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Real wedding: Southern charm meets garden glamour

A happy pair share details of their chic yet relatively casual garden wedding in South Carolina for TODAY's Real Wedding series.

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'I do!'

Newlyweds Mike Able and Laura Gibson had known each other for six years before they had their first real conversation. But after that, things moved pretty quickly.


Their beautiful wedding was photographed by Jennifer Bearden Photography. You can find more TODAY Real Weddings here.

Party time

Though the couple went to college together, their first real chat didn't happen until they ran into each other at a friend's party.

Over chips, dip and the roar of a college bowl game in the background (North Carolina vs. Tennessee, as Laura recalls), it became clear to Laura that Mike had his priorities straight: family first, then football.

In love with the same things

“That was the first time we'd sat down and talked," Laura said. "I saw his closeness to his parents. And I love to talk about college football, so that kind of solidified it for me. He still jokes that I'm way more of a football fan than he is.”

A change of heart

“If you ask him, he'll say I hated him,” Laura said with a laugh. “I didn't. But, to be honest, he was dating someone I knew really well, so I only heard the bad side. If you'd told us then we'd be married, neither of us would have believed it.”

Meant to be

“I really didn't think she liked me," Mike confirmed. "At all."

Stars align

"But when we ran into each other this time, she wanted to talk to me. And she was just the kind of girl you could settle down with.”

Fans of each other

It wasn't long after that fateful bowl game that it became clear to both of them: There was no one else they'd rather spend the rest of their lives watching football with.

A perfect match

Laura invited Mike over to her place in Charleston, S.C., a week later to watch the Super Bowl with a group of friends, and the rest is history.

A lovely surprise

After three months, Laura told Mike she loved him and Mike started thinking about a ring. While Mike jokes that he regrets not popping the question on the 50 yard line in honor of their courtship, his carefully orchestrated proposal — a total surprise to Laura — was certainly one for the record books.

Plans take root

“We weren't talking marriage, but we talked about what we'd want in our future,” Laura said. And, yes, they'd inadvertently ended up looking at rings in a little antique shop in Savannah, Ga.,while celebrating their one-year anniversary.

Plot twist

That might have tipped Laura off, except that Mike had already thrown her off his trail by insisting they get their financial ducks in a row before getting married. Three weeks later, while she least suspected it, he ordered her favorite ring from the shop and began to put his big proposal plans in motion.

The mastermind

“I'm sneaky,” Mike said. “I like surprises.”

Dreams afloat

He scheduled a date night for the two of them at the local marina, but refused to give Laura any details about the evening. He prepared his boat with flowers, wine and a custom fishing rod for her that read “Be My Catch Forever” in silver.

Off on an adventure

When Laura arrived at the marina that night (with their black Labrador in tow), Mike asked if she wanted to go on a picnic and started the boat off for Crab Bank Island.

Sandwiches and wine

“He was acting kind of on edge,” Laura recalled. “He had all these sandwiches and desserts. He kept asking if I wanted another sandwich. I remember, in my best clumsy moment, I spilled wine on my pants. Then he asked if I wanted to go on a walk.”

Flying away

Crab Bank Island, also a seabird sanctuary, made for one anxious walk. “I hate birds,” Laura laughed. “I thought they were attacking me and I started running and he just grabbed my hand.”

Suddenly, the birds hardly mattered.

Part of history

Mike popped the question, and 14 months later, the couple tied the knot at their church in Charleston, the historic St. Michael's Episcopal Church.

Committed to one another

“We both felt like, the meaning behind why you get married is very much rooted in religion," Laura said of their choice of venue. "You're also making a religious commitment.”

Getting into gear

While there was no question where the couple would say their “I do's,” locking down a location for the reception proved challenging.

A special place

“Charleston is the number one wedding destination in the country,” Laura noted, “so it's really hard to get a venue in spring and summer. We know the area really well, especially Mike, who was born and raised here, and it was really important that we have the reception somewhere we hadn't been to at 20 other weddings."

A party with a view

Without much shopping around, they settled on The Creek Club at I'On in Mount Pleasant. “The Creek Club is very casual, very Charleston, and on the water," Laura said.

Blue skies

Because they loved the venue so much, they stayed flexible on the date, taking whatever was available. "We wanted April, because of the heat, but instead, we got three days after my birthday in June," Laura said.

As it turned out, the weather was ideal — no rain and no humidity.

“It was the most perfect day,” Laura said.

Fun for everyone

Second only to making sure there was a large religious aspect to the ceremony, the couple focused most on guaranteeing that the evening was a blast for friends and family.

“It was an indoor-outdoor reception,” Mike said, “and we had games outside like cornhole. We had a band and a photo booth.”

A pet-friendly bash

“People could bring their dogs," Laura added. "And part of our favors to guests were dog treats, another was custom coozies. I also ordered a lot of stuff off Etsy — all of our paper lanterns, the bright tissue pompoms hanging from the rafters, the jewelry dishes for the bridesmaids. We had a small business right here make our formal sets.”

Sweet romance

As for sweets, there was a dessert table with mini cookies, cupcakes and tarts from local favorite Sugar Bakeshop and a small, 6-inch chocolate and buttercream cake for the couple's cake cutting.

Bright and wild

The inspiration for the bursts of color in the decor came from a picture of a vibrant, almost wild-looking bouquet Laura had found on Pinterest: “I took it to our florist and said, 'I want this for my bouquet' and I took it to our wedding planner and said, 'Run with this.'”

The overall results were Southern, chic and relatively casual, which was important to the pair.

A stunning look

The bride's look, naturally, was not without a few special touches. Her classic two-tone gown, which she described as “just the right amount of Southern and fun,” had thin straps, a plunging neckline, and its own bow tie at the back. It was also, by the way, the fourth dress she tried on and the only one that made her dad tear up. But the icing on the cake was her aunt's stunning cathedral-length, Venetian lace veil.

Something old, something new

Laura's garter was made locally using her grandmother's lace and pearls, and the sixpence she wore in her shoe once belonged to her great-grandfather.

'She was so beautiful'

“We did a first look, so I'd seen her, but I just remember leading up to it, waiting, and then seeing her walk down the aisle," Mike said. "She was so beautiful. I don't think I stopped smiling for days.”

Find more TODAY Real Weddings here.

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