DIY Backyard BBQ Wedding Reception (2024)

We're married! And no one fainted from heat!This post is the second half of our wedding tale - ourbride & groom portraits and the DIY reception. To see pictures and read about our first look, bridal party, and ceremony details (including our vows), find part 1 here. With that, here's the second peak into ourDIY backyard BBQ wedding. The story of how a craft-obsessed California girl married a design-savvy woodworking Texas boy. On the hottest day of the year.

We love pinwheels - obviously. They make fun colorful decor for way less cost than flowers. These pinwheels basically tell the story of the mood of our wedding - "let's all just have fun - yay!" After the ceremony, the guests followed my best friend and usher Tyler, who held an upcycled fence board sign that read "RECEPTION" all the way across the street from our neighbor's garden where we got married to the celebration in my childhood backyard (read about the fence boards in part 1). During co*cktail hour, Lucas and I snuck in a few photos before joining the fun.

As before, while we go through the pictures, I'll sharespecific details, alternating between day-of anecdotes and our DIY touches, including links to where we bought certain things. We did lots of research to find the best prices, and, in general, we tried to buy as much as possible using our Amazon points.All images are copyright ofBrent Van Auken Photography, except where noted with the "© SK" mark. Click any picture to enlarge.

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After scarfing down some food, Lucas and I snuck away to take a few happy couple shots in the sunset. Life is good.

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Welcome to the reception! I made five of these chalkboard signs using frames I picked up at Goodwill & the clearance section of Michaels. Lucas cut some smooth MDF to fit in the frames that we spray-painted withchalkboard paint. Before drawing, I "seasoned" the chalkboard by covering the entire board in chalk and wiping it off.I printed out scaled down images of my designs, and divided both the image and the chalkboard into sections to make copying them much easier. I drew with a combination of regular chalk that I sharpened with a pencil sharpener, q-tips to wipe things away (like my guidelines with I was done), andchalk ink pen.

Our entry table is made out of the old fence boards on top of two borrowed wine barrels. We had both of our parents' wedding photos on either side of one of our engagement pics. We used an old hinge to put together two old windows into a stand that we taped our alphabetical seating arrangement to and a copy of our menu. Note: washi tape melts off in 110ºF heat. For some extra decor, a couple of my bridesmaids picked some extra bundles of lavender from our neighbor's yard the day before the wedding.

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For our guestbook, I painted this CA + TX sign out of an enormous piece of plywood. I started by painting the entire board gray. I then used yarn to divide the board into 6-inch squares; my scaled-down image was also divided into the same number of squares. I pencil-drew the states and then painted over in orange. The vintage typewriter held a note that read, "Please use the sharpies to leave us a message in the gray area of the sign!" After the wedding, we hung the sign on our office wall - room decor and a constant reminder of all the people who showered us with love that day! Someone wrote "HOTTEST WEDDING EVER" unsigned in the bottom left corner. Truth.

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Before telling you about the details of our table settings, I must start by saying that the groomsmen set this all up the morning of the wedding. With the help of a few other key players: Lucas's parents, my brother's girlfriend Alexis, Tyler, and Big Sarah & her close friend Lauren. Impressive right? The week before the wedding, my mom and I divided all of the table decor into separate boxes - one for each table (complete with seating diagrams).

Quite a few months before the wedding, my bridesmaid Corey & I cut 29 yards of fabric (in 8 prints) into 200 napkins and 144 bunting flags. Lucas and I bought a majority of the fabric from JoAnn Fabric on Black Friday at 7am. Thank goodness for Corey's: a) enormous dining room table b) rotary cutter and c) cutting mats. My friend (and former landlady) Cordula spent several weeknights helping me sew the bunting flags into 9 rows along a rope of thick jute twine. We had quite the rhythm going. I kept and washed all of the napkins and plan to turn them into a memory quilt.

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I put together the centerpieces using a hodgepodge of random things:

  • Clear wine bottle with raffia around the neck, filled with dried billy balls, lavender, and wheat grass (bought onlinehereandhere)
  • Clear soda bottle with an orange pinwheel sticking into multi-colored birdseed
  • Small glass vase with purple flowers I made using crepe paper from the dollar store, some wire stems, and floral tape...sitting on top of a wooden coaster from a tree that fell down in my parents' front yard
  • Small bowl full of my mom's famous tamari almonds
  • Mason jar candle holder with a wire handle I twisted onto it
  • A small jar with golf pencils (for the madlibs)
  • Succulent wrapped in kraft paper (that my mom later planted all together into an arrangement for our porch!)
  • Napkin holder made out of a burlap-covered soup can with a small green pinwheel glued to the front.
  • All on top of a piece of recycled fence board atop a piece of burlap.
  • Repeat 21 times.

Phew! I'm pretty sure that those candles were melted long before they ever got lit. (Ps. I calculated that the centerpieces cost us about $7 each). We rented our table linens online for literallyhalf as much as it would have been from a local shop. A quick pop in the dyer with a wet towel and they were wrinkle-free (Thanks, Mama V, Daniela, and Alexis for taking on de-wrinkle duty!).

For place cards, my nana and I used adecorative puncherto cut stickers out ofchalkboard contact paperthat we then stuck onto mason jar cups and I wrote each person's name inchalk ink. After the wedding, my mom tossed them all in the dishwasher and, while the chalk washed away, the labels stayed put! Each setting also had a smaller 8-ounce mason jar cup to use for water. On top of eachwheat straw paper plate, we put a custom wedding-themed madlib, which we collected at the end of the night as a fun keepsake. All those mason jars and onlyonegot dropped - at the end of the night as we were all walking to the shuttles (way to go, Bob!).

Instead of the mason jar cup and madlib, the kids got chalkboard labeled metal pails filled with crayons, stickers, and candy, along with a DIY card kit that read "Get crafty. Use stickers and crayons to design your own card!" Much to our surprise, most of these handmade cards wound up in our CARDS suitcase - best wedding cards ever! Flower girl Lola and her sister Layne Grace also completed a madlib in which they told us to "always remember to flip your pineapple before bed." Good advice, folks.

Click to enlarge the below photos to read a couple Madlib samples.

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Since our wedding was in California, we wanted to make sure we brought in Lucas's Texan roots as much as possible. We served Texas-style BBQ and as our thank you favors, gave each of our guests a little jar of BBQ spice rub. Rudy's Rub - straight from Texas. We bought it in bulk from the restaurant and, with face masks and rubber gloves, Cas and I divided the 28lbs of spice rub into 200 small jam jars. We'd originally planned to try to make our own BBQ sauce, but the thought of handing out 200 jars of spoiled BBQ sauce to all our favorite people terrified me. As it was, this project took the good portion of a day - I can't imagine if we'd tried to make something too!

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Lucas and I don't drink, but our friends sure do. Lucky for us, my brother works for Sierra Nevada and took charge of the beer selection. Mom was on wine duty. We still wanted to have His & Hers signature drinks, so we stocked up on Lucas's favorite ginger beer and my favorite Vignette Wine Country Soda made by a Berkeley-based company.Surprisingly,no one wanted to sip on red wine in the heat (hint: if you buy your wine from Trader Joe's, they'll take back any unopened, un-chilled bottles after your event).

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This straw holder is the same one I made to hold napkins on the tables.

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I bought the Anthropologie apron I'd been eyeing formonthsto wear during dinner. Let's be completely real for a minute, me + white dress + BBQ sauce drenched ribs + baked beans = disaster. And, I'd like to report, Idid get BBQ sauce on the apron. Those Mr & Mrs signs you see hanging from our chairs? More upcycled fence boards! I did quite a bit of painting. These are now hanging outside our bedroom door.

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For the past couple of days, I've heard you all groaning, "yes, but what about the food?!" This issupposed to be a food blog. One of my dear high school friends - Melissa - baked all of the cupcakes and a tiny cut cake. Strawberry lemonade (with a gluten-free version using Cup4Cup flour), honey pumpkin, and red velvet. She went to culinary school for baking, so I had complete faith in her, but we used it as an excuse to get together anyway. We spent an entire day baking a few months before the wedding taste-testing the recipes, and even though it'd been a few years since we'd last seen each other, it felt like old times. I had the little bird cake toppers die-cut at a local scrapbook store and my bridesmaid Jenny added the teeny-tiny bow tie and veil. I've been blessed with some pretty talented female friends.

Speaking of incredible women, that cookie table you see is not any ordinary cookie table - it holds the time-tested and well-loved recipes of my aunts, cousins, nana, and family friends. The women in my life can bake a mean cookie. The cookie table was my favorite part because it showcased the family recipes of the women I love - the perfect personal touch.My namesake Sarah arranged the cookie table decor using some vintage platters and pieces from her kitchen and my mom's. Oh, and because I'm a candy-fiend, we had large jars filled with the Bride's Favorite - lemon drops - and the Groom's Favorite - peach rings.

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With the help of my new sister-in-law Daniela, we made all of the cut-out props for the photobooth out of card stock, an exacto knife, and some skewers. A few of the mustaches were die-cut at the scrapbook store. In addition to all the cut-out props, we set up a coat-rack filled with hats and a few chalkboardsthat we glued to paint stirrers to make signs.

That creepy-looking dude in the tank top in the bottom left? That's my brother. Earlier in the evening he was wearing a dress shirt and bow tie, but it transformed into this black tank top within 5 minutes of delivering his toast. Keepin' things classy.

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Right after cutting the cake (delicately and with no cake to the face), we twirled out to the dance floor for our first dance as husband and wife -Gotta Have You by The Weepies. For the father-daughter and mother-son dances, our respective parents chose the songs and they were kept a surprise:Father & Daughter by Paul Simon&My Wish by Rascal Flatts. One minute and 30 seconds into each of the parent dances, we invited all of the fathers & daughters, and mothers & sons to join the dance floor. Three new moms danced with their infant sons - picture perfect.

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Now we get to the good stuff. The real party. You can finally tell from the sweat dripping off people's faces how extremely hot it was...even after the sun went down. Ten's red hair dye even dripped off, staining his white dress shirt pink. And yet, everyone threw on their dancing shoes and kept the party going all the way 'til 11:30pm - bring on the heat! At Lana's command, our friends tried really hard to put that dance floor into the pool (maybe they justreally wanted all that water?).In case you forgot, that dance floor was built over my parents' pool (click to see pictures of the process). When my dad announced his idea to construct a dance floor over the pool, I laughed at him. When he kept a straight face, I figured - what the heck! At least if it did go crashing down into the pool, we'd make the local news!

Since we're both music freaks, we decided that if we hired a DJ, we'd just end up telling the DJ exactly what to play. Instead, we opted to forgo the DJ and plan it all ahead of time. That way we knew we'd hear exactly what we wanted. We made our own playlists and Lucas's cousin Bobby flew all the way from Texas to MC for us (and, of course, the control freak in me created a spreadsheet of all the announcements we knew we'd want). He wasfantastic- even getting on the dance floor during the Cupid Shuffle to show everyone what to do. Of all the decisions we made for the wedding, making our own iTunes playlist was one of the best (you know, right up there with deciding to get married in the first place).

Here's the gist of how we DJed our own wedding - our ultimate DIY. We had three main playlists on iTunes: co*cktail hour, dinner, and dance. Plus a playlist for the ceremony songs and all of the important moments (first dance, etc.). We spent months on our dance playlist - grouping songs that would go well together, keeping in mind the flow of the night (ex. oldies earlier on, sets of two slow songs followed by a fast up-beat song to get everyone back on the dance floor, and, at a certain point, all fast up-tempo dance songs the rest of the night). Lucas then edited every single song to somewhere between 2 and 4 minutes, making all of the transitions between songs smooth so we could set iTunes to play with a 2 second crossfade. You can read more details and view a PDF version of our playlists here.

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Right after we got hitched, I gave you quick anecdote of how our favorite day ever ended with nothing short of magic. Since this is the story of how acraft-obsessed California girl married a design-savvy woodworking Texas boy, I'll tell you again because every good story needs an end.The backyard dance party ended at 11:30pm withWe Are Youngblasting and every single guest still at the party joining arms in a gigantic 50+ person (sweaty) circle around me and my new husband. Some shirtless, some shoeless, and alldancing, stomping, and screaming along at the top of their lungs. And in the last 20 seconds, everyone stormed the center into a gigantic mob of hugs and love. It was magical. The stuff of movies. You couldn’t recreate it if you tried.

Thanks for (virtually) coming to our wedding! The story of how I married the love of my life. To keep you from having to scroll up, here's the linktopart 1(first look and ceremony details).

In the ultimate of budget-wedding moves, we sold more than half of the decor to other brides. Check out my recipe for a flourless salted almond chocolate cookie inspired by the deep dark chocolate cookies Big Sarah baked for the cookie table.

Photography: Brent Van Auken Photography|Cake: Melissa Haskins| Invitations: Printed by GreenerPrinter(designed by bride & groom)| Catering: Steelhead B.B.Q. Co.|Day-of coordination: Chico Event Specialists| Bride's Dress: Casablanca|Hair & Makeup: Lindsey Lifur @ Mecca Salon| Venue: Private residence in Chico, CA. | Music:

Snixy Kitchen Wedding Posts:

  • Our engagement story and ring
  • Engagement photos
  • How to DJ your Own Wedding
  • Honeymoon Part 2 - Food lover's guide to Tokyo
  • Honeymoon Part 3 - Food lover's guide to Kyoto
DIY Backyard BBQ Wedding Reception (2024)

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