“Every wedding needs less stress and more personalisation”
For Holly Congdon, founder of sustainable catering company Lettice Events, the future of weddings isn’t about rigid traditions, overcomplicated timelines or copying what’s trending online. Instead, it’s about creating celebrations that feel deeply personal, days that genuinely reflect the couple at the centre of them.
“Every wedding needs less stress and more personalisation,” Holly says immediately when asked to summarise her approach.
It’s a deceptively simple statement, but one that perfectly captures the philosophy behind Lettice Events. Since relaunching the family business, Holly has built a catering company that feels refreshingly modern: design-led, hyper-personalised and rooted in sustainability, without ever feeling worthy or restrictive.
“We wanted to create something that felt a lot more fun and fresh,” she explains. “At the time, catering felt very traditional. It felt like you were hiring the same company your parents might have used. We wanted people to feel like when they called us, they were speaking to friends who genuinely cared about creating the best possible day for them.”
That warmth has become central to the brand’s identity. Couples aren’t simply choosing a caterer; they’re entering a collaborative creative process where every detail is designed to feel uniquely theirs.
Why modern couples want bespoke weddings
At the heart of Lettice Events is the belief that no two weddings should ever feel the same.
“Nothing is packaged,” Holly says. “Everything is bespoke.”
Rather than offering fixed menus or standard wedding formats, Holly and her team begin by understanding the couple themselves: how they host, what they love eating, the restaurants they return to, the atmosphere they want guests to experience and, most importantly, what actually matters to them.
“We always ask couples what they’ve loved and hated at weddings they’ve been to,” she explains. “Some people care most about an amazing meal and a long family-style lunch. Other people just want the best party imaginable. That’s completely fine too.”
Once those priorities are established, the team builds the event around them.
“If someone tells us they don’t care about sitting down for a formal three-course dinner and all they want is a packed dance floor, then we lean into that,” Holly says. “We might do one incredible course, get everyone dancing sooner and then bring out amazing late-night food later in the evening.”
For Holly, great wedding planning isn’t about imposing rules. It’s about understanding personality.
“Trying to apply one formula to every couple just doesn’t work,” she says. “Everyone’s version of the perfect wedding looks different.”