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Brasfield-Langewisch. (2003 Wedding Register).


Frances Elkin Brasfield and Robert Vernon Langewisch were united in marriage at three in the afternoon on May 18, 2002, at the First Presbyterian Church First Presbyterian Church is a generic church name, and can refer to hundreds of churches within the English speaking world. If you followed a link here, please consider making it more specific by including the city or town in which the church resides.  in Tupelo. The bride is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Daniel Lynton Brasfield of Tupelo. She is the granddaughter of Mrs. Ernest Love Joyner and the late Mr. Joyner and the late Mr. and Mrs. Lynton Bernel Brasfield, all of Tupelo. The groom is the son of Ms. Joan Ann Langewisch of Mt. Olive, Illinois, and Mr. Robert Melvin Langewisch of Eureka, Missouri. He is the grandson of the late Mr. and Mrs. John Steven Yancik and the late Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Louis Langewisch.

Rev. Marion McCoy Franklin and Rev. Henry Shelton officiated at the double-ring ceremony. Nuptial nup·tial  
adj.
1. Of or relating to marriage or the wedding ceremony.

2. Of, relating to, or occurring during the mating season: the nuptial plumage of male birds.

n.
 music was provided by Dr. James Bruce Lesley, Philip Allen Austin, Mathew Edward DeLong, Daniel Vernon Lezotte, Brian Lutz, Paul Ralph Siegal, and Kirk Matthew Townander, vocalists; and Dr. Conwell Ray Harris, organist. Scriptures were read by Gert-Jan One.

Escorted by her father, the bride wore a princess-cut gown of ivory mikado mikado (mĭkä`dō), a former title of the emperor of Japan used chiefly in the English language.  silk decorated with bands of beaded, scroll-designed soutache sou·tache  
n.
A narrow flat braid in a herringbone pattern, used for trimming and embroidery.



[French, from Hungarian sujtás.]

Noun 1.
 at the neckline neckline

The line that connects the two lowest points on the intermediate declines of a head-and-shoulders chart pattern. In an inverted head-and-shoulders formation, the neckline connects the two intermediate tops.
 and along the chapel-length train. She carried a bouquet of gardenias, roses, peonies, and greenery.

The bride's sisters, Dale Brasfield Wailer and Katherine Brasfield Gottlieb, were matrons of honor. The groom's sister, Peggy Ann Langewisch, served as bridesmaid. The bridesmaids wore periwinkle periwinkle, in zoology
periwinkle, any of a group of marine gastropod mollusks having conical, spiral shells. Periwinkles feed on algae and seaweed.
 gowns with embroidered em·broi·der  
v. em·broi·dered, em·broi·der·ing, em·broi·ders

v.tr.
1. To ornament with needlework: embroider a pillow cover.

2.
 satin bodices and floor-length chiffon skirts. They carried bouquets of deep red roses and peonies with blue hydrangeas, which echoed the floral arrangements in the church. Julia Ainsley Waller, niece of the bride, served as the flower girl.

Heather Johnson Camp, Janet Nolting Carter, Kelleen Fitzgerald Cicchillo, Susan Alice Clark, Dina Laurie Colman, Toshie Yvonne Davis, Kristin Ann Gilmore, Virginia Watson Griffith, Elizabeth Ann Houle, Brenda Hiatt Jacroux, Cynthia McCreary Johnson, Amy Roberts Norton, Carol Allen Popwell, Melissa Hail Ross, and Annette Elaine Sessions were honorary bridesmaids.

Darrell Eric Missey served as best man. Randall Douglas Gottlieb and James Gregory Waller, brothers-in-law of the bride, were groomsmen. Kyle Dillon Kasten and Andrew Thomas Yancik, cousins of the groom, served as ring bearers. Ushers included Gregory Berg, Bryan Davidson, and Mark Livingston Switzer.

Following the ceremony, the bride's parents hosted a reception at the Tupelo Country Club. Their guests enjoyed dancing to music by Moonstone moonstone, an orthoclase feldspar, found in Sri Lanka, Myanmar, and Madagascar (and formerly in the St. Gotthard district of Switzerland). In spite of its pronounced cleavage, it is widely used as a gem. .

The couple spent their honeymoon in the mountains of North Carolina and Tennessee.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Downhome Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Mississippi Magazine
Date:Jan 1, 2003
Words:400
Previous Article:Bradshaw-Reeves. (2003 Wedding Register).
Next Article:Brewer-Bottoms. (2003 Wedding Register).



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