Why I Went Full Minimalist (And Never Looked Back)
I’m not gonna lie—the idea of a minimalist wedding scared me at first. Would people think we were cheap? Would the photos look boring? Would Aunt Carol judge us for not having elaborate floral centerpieces?
Turns out, none of that mattered once I realized something huge: nobody remembers the table decorations. They remember how they felt, who they talked to, and whether the food was good.
Going minimal wasn’t about taking things away—it was about making room for what actually mattered.
Here’s what I discovered:
- Less decoration means more conversation
- Fewer guests creates deeper connections
- Simple choices reduce decision fatigue by like 90%
- Quality over quantity isn’t just a saying, it’s a lifestyle

🖼 Steal This Look
- Paint Color: Sherwin-Williams Pure White SW 7005
- Furniture: Sleek acrylic ghost chairs, raw-edge wooden farm tables with clean lines, unadorned linen-draped banquet tables
- Lighting: Bare Edison bulb pendant clusters on black cord, simple brass candlestick holders with tall taper candles
- Materials: Unbleached organic cotton, raw linen, untreated wood, matte ceramic, clear glass, brushed brass accents
There’s something almost rebellious about walking into your reception and seeing clean surfaces and uncluttered sightlines—guests immediately relax because their eyes aren’t competing for attention everywhere they look.
Getting Started: The Stuff That Actually Matters
Your Ceremony Backdrop Is Everything
I spent way too long overthinking this before I figured out the secret: one stunning focal point beats twenty mediocre decorations every single time.
For our ceremony, I chose a simple geometric wedding arch made of copper piping. We draped some flowing white fabric across one side and added exactly three sprigs of eucalyptus.
That’s it. And it was absolutely perfect.
Other backdrop ideas I considered:
- Wooden frame with pampas grass (very trendy right now)
- Nothing but the natural forest backdrop at our venue
- White fabric curtain hung between two trees
- Single large statement dried floral arrangement
The venue we picked—a modern art gallery with huge windows—already had gorgeous architecture. Why cover that up with stuff nobody needs?
Furniture That Doesn’t Fight For Attention
We rented ghost chairs for the ceremony because they literally disappear into the space. You see the people, not the chairs.
For the reception, we went with simple wooden farm tables with clean lines. No tablecloths that needed steaming (thank god), just the natural wood with simple cream table runners down the center.
Time saver alert: Less furniture = way less setup time. We were done decorating in 2 hours instead of the full day I’d originally planned.
🏠 Steal This Look
- Paint Color: Benjamin Moore Chantilly Lace OC-65
- Furniture: Copper piping geometric arch, clean-lined modern gallery benches for guest seating
- Lighting: Natural daylight through oversized windows, minimal recessed gallery lighting
- Materials: Brushed copper, flowing white linen, dried eucalyptus, concrete or polished concrete floors, white gallery walls
There’s something quietly powerful about walking into a sunlit white space and seeing just one perfect line of copper against flowing fabric—it feels intentional rather than decorated, and your guests will remember that restraint.
The Decor That Made People Say “Wow”
Single-Stem Flowers Are Your Best Friend
Instead of those giant centerpieces that block everyone’s view and cost like $200 each, I bought clear glass bud vases. Put one white rose or eucalyptus stem in each one.
Cost per table: $12
Impact: Chef’s kiss
Other minimal flower ideas:
- One large potted succulent per table (guests took them home!)
- Dried flower bundles wrapped in twine
- Branches with hanging tea light holders
- Literally just greenery—no flowers at all
Lighting That Does The Heavy Lifting
This is where the magic happened for our evening reception.
We strung up warm white fairy lights above the tables—nothing crazy, just enough to create ambiance. Then we put pillar candles in varying heights down the center of each table.
Lighting mistakes I almost made:
- Buying colored lights (stick with warm white)
- Overdoing it with too many strands
- Forgetting about daytime lighting (natural light is free and gorgeous)
- Not doing a lighting test before the day
🌟 Steal This Look
- Paint Color: Farrow & Ball All White 2005
- Furniture: Long wooden farm tables with simple cross-back chairs, no tablecloths to let natural wood grain show
- Lighting: Warm white LED fairy lights (2700K) with battery-operated pillar candles in clear glass hurricanes
- Materials: Clear glass bud vases, raw wood, cotton linen napkins, unbleached twine, matte ceramic candle holders
I still remember walking into our reception space at golden hour and seeing those fairy lights flicker on—it was the one moment I genuinely teared up, realizing less really could feel like so much more.
My Step-By-Step Setup Process (That Actually Worked)
Two Days Before
I walked through the venue with literally just my phone and took photos of every angle. This helped me figure out what the space already had going for it.
Big realization: Our venue had this incredible exposed brick wall that I almost covered with a fabric backdrop. So glad I saw it in advance and left it alone.
Day Before
Setup crew (aka my sister and two friends) helped with:
- Positioning furniture – We measured everything to ensure equal spacing
- Hanging the ceremony arch fabric – Took 20 minutes max
- Arranging the table runners – So easy compared to full tablecloths
- Testing the lighting – Plugged everything in to make sure it worked
Day Of
Morning of the wedding, we just added:
- Fresh greenery to the arch
- Single stems in the bud vases
- Candles on the tables (didn’t light them yet obviously)
- Simple place cards at each setting
Total time: 45 minutes
★ Steal This Look
- Paint Color: Behr Swiss Coffee 12
- Furniture: ceremony arch with draped linen fabric, minimalist wooden folding chairs in natural oak finish, simple rectangular reception tables
- Lighting: warm white string lights with discreet black cable, battery-operated LED candles in clear glass holders
- Materials: exposed brick (left untouched), Belgian linen fabric for arch draping, eucalyptus and olive branch greenery, natural cotton table runners, unbleached muslin cloth
I love that this process embraces restraint—there’s something deeply satisfying about realizing the venue already gave you everything you needed, and your job was just to not mess it up.
The Color Palette That Saved My Life
I chose three colors and stuck to them religiously: white, cream, and soft gray-green (from the eucalyptus).
🖼 Steal This Look
- Paint Color: Valspar Ultra White 7006-24
- Furniture: white ceremony folding chairs, cream linen-draped reception tables, gray-green eucalyptus garland runners
- Lighting: warm white globe string lights with cream fabric cord covers
- Materials: matte white ceramic vessels, raw cream linen napkins, silver dollar eucalyptus stems, pale gray-washed wood signage
There’s something almost meditative about walking into a space where every element whispers rather than shouts—this palette lets your guests actually see each other instead of fighting through visual noise.
Making It Work In Any Season
Spring Minimalist Wedding
Add touches of fresh greenery and maybe some white flowers. Let the natural renewal energy of spring do the work.
Summer Minimalist Wedding
Focus on outdoor venues where nature provides the decoration. Add white fabric draping for shade and visual softness.













