After the ceremony, guests enjoyed cocktails and donned Willie Norrisâs âPromote Homosexualityâ enamel pins as they found their table numbers. âLibbyâs foodscapes looked like theyâd been painted into the scene by a Dutch master,â says KB. âIf you ever went to MeMeâs Diner in Prospect Heights, you know how comforting, delectable and queer her cooking is. She stuffed little squashes, made absolutely perfect steelhead trout, and made braised beans so good that they were highlighted as an enthusiastic talking point of the entire evening. Beans! Sheâs a genius.â Rather than curtaining off the kitchen space, her cooking became a feature of the party. After dinner, there were toasts and a performance by Outcalls, a band made up of Lilyâs sister, Britt Olsen-Ecker, and Melissa Wimbish, who performed songs including âDreamsâ by The Cranberries and âCome to My Windowâ by Melissa Etheridge (the latter inspiring an impromptu singalong).
âWe dressed up and got down on the dance floor to queer hits including but not limited to: âWhatâs Up?â by 4 Non Blondes, âAll The Things She Saidâ by t.A.T.u., âCall Your Girlfriendâ by Robyn, âImmaterialâ by Sophie, and more,â says KB. âA unique moment we organized was the Hava Nagila being sung by our friends and family. To be launched to the heavens in chairs made from turned hardwood with the only music being the clapping and singing of our loved ones, it was an amazing way to celebrate and share one of the first modern folk songs in the Hebrew language.â After the dancing, âwe all lounged on the leather couches and cow hides into the wee hours of the morning, and a dear friend of ours, Simone Thompson, passed around a vintage copy of On Our Backs, the first women-run erotica magazine as well as the first to feature imagery and words for a lesbian audience.â
Like any true party, a splash in the pool took place thanks to their friend Sam Wyer, who returned to the celebration sopping wet. âHis silly smirk while standing in a puddle of water in the kitchen at 1 a.m. is an image weâll carry with us forever,â says KB. One of Lilyâs talented sculptor friends âmade a personalized Loving Cup with our names, wedding date, and âDykesâ written in gold lettering,â says KB. âItâs made with a skill and love that can only tell the tales of a lifetime of care.â Finally, the local fast food staple of Garden Catering provided an appropriately high-low late-night snack. âItâs the type of place where you men in Patagonia vests and women in Louboutins exit holding the greasiest paper bags youâve ever seen,â says KB.
Now, living joyfully surrounded by the silver pieces and collection of objects from their wedding, KB and Lily are âhappy we went in so hardââand that theyâll never need to do it again. âThe reason we wanted to have a wedding (and share it) was to create joyful imagery that could be a talisman of queer love and celebration,â says KB. âWe wanted to douse everything in effortful meaning, because the efforts of all those who came before us mean so much.â