Categories
News

Life, twice: Court rejects Randy Taylor’s last-minute offer

A Nelson County Circuit Court judge sentenced Randy Taylor to two life sentences in prison for the abduction and murder of 17-year-old Alexis Murphy, whose body has never been found. Taylor has maintained his innocence, but during the July 23 sentencing hearing, his attorney said Taylor would disclose Murphy’s whereabouts if the court reduced his sentence to 20 years and repeated the allegation that someone else was responsible for her disappearance.

Nelson County Commonwealth’s Attorney Anthony Martin and the Murphy family dismissed the offer. “We have definitely done our best to give this family some closure. We have to balance closure with public safety,” Martin said, according to the Daily Progress. “His criminal history goes for four pages.”

Trina Murphy, Alexis’ great-aunt, said “I’m not bargaining with a murderer,” she said, according to the Progress. “He will never do this to another young girl or a community.”

Prior to Murphy’s disappearance in August 2013, Taylor was a suspect in the 2010 disappearance of 19-year-old Town of Orange resident Samantha Clarke, but in the aftermath of her disappearance he accused police of harassment and had several unrelated charges against him thrown out when a judge agreed investigators had been illegally tracking him with a GPS unit without a warrant. Taylor detailed his story in a feature on Clarke’s disappearance in the Hook in 2012.

In the Clarke case, Taylor claimed he’d been at home with his son without anyone to corroborate his account, and he said he’d made multiple texts and calls to Clarke that night because he’d heard someone else make a threat against her. After his arrest in the Murphy case, he also implicated someone else, claiming Murphy left his home with another man the night she vanished. That man testified at his trial and is not considered a suspect.

Surveillance footage from the Liberty gas station in Lovingston showed Taylor and Murphy walking by one another August 3, the night Murphy went missing. Although evidence including hair, blood, clothing, and her phone was found in and around Taylor’s home, her body has not been discovered.

Taylor plans to file an appeal.

Categories
News

Court drama: The McDonnells trial begins

Just how much are we looking forward to the July 28 kick-off of the federal corruption trial of former Governor Bob McDonnell and his wife Maureen? Well, let’s just say that any visitor to Odd Dominion headquarters over the next six weeks will encounter a giant “Do Not Disturb” sign and the wafting smell of freshly popped popcorn.

Accused by the feds of numerous violations of public corruption laws, Bob McDonnell holds the dubious distinction of being Virginia’s only governor to be indicted while still living in the executive mansion. If he and his wife are found guilty on all counts (which include multiple counts of wire fraud, making false statements, and “obtaining property under color of official right,” as well as—for Maureen—a single count of obstruction), they could find themselves living behind prison walls for the rest of their lives.

To say that this seemed an unlikely outcome when McDonnell first took office would be the understatement of the decade. Love him or loathe him, when Bob McDonnell first entered the governor’s mansion (carrying Maureen over the threshold like a giddy groom) he seemed like a man with his moral compass pointed unwaveringly toward righteousness.

But what a difference four years makes! Now accused of of taking over $160,000 in gifts, loans, and perks from tobacco-and-dietary supplement impresario Jonnie Williams in return for various favors, Bob and Maureen face both reputational ruin and untold years of incarceration.

Making matters worse for them, the lead-up to the trial has consisted of a series of setbacks and new, unseemly revelations. After hiring a forensic accountant named Allen Kosowsky (at a “discounted rate” of $400 per hour) to pore over the former first couple’s finances, the defense was recently dealt a blow by presiding Judge James Spencer, who denied a request to allow Kosowsky and another expert witness to testify in front of the jury. This hurts the McDonnells’ case on two fronts, as their lawyers are seeking to dispel the notion that the couple were in dire financial straits when they met Williams, while also arguing that Williams—the prosecution’s star witness—is being bailed out by the feds, who have delayed evidence-gathering in two ongoing civil suits against Williams and his company Star Scientific (now renamed Rock Creek Pharmaceuticals).

The judge also denied defense motions to bar some pieces of evidence—including financial disclosure forms filed by the former governor and incriminating statements made by his wife to law enforcement officers—from trial.

Meanwhile, federal prosecutors have recently expanded their allegations to include a $23,000 golf resort vacation taken by the McDonnells in May 2012. This pricey getaway was reportedly paid for by UVA Board of Visitors Vice Rector William Goodwin, and—according to the feds—intentionally omitted by the then-gov on his annual disclosure forms.

On the plus side, the Bob McDonnell “Restoration Fund” has raised around $250,000 for his defense (including a $10,000 donation from former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney). Of course, his defense team has estimated that the trial will cost the McDonnells at least $1 million, but it’s a start.

Now if you’ll excuse us, we have to go check our supply of Orville Redenbacher gourmet kernels and make sure our EasyPop is in good working order. See you in six weeks!

Categories
News

Mix it up: Developer-architect Bill Atwood takes aim at West Main

Waterhouse building designer Bill Atwood is taking another stab at a multi-story mixed-use development near downtown, and while he believes he’s got a plan for a project that will push West Main Street in the right direction, some are raising concerns that it could put traffic pressure on the surrounding neighborhood.

The Atlantic, which will straddle the 400-500 block of West Main with frontage on parallel Commerce Street, has evolved since May, when Atwood’s initial presentation of a six-story office building that annexed two historic brick structures got a chilly reception from the Board of Architectural Review (BAR). The project is by right, meaning it needs no special zoning approval. It does, however, require a certificate of appropriateness from the BAR, and Atwood said he’s committed to a building that’s right for the neighborhood. He’s since held multiple meetings to gather input from nearby residents, and the project has a new look—and a new purpose altogether.

Atwood is now proposing a mixed-use, mixed-income building, with office and retail space and about 25 apartments, including five affordable and 15 “workforce” units for lower- and middle-income residents. The tallest section of the L-shaped structure will front West Main on the property now occupied by Atlantic Organic Sleep Shop, which would be demolished; longtime shop owner Andie Levine, who also owns the property, said he’s been in talks with Atwood about relocating into the finished building. A lower, longer section will stretch west down the block behind the old brick buildings, which currently house a nail salon and an executive coaching business.

The project also includes a parking garage with an estimated total of 175 spaces, a surplus Atwood said will be a boon to Charlottesville’s growing midtown.

Not everyone is happy with that plan. The garage would have entry and exit points on tiny Commerce Street, and some local residents are concerned about a big uptick in traffic.

“I think the days of needing to garage a lot of cars are numbered,” said Schaeffer Somers, a UVA School of Architecture professor who owns a house on Sixth Street NW. “Twelve, 20 years from now we won’t be thinking about the built environment in the same way.”

There’s already parking a block away in the city-owned garage at the Jefferson School City Center on Fourth Street, Somers pointed out. Why not encourage walkability from there to West Main, and keep parking to a minimum?

“The way this part of the community has been treated, I think this is really a critical project to get right,” Somers said, referring to the razing of the predominantly African-American Vinegar Hill in the 1960s.

Officials, too, expressed concerns about the build. Mary Joy Scala, the city’s preservation and design planner, told the BAR she felt the Commerce Street apartments “do not respect the character of the Starr Hill neighborhood.”

Atwood defended the design, and said he’d continue to engage the community. He’s commissioning a traffic study to better understand the impacts of the planned garage, but he said more parking capacity is going to be essential to the growth of the West Main corridor. Just as important to that growth, he said, is development that includes both much-needed mixed-income housing and space for those apartment-dwellers to work and shop—what he calls “park your car and live” projects.

“It’s not 500 college apartments,” he said, referencing the student-centric housing developments cropping up a few blocks east. “It’s difficult to do, and it takes a lot of work. But we’re trying to move forward in a positive way and meet the needs of the neighborhood.”

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Looking for real estate online takes off

Once upon a time prospective homebuyers asked their agents to search the local MLS and find the listings they thought their clients would like best. Back then only REALTORS® had access to MLS information, and buyers who wanted to be more independent had to rely on print ads, open houses or just driving through neighborhoods looking for signs, not a strategy that worked well for out-of-towners.

In today’s world buyers have many ways to search for properties and neighborhoods including popular, for-profit real estate websites such Zillow or Trulia, which offer information on which homes are for sale or for rent and for how much.  Consumers also can search for homes at realtor.com and caar.com, and those who want to visit a few listings before going out with their agent can find announcements of open houses at most of these sites as well.

The easy availability of online information has fundamentally changed the way people buy and sell homes.  Buyers and sellers are more knowledgeable about the process than they once were, and a big part of an agent’s role is now helping them accurately interpret and make sense of the enormous amounts of available information.

The accessibility of online resources also means that successful agents have to become effective Internet marketers. Whereas once the term “curb appeal” meant how the house looked from the street, today it is more about how it looks in photos and virtual tours. Many also have become adept at using social media such as Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to help get the word out to prospective buyers.

For better or for worse, the Internet has changed the way we do real estate, opening up the market to buyers all over the world and demanding that agents learn the skills required to take advantage of the different outlets for marketing their listings.

How Buyers Find Homes

“Most people today start their home search online, and those numbers are growing yearly” said Amy Webb with Nest Realty.  “It’s the number one place to go for anyone who is even remotely thinking about searching for a home,” she continued.

They don’t just find homes this way, Webb explained.  Buyers also go to the Internet to get information on the metropolitan area, the schools, parks and recreation and job opportunities.  They also go online to compare several different localities or neighborhoods or to look at satellite images for an overview of an area’s resources.

 “We see a much more educated and informed consumer,” who, she added, is likely to be prepared with questions about a nearby industrial facility they noticed on a satellite image, or about the potential flooding risk from a river or creek a few blocks away.

When it comes to what is on the market for sale, “often by the time they call me they have a list of homes to see and have ruled out others,” Webb said.

Unfortunately, online information may be either incorrect, incomplete, or may not apply locally.  This means a big part of the agent’s job now includes helping both buyers and sellers to correctly interpret the information they have found from online sources so they can understand how what they have learned applies (or not) to their particular situation.

Todd McGee, with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate III, agrees stating that the information out there, especially on the for-profit sites is “not always accurate or up to date,” since it is based on averages which can’t take relevant details into consideration.

Recently he received an email from a client who was excited about seeing a home that was advertised as “for sale by owner” on one of these sites.  However, the client was soon disappointed when McGee discovered it had actually been off the market for some time.

McGee has run into similar issues when working with sellers who research real estate sites for estimates of what their home is worth.  Since the figures are based on averages omitting critical details about similar sales, the result may be an inflated price or one that does not accurately reflect the home’s true value.

McGee recommends realtor.com and caar.com as having information that is more accurate and up to date, however, even these sites don’t provide complete data on every transaction.  Agents, on the other hand, are familiar with the neighborhood, have been inside many of the homes and can speak to their condition and location in a way that no third party site can do. They also have access to details that affected a home’s sales price, such as that the seller offered a $2500 carpet allowance, or it was a short sale, or the seller had already moved out and was anxious to close.

Understanding and communicating the nuances of a local market to both buyers and sellers based on experience is a big part of the agent’s job. McGee described it as helping them to “navigate, interpret and decipher the data.”

Open houses are another source of information for buyers or for sellers trying to get a feel for what their home may be worth.  These are advertised locally on caar.com, which Karen Kehoe with RE/MAX Regency agrees has the most current information on local real estate issues. However, open houses are also featured on sites like Zillow, she said.

Agents As Online Marketers

Just as buyers and sellers find and utilize online resources, agents are learning to use the Internet to provide all manner of information to their customers and clients.

Today 90 percent of buyers start their property search online, so it is critical to use the Internet for marketing, explained Rick Walden with Virginia Estates, adding “we were one of the early companies to have an online presence.”  He described their website as very user friendly, with five or six ways to search for properties, making it accessible to people with all different styles of acquiring information.

Kehoe’s business also benefits from her online presence.  “I can’t imagine not having a website,” she said.  She believes prospects are looking for data and will gravitate to sources that provide the most complete information.  For example, at one time it was common to market homes via brochures that intentionally excluded the price to give prospects an incentive to call the agent for more info.  Today, however, if an online description doesn’t include a price, the prospect will just call another agent, Kehoe explained.

Many of Kehoe’s prospects find her online and send inquiries.  “I live off emails,” she said, which she uses to stay in touch with her clients and answer their questions.  She lets buyers know what new properties are on the market and keeps sellers informed about recent sales and listings that may impact the price on their home.

Part of having an effective online presence is showcasing each property appropriately, Webb said.  This means using excellent professional photos.  First, though, homes must be in their best condition, since in most cases consumers will see pictures online before they ever go inside, and if they don’t like the pictures they may choose to look elsewhere.

Before the photographer arrives, sellers need to declutter as cameras are “distracted by small objects,” Webb said.  Cameras also like natural light so open all the drapes and let the light in before taking photos.  Sprucing up the landscaping is also a must as the first view will likely be of the home’s exterior.  Even if it is an older home, it still needs to look “clean, bright and appealing,” Webb said.  She likened the process to finding a date on match.com where everyone always presents himself or herself in the best possible way.

At the same time, it’s also a good idea to “keep it realistic,” Webb said.  For example, photos should give a true idea of the home’s size and not be too “photoshopped.”  Otherwise, she said you are just “setting prospects up for disappointment.”  She gave the example of buyers coming in from out of town who only have 48 hours to look at houses. Neither these buyers nor their agents appreciate wasting time with homes that aren’t realistically represented online.

Occasionally buyers even purchase a home based only on online resources and assistance from their agent. McGee once sold a listing to some clients who were out of the country when they purchased the home.  They based their decision on the virtual tour photos and didn’t actually visit the house until after it closed.

One Stop Shopping

As consumers rely more and more on information they find from online sources, agents are responding with websites that are one-stop shops.

McGee recently refreshed his personal website, which allows consumers direct access to the database of homes for sale as well as a list of resources such as a neighborhood’s walk score or school information.

REALTOR® blogs can also be an important consumer resource. McGee blogs regularly on topics of interest to homebuyers and sellers including updates on listings and neighborhoods as well as consumer information such as how to clean a jetted tub, or how to spot termite damage.

Another local blogger is Jim Duncan with Nest Realty (realcrozetva.com) who has maintained his site for years, regularly updating it on local issues and information that impact real estate.  He explained that an important part of Crozet’s appeal is that it is near Charlottesville, but it still maintains a small town feel.  On his blog he regularly describes Crozet as a place where residents can breathe clean air, enjoy mountain views and appreciate the “slower pace of life.” He added that out-of-town buyers looking for those qualities in a place they want to live often call him, having read all about it on his blog.  “It’s nice to know that people are doing this kind of research,” he added.

Webb maintains a personal website where consumers can search for homes using filters such as neighborhoods or schools districts. She also blogs on real estate topics, such as understanding your credit score, or the ins and outs of wells and septic systems.

While people accustomed to living in a rural area may be familiar with well and septic issues, she explained, someone relocating here from a big city is grateful for information that lets them evaluate the costs and benefits of living out in the country and what that means in the way of inspections and upkeep.

A New Way to Do Real Estate

The Internet is changing the way REALTORS® do business making them into what Webb calls “curators of great information,” as they help their clients sort through the vast amount of data available online.  The result is consumers who are better informed and better able to make decisions about some of the most significant financial decisions of their lives.  Call your REALTOR® today to get started.

Celeste Smucker is a writer, blogger and author who lives near Charlottesville.

Categories
Arts

Film review: The Purge sequel is dragged down by lackluster anarchy

Anyone who has been to an underground or independent film festival is no doubt familiar with a very specific genre of DIY “woods” movies where dudes with guns creep through a forest, talk an awful lot for people trying to remain undetected, and get into strangely choreographed shoot-outs at odd intervals. These movies are made this way out of necessity, due to a lack of resources and funds; the work ethic is commendable, but they are notoriously hit-or-miss in quality. The only thing that separates The Purge: Anarchy from these movies is a budget for location permits (and Michael K. Williams).

If you weren’t expecting a sequel to last year’s critically reviled but financially successful The Purge so quickly, you’re not alone. Apparently, neither was writer-director of both films James DeMonaco, who delivers a story that is equal parts half-finished (sometimes inspired) ideas and tedious filler (and Michael K. Williams).

One year after the events of the first film, we are introduced to a new cast of characters for whom the annual purge has become shockingly routine. Five people—a mother and daughter, a couple on the verge of a breakup, and a mysteriously skillful survivalist with a mission—find themselves stuck in the open together and must cooperate in order to find safe haven for the night. Along the way, we get glimpses of how class and race factor into the purge. The wealthy pay to do it safely while the poor do whatever it takes to survive, whether it’s hunker down or go on the offensive. Meanwhile, a Black Panther-style revolutionary has been telling the truth online and hints at a brewing rebellion. 

Sounds like a hell of a ride, right? It definitely could have been. Before you see it based on this description, please understand that this is only the first 20 minutes, which are full of promise and effective tension (and Michael K. Williams). The rest of the long-feeling 103 minutes is filled with too-distant atmosphere and a series of embarrassingly predictable, tonally inconsistent setups. If someone is walking slowly and the music goes quiet, you’ll learn to count the beats before something attempts to startle you. All of the gunshots and screaming in the background are just that: background. Every time the action cuts away to someone not in the central cast getting shot or abducted, it feels like another story that’s more interesting than the one we’re following. Escalation to absurdly gratuitous heights would have suited this story perfectly, but it’s nowhere to be found.

The saving grace of The Purge: Anarchy may be three or four moments of effective campiness (and Michael K. Williams). As you watch this movie, you will laugh. As you leave, you will wonder whether you were meant to. As a devotee of 1980s Schwarzenegger flicks who still cherishes his VHS copy of Demolition Man, I’m totally on board with seemingly stupid action flicks that surprise you with their level of self-awareness. The scenes near the end that echo these films work and may be worth the price of admission for some, but The Purge: Anarchy doesn’t set the stage enough for them to pay off.

If you’re confused or frustrated by the teasing use of Michael K. Williams’ name in this review, get ready to feel the same way about his presence in the movie. Playing the leader of the freaking badass black anti-purge militia, his scenes are far and away the best, but total about six minutes and happen at least an hour apart. This is just one of many ideas casually tossed into The Purge: Anarchy that deserve their own movies, not to be offhandedly referenced in a movie about five uninteresting people whose only collective talent is being exceptionally bad at sneaking.

~Kristofer Jensen

Playing this week

America
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Begin Again
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

The Breakfast Club (Wed.)
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Chef
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Deliver Us From Evil
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Earth to Echo
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

The Grand Budapest Hotel
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

How to Train Your Dragon 2
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Ida
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Jersey Boys
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Maleficent
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Obvious Child
Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6

Planes: Fire & Rescue
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Sex Tape
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Tammy
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Transformers: Age of Extinction
Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX

Movie houses

Regal Downtown Mall Cinema 6
979-7669

Regal Stonefield 14 and IMAX
244-3213

Categories
Magazines Real Estate

Louisa County Public Schools

At Louisa County Public Schools, we know that each student is capable of learning, achieving, and succeeding. We know that graduates need to be prepared for the workforce as well as the classroom. We know that a child is much more than a score on a standardized test.

Through innovation, compassion, and hard work, Louisa County Public Schools is fulfilling the promise of public education and has emerged as a top-caliber school division in the growing central Virginia area.

Louisa County High School’s advanced curriculum options allow our best and brightest to graduate with not only a diploma, but also an associate’s degree, at little to no cost for families. Due to the education level of our faculty, LCHS is able to offer college credit courses right on campus every day.

LCHS has also developed one of the most varied and successful on-campus Career and Technical Education programs in the state. Our students hone job skills, earning industry certifications and licenses in fields such as the culinary arts, firefighting, cosmetology, building trades, turf management, nursing, and many more.

U.S. News and World Report recently bestowed its Bronze Award on LCHS, one of the only high schools in our region to receive the honor. Despite the challenges and disadvantages many of our students face, they continue to learn and pass the SOL tests at a higher-than expected rate compared to their peers at other high schools.

All of this is accomplished while the LCHS building, destroyed in the August 2011 earthquake, is being rebuilt and classes are held in modular units in what was and will again become the parking lot.

The stage for that across-the-board success is set at Louisa County Middle School, where pass rates continue to rise. Student achievement and school spirit go hand-in-hand at LCMS, which has also become a leader in the school division’s Olweus Anti-Bullying Program. While the middle school years can be challenging, our team at LCMS takes a whole-child approach to support our young learners and prepare them for the next exciting steps in their development.

Moss-Nuckols Elementary School, which serves the growing Zion Crossroads area, uses a garden as the centerpiece of its emphasis on nutrition and wellness. Second-graders cultivate staples, such as lettuce and tomatoes, which supply the school cafeteria. They grow other vegetables, such as bok choy and Swiss chard, which are used in school-wide taste tests, exposing students to new foods.

Jouett Elementary School, in eastern Louisa, has implemented the highly-regarded Responsive Classroom curriculum, which develops the rhetorical and conversational skills of students through daily interactions. Students also participate in a number of community-building groups, such as the Garden Club, which has beautified the grounds. Jouett’s Trailblazers program helps dedicated students develop leadership skills, while teaching them that true leaders serve.

The August 2011 earthquake destroyed Thomas Jefferson Elementary School, but the resulting challenges could not shake the heart of its dedicated faculty and staff.  In August, the Patriots will begin the new school year in their new school building. The school’s Odyssey of the Mind team has become popular with students and successful, with one group nearly earning a trip to the national competition this year. Individual responsibility is reinforced for students in the BRAVO program, serving the needs of the school. Thomas Jefferson’s monthly Key competition encourages positive actions for students as groups, with monthly rewards for those classes that remain on their best behavior.

Trevilians Elementary Schools, serving western Louisa County, recognizes that success takes a different form for each individual student. With the motto “Create, Achieve, Celebrate,” the school encouraged short-term goal setting for every student this past year. Students determined their own weekly marks of success and earned treasure box prizes when they reached them.  The school emphasized other incentives this year, including a weekly vocabulary assignment, which resulted in participating students being eligible to attend a school pep rally with the high school’s football team and cheerleaders.

Louisa County Public Schools is a smaller district in a rural setting and has overcome the loss of two schools- 40 percent of student capacity- in the August 2011 earthquake. Despite the challenges we face, we’ve solidified ourselves at the top of the region, thanks to our focus on each student as an individual, our compassion for each student and our dedication to each student’s success.

Categories
Magazines Uncategorized Weddings

At first sight: An elegant, easy-going day to remember

Candice Cloos said she met Patrick Haney the old-fashioned way: “in a dive bar.” Truth be told, she was trying to disentangle herself from a conversation with another man, when she noticed Patrick and shouted, “There you are!”

“Without missing a beat, he played along that we knew each other, and we spent the next five hours talking,” Candice recalled. The pair had their first date the next evening—and have been together ever since.

When it came time to plan their wedding, Candice said she wanted it to “feel like us.” Living a fast-paced life in Washington, D.C., the couple appreciated weekends away where they could relax, be outdoors, and spend time together. “One of our favorite spots is Charlottesville, where I went to undergrad and grad schools,” she said, “so of course it was where we wanted to be married. I wanted our wedding to capture my Virginia roots and have a rustic elegance that was beautiful and easy-going.”

Aaron Watson Photography 389

Venue-wise, Pippin Hill fit the bill perfectly (learn more about Pippin Hill on page 43), and even the day’s rain brought a bit of magic because it “left behind lots of frogs that the children tried to catch.”

Every part of their wedding held special meaning, though, from verses read from a grandmother’s Bible to vintage champagne glasses that have been in the Cloos family for years to the couple’s first look, when Patrick presented his bride-to-be with a calligraphy letter he’d written. But for all the traditions, Candice and Patrick opted for one out-of-the-ordinary element: Following a rehearsal dinner at the C&O and late-night jazz at Miller’s, the pair spent the night before their wedding together at Keswick Hall. “It was so amazing to be able to start our wedding day doing things we love most,” she said. “Going for a walk outside with a cup of coffee and then swimming in the pool.”

Aaron Watson Photography 101

Candice Cloos and Patrick Haney

Ceremony and reception venue: Pippin Hill

Officiant: Claire Goodman

Catering: Pippin Hill

Flowers: Blue Ridge Floral Design

Cake: Albemarle Baking Company

Music: Six Stylez (reception), Charlottesville High School string quartet (ceremony)

Dress: Carolina Herrera

Shoes: Jimmy Choo

Invitations: Rock Paper Scissors

Hair and makeup: Daphne Latham

Transportation: Albemarle Limousine

Aaron Watson Photography 218

Aaron Watson Photography 341

Aaron Watson Photography 291

Aaron Watson Photography 050

Categories
Weddings

A little romance: How sweet this celebration is

Although they didn’t know it at the time, Katie Castillo and William Deibler spent their high school years in houses just a few miles away from each other. But it wasn’t until Katie had graduated from the University of Virginia and moved back home that mutual friends introduced her to William. A few months into their relationship, she took her then-boyfriend to Charlottesville, “so he could experience my favorite place.”

That place was where the couple decided to marry because they wanted “a romantic, laid-back—but still glamorous—celebration with good wine and delicious food,” Katie said. “We envisioned an outdoor spring wedding, and when we toured Keswick Vineyards, we knew we’d found our spot.”

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

 

A big, family-filled celebration with plenty of elegance was the order of the day, but Katie and Will also kept in mind that one of their favorite restaurants serves wings and cheese fries, “so we knew we wanted some comfort food incorporated into our menu,” she said. For the cocktail hour, Beggar’s Banquet prepared mini crab cakes, beef sliders, and grilled brie sandwiches. The pair have a sweet tooth, and “sharing our love of treats with our guests” was important, so they served a simple white cake trio, gold leaf painted macaroons, and Katie surprised William with a groom’s cake that was a replica of his Marine Corps uniform. There was also a popcorn bar, and later in the evening the Carpe Donut truck pulled up.

Five months before their wedding, William’s father passed away, but “knowing how excited he was for our big day kept us going,” said Katie, adding that they included several special touches to celebrate him, including a single white rose on his chair and a memory candle that burned throughout the ceremony and reception. In addition, Katie found William’s dad’s cufflinks and surprised her future husband with them during the pair’s first look, a time that allowed them to “share our emotions with each other before we shared them with the rest of our guests.”

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

 

Katie Castillo and William Deibler

Ceremony and reception venue: Keswick Vineyards

Officiant: Phillip Gates

Catering: Beggar’s Banquet

Event planner and flowers: Amore Events by Cody

Cakes: Sweethaus (wedding); Karen Kurian (groom’s cake)

Late-night snacks: Carpe Donut

Photobooth: Charlottesville Photobooth

Music: Derek Tobler (reception DJ); Peter Richardson (ceremony)

Dress: Marisa

Shoes: Jimmy Choo

Bridesmaids’ dresses: Donna Morgan and Bill Levkoff

Hair: Top Knot Studio

Invitations: Val Marie Design

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

View More: http://lauragordon.pass.us/deiblerwedding

Categories
Magazines Weddings

C-VILLE Weddings – January 2015

Click to see the January 2015 issue of C-VILLE Weddings.

Categories
Magazines Uncategorized Weddings

Mood for love: Clifton Inn sets the stage for a weekend-long celebration

When they thought about how they wanted to get married, Heather Welch and Greg Arbogast knew one thing: Their wedding should feel like a weekend retreat. The couple sought a “location where our friends and family could enjoy exclusive use of the property and unwind for the weekend, sort of like a mini vacation,” Heather said. And after visiting the Clifton Inn, “we fell in love with everything about it.”

The pair and their guests had the run of the inn from Friday to Sunday, which allowed them to treat the property like a resort. The weekend began with desserts and cocktails by the pool after Friday’s rehearsal dinner, and before the wedding the following day, everyone enjoyed lawn games and some more downtime at the pool. Later that evening, the post-ceremony dinner was served family style “to build a sense of community among the guests,” Heather said. “We provided flip-flops, so the girls could enjoy dancing under the bistro lighting and the stars.”

HG0601

“We strove for casual elegance that matched the relaxing, yet clssic atmosphere of the Clifton Inn,” she said. And the wedding’s personal touch came courtesy of the bride’s grandmother and aunt, who have canned dilly beans (pickled green beans) for years, and finally were able to pass the tradition on to Heather, who “spent an entire weekend canning fresh green beans,” which was her way of saying thank you to the people who joined her and Greg for their unforgettable weekend.

HG0361

Heather Welch and Gregory Arbogast

Ceremony and reception venue: Clifton Inn

Event planner: Amanda Gray at Ashley Baber Weddings

Officiant: Erin Seder Warren

Catering and cake: Clifton Inn

Flowers: The Arrangement Company

Invitations: Rock Paper Design

Music: Derek Tobler (DJ); Dress: Marisa

Shoes: Jimmy Choo

Bridesmaids’ dresses: Monique Lhuillier

Hair and makeup: Lora Kelley

Plate rental: Festive Fare

Lighting: Blue Ridge AV Lighting

HG0001

HG0492

HG0380

HG0460

HG0388

HG0486