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Handmade Weddings: LoucheLab's Love Story
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If you're following the Handmade Wedding Series, then you probably appreciate a good love story. LoucheLab and her husband Ned have a particularly handmade story of falling in love (well, it's high tech, too).  Blogging, artwork, photography, webcams, artist books and international romance all converged to get these two souls together.  Below, you'll find LoucheLab's account and photographs, as well as a special portrait video we produced with them (which does have some spicey mature artwork by the artists, so be forwarned if you are watching this with your child —this is an adult love story, afterall!).

Ned and I met by accident. (Which is a pretty big accident, considering that we lived about 7,000 miles from one another.) I was living in Tel aviv, Israel, and Ned was living in the Meat Packing District in New York and packing up his studio to move to Brooklyn. We had both started blogging 9 months before — after painful break ups. So Ned was surfing random blogs and got into mine, went to my flickr page and looked at my art and then wrote me an e-mail.

It was basically my art and his words that brought us together.


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[Music by Barry London]


We spent almost a year apart; then I flew to NY in Christmas to meet him for the first time. Before I came he said, "I want us to make art together while you are here." My art was always very solitary, so I asked, "What do you mean?," and he said "I don't know, but we'll figure it out."

And we have: we made graffiti and paintings and we took a lot of pictures of one another. After I went back to Israel, we kept on talking on webcam all the time; it was on 24 hours a day. He would wait till his midnight, which was my 7:00 AM, and we would talk before I would go to work, and I would rush home from the office to see him. It was like living in one apartment with a window into the other room where he was, without being able to touch one another — besides with words and art.

In the course of the months apart, we both created a lot, we expressed our love, the sexual frustration and the emotional roller coaster state with photography and paintings and street art and t-shirt making and computer art and so on. The whole relationship, between his blog and my blog and our flickr accounts, were very public and we had people all over the world encouraging us through the difficult times and happy for us, when finally, we made the choice of me moving to NY so we could start a life together offline.


[Me signing our Ktuba (illustrated wedding contract in the Jewish tradition). We wrote the text together and I illustrated it.]

We first decided to get married so I could stay in the United States, but as the preparation started, it became a very small part of it all. Because art was such a big part of our relationship, and because as a part of our relationship, we beat all odds and made the rules as we went along, it was really obvious to us that our wedding would also be like that — intimate and important and very art inspired.

 
[This is me working on the Hupa. It's a big blanket like thing that in Jewish tradition serves as a roof the couple need to get married under. I spraypainted about a 100 ravens on it and my hand was sore for about a week after. The stars in the middle are tattoos we got together, when I came to visit NY and meet Ned for the first time.]

The theme of the wedding was ravens, because of, well a lot of things, but also because they mate for life after having a relatively long period of just playing the field. (Below, you'll see me getting my wedding tattoo. I illustrated it.)

It was basically a Rabbi who is a friend and about 20 friends and family members in our studio in Williamsburg. A lot of what we made was a spur of a moment idea that took shape. Ned edited a cool music mix and we thought "this would be a nice give-away," which lead to me spray painting 40 CDS with a cool pattern and us burning copies till 5:00 in the morning.

Our Rabbi told us that although we didn't want rings, we needed to exchange something of value. So we decided to get rings after all, and on the train on the way to the store, we tried to figure out what they would symbolize for us — and what being married means to us. We talked about learning and making mistake and this being a beginning rather then a happy ending: we got both rings engraved with "Human" on the inside.

The idea of writing and illustrating our own Ktuba actually came from Josh the Rabbi, which I was really grateful about. I wouldn't have thought about it myself. Also, he suggested making some art or writing something to express how we feel about weddings and marriage, which is how the wedding book I made came to be.

We didn't have a DJ or a band or 300 people in fancy dresses or flowers or a white dresses: we had only people that we wanted there (including my sister on webcam from Israel). We had to deal with a lot of feeling and fears beforehand, rather than having too many arrangements to take care of. While the wedding was going I realized I forgot one of the decoration projects I wanted to do, but it didn't matter. After the ceremony, Ned's parents took everyone out to Union Picnic for dinner, which was at the time our favorite restaurant. Even still, we hear from people who were there about how significant and intense the whole event was, and how it's one of the most memorable events they can think of.

[Ned getting his wedding tattoo. He designed it.] 

The handmade wedding theme caught on, and we got artwork from 3 or 4 artist friends as gifts and Ned's dad designed andprinted a book of the wedding pictures for us, which we show off to anyone who wants to know what the wedding was like.

I always hated weddings before. I used to work for a catering service and the way so many wedding are about food or about showing off was really repulsive to me. With the way things went with our wedding, I can say that this was the best wedding ever, which is cool because it was mine!

[Married!]
 
What an inspiring love story. Leave your thoughts in the comments! 

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tags Tags Barry London, Etsy Love Stories, Handmade Portraits, Handmade Wedding Series, louchelab, Tara Young, video
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