At Greate Bay Country Club, I heard someone whisper, “three, two,” while a sequin cowboy hat slid across the photo booth table. June 13, and we were already counting down.
The Booth Line Started Early
Cocktail hour had that soft hum from the sax and guitar. People drifted between the bar and the white backdrop like it was part of the route. Hannibal nudged friends closer to the camera and tapped the screen with an easy smile. The first set of pictures came out with someone holding a tiny rubber chicken alongside a glass of rosé. It made sense in the moment.
By the time we moved inside for introductions, the line at the photo booth had a bend in it. A kid in suspenders kept running from the backdrop to the doorway to peek at the dance floor, reporting back to his aunt like a scout. “They’re coming,” he said, and then the room tilted toward the doors as Francesca and Joe came in grinning, taking wide steps to avoid her dress hem. When they settled into their first dance, he finally paused.
Halfway through, Francesca’s heel slid on the edge of her train. It was quick, a little dip that wasn’t planned. She laughed right into Joe’s shoulder and gave a tiny thumbs-up over his back to her maid of honor. We all relaxed with her. After that, people took turns slipping out for photos while the servers started placing plates. You could see the napkins folded into boats and, next to them, a stack of fresh photo strips that someone forgot to grab.
“Wait, we blinked. One more.”
Speeches had that mix of clinking forks and phone flashlights trying to help the videographer catch the right angle. During the mother and daughter dance, a circle formed without anyone announcing it, and then it opened again like a camera iris. As soon as plates cleared, Dom nodded once at the center of the room, and the first wave surged in. Sneakers squeaked on the floor. A cousin darted back to the photo booth, grabbed the feather boa, and returned in time for the next chorus, feathers trailing behind like confetti that never landed.
It went like that for a while. Dance floor, photo booth, back again. People started building stories on their phone screens, scrolling the earlier strips and comparing them to the newest ones. Hannibal kept rotating props so it felt new every time, and the line never really disappeared. Francesca and Joe got pulled from one side to the other, arms linked, laughing at how the same uncle showed up in nearly every frame.
An Almost Tackle for the Garter
The bouquet toss sent a tight cluster of friends into a single step forward. The flowers skimmed two hands and landed in the crook of someone’s elbow. Clean catch. The garter toss, though, had a wobble. Joe flicked it too low, it bounced off a shoulder and rolled toward the photo booth line. The room made that sound people make when a glass almost tips. One of the groomsmen lunged, missed, then scooped it with the sequin cowboy hat like a net. He held it up, proud, and a photo strip fell out of the brim. The booth cheered like it had its own team.
After cake, people drifted outside to cool off, then came right back in when the next song pulled them. Someone lost a shoe near the head table. She laughed, lifted her bare foot, and kept moving, then circled back to the photo booth with her date so they could get a “one shoe on, one shoe off” picture. It looked better than it sounds.
As the night moved toward the end, Dom’s voice cut through to cue the sparkler exit and a handful of us sprinted for one last photo. We crushed in five across, cheeks pressed, shoulders bumping. The countdown started and a stray feather tickled my nose right at one. I sneezed in the shot. We took another.
Inside again for Piano Man, arms linked tight, the room turned into a slow chorus. Someone tapped a spoon against a water glass like a metronome. When the doors opened for sparklers, the light from outside slid across the dance floor and caught a curl of feather on the ground. A kid picked it up and tucked it into his pocket like treasure, then ran for the glow.



