Joelle & Johnny

September 16, 2017 | Private home in Blue Hill

Joelle and Johnny met at Reggae Fest 2014 at Sugarloaf and had their first date at Fiddlehead Restaurant in Bangor, where Joelle was living. The evening went so well that Johnny stayed at his family’s home, on the Penobscot Native American Reservation in nearby Old Town, so they could continue their date through the weekend. “We never looked back,” says Joelle, who was then in her fourth year of osteopathic medical school at the University of New England in Biddeford. They soon met each other’s families, and four months after Joelle moved to Massachusetts for her residency, Johnny joined her.

As their two-year anniversary approached, Johnny developed a ruse 
to get Joelle to the beach at dawn so he could propose, setting the alarm on his phone to go off sporadically, pretending it was a telemarketer on the other end. In Maine for the weekend to celebrate, Johnny had the alarm go off at 4 a.m., said he couldn’t go back to sleep, and asked Joelle to go with him to Goose Rocks Beach in Kennebunkport to take photos of the sunrise. He popped the question with a ring he had made with
 a stone from Joelle’s family, gifted to him by her mother. They were married on a property a half-mile from Joelle’s family’s home in Blue Hill, with views of Cadillac Mountain and Blue Hill Harbor, and their dog, Boba Fett, as the ring bearer. Johnny and his groomsmen wore traditional native bolo ties handmade with glass beads, sweet grass, and porcupine quills—one of several nods to his family’s heritage, made by a Mohawk woman, Hilde Barnes. “Every aspect represented us in some way,” says Joelle.

FAMILY TRADITIONS

CEREMONY: It was important to the couple that they pay tribute to the Penobscot Nation in their wedding ceremony. They said their vows under an arbor built by Joelle’s stepfather and decorated with local cedar, which in Native American culture symbolizes good luck. Johnny’s grandmother offered a traditional prayer and the couple drank from a Native American horsehair wedding vase.

COLORS: Joelle and Johnny chose subdued, natural colors—light gray, greens, ivory, and tan—to convey their wedding’s rustic-chic theme. The bridesmaids’ dresses were light gray chiffon, the tables featured handmade burlap runners, ivory candles, and light gray napkins tied with twine—with a sprig of dried lavender tucked in.

MENU: Bianco Family Catering in Brooklin, which Joelle had worked for during her summers in college, provided a bountiful spread that included smoked salmon, smoked mussels, and Bianco’s Italian sausages among the appetizers, and a barbecue buffet with chicken, smoked brisket, and baby back ribs grilled on site. Dessert was Toni’s Famous Whoopie Pies, and Johnny’s mother hosted a late-night panini bar.

Accessories:
BHLDN

Ieie

Bridesmaids’ Dresses:
Weddington Way

Cake & Desserts:
Toni Staples
207.460.8419

Catering:
Bianco Family Catering
207.359.4999

Centerpieces & Flowers:
Kaleidoscope Arrangements

Fairwinds Florist

Gown:
Maggie Sottero, Mariella’s Creations

Hair & Makeup:
Blush Salon and Boutique

Lighting & Rentals:
Wallace Events

Linens:
Crown Uniform and Linen Service

Music & Stationery:
Tomekin Media

Photographer:
Sarah French Photography

Rings:
Rebekah Brooks

Szul

Naturaleza Organic Jewelry

Ring Bearer Attire:
Poppy Parker Market

Shoes:
Badgley Mischka

H&M

Suits:
Calvin Klein

Ties:
Hilde Barnes