Croatian Wedding, Cokeburg, PA, 1984
The bridal party lines up for a wedding picture. The best man, or "kum," wears an embroidered "peskir" over his right shoulder, knotted at the waist on his left side. All attendants wear sprigs of rosemary, a good luck symbol tied with blue, red, and white ribbons.
Katrina Thomas's notes: Croats are Slavs, who emigrated from the nation state of Croatia, once part of the former Yugoslavia. They are predominately Catholic. Their folk music is played by plucking a tambura, a Balkan string instrument made in five different sizes. I photographed two marriages, one in NYC and the other in Pennsylvania farm country. The country wedding keeps many traditions because the bride is descended from immigrant families, who came to mine coal when it was a company town, known as Shaft Four. The village population of 890 swells to 1200 to celebrate the nuptials of the mayor's daughter, who is an accomplished folk dancer and musician. Seven tambura groups play constantly from morning until after midnight, several starting before breakfast, one leading the procession to church, another accompanying Schubert's Ave Maria during the nuptial rite, various providing music for dancing, and finally after the newlyweds depart tamburas continue to set the beat for rock 'n roll.
Thomas, Katrina (photographer)
1984
1 photograph : black-and-white
reformatted digital
North and Central America--United States--Pennsylvania--Washington--Cokeburg
BMC-M59
Photographer's categories: Post-nuptial , Documentation , Bridal attendants , Best man , Traditional apparel , Good luck
BMC-M59_20-05