblos that the Spanish found along the
Rio Grande and its tributaries. Many of the
Native American pueblos exist today much as they
were in the 13th cent. Word of the pueblos
reached the Spanish through Cabeza de Vaca, who
may have wandered across S New Mexico between
1528 and 1536; they were enthusiastically
identified by Fray Marcos de Niza as the
fabulously rich Seven Cities of Cibola.
A full-scale expedition (1540–42) to find the
cities was dispatched from New Spain, under the
leadership of Francisco Vásquez de Coronado. The
treatment of the Pueblo people by Coronado and
his men led to the long-standing hostility
between the Native Americans and the Spanish and
slowed Spanish conquest. The first regular
colony at San Juan was founded by Juan de Oñate
in 1598. The Native Americans of Acoma revolted
against the Spanish encroachment and were
severely suppressed.
In 1609 Pedro de Peralta was made governor of
the “Kingdom and Provinces of New Mexico,” and a
year later he founded his capital at Santa Fe.
The little colony did not prosper greatly,
although some of the missions flourished and
haciendas were founded. The subjection of Native
Americans to forced labor and attempts by
missionaries to convert them resulted in violent
revolt by the Apache in 1676 and the Pueblo in
1680. These uprisings drove the Spanish entirely
out of New Mexico.
The Spanish did not return until the campaign of
Diego de Vargas Zapata reestablished their
control in 1692. In the 18th cent. the
development of ranching and of some farming and
mining was more thorough, laying the foundations
for the Spanish culture in New Mexico that still
persists. Over one third of the population today
is of Hispanic origin (and few are recent
immigrants from Mexico) and roughly the same
percentage speak Spanish fluently.
When Mexico achieved its independence from Spain
in 1821, New Mexico became a province of Mexico,
and trade was opened with the United States. By
the following year the Santa Fe Trail was being
traveled by the wagon trains of American
traders. In 1841 a group of Texans embarked on
an expedition to assert Texan claims to part of
New Mexico and were captured.
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