eidi aw Hank Win nd's photo albui cute," she though €0 eight months later, anot er friend, Michael Kelter, arranged a blind date with that cute guy in the photo, unaware that she ever noticed his picture. "Our first date was at Fran O'Briens Maryland Crab House in Auburn Hills, and we closed down the place," said Heidi. As a wedding photojournalist, Katzman captures special moments in other people's lives, but she felt instinctively this was a significant moment in her own life. And she knew they clicked. After a one-year courtship, the romantic proposal by candlelight occurred during a power outage in Charlevoix. "I thought the power failure was planned," chuckled Katzman. On September 9, 2001, Heidi Katzman married Henry Wineman III at The Ritz-Carlton in Dearborn. "Over the years I've had the advantage of going to many weddings, and I knew I wanted something different," explained Katzman. Elements combined to ensure the unique- ness of the occasion: Waiters served lemonade prior to the cer- emony; the couple provided pocket-size programs; handker- chiefs, as well as kippot, were handed to guests; ushers escorted guests separately to the round and square tables in the ballroom; the waitstaff took individual din- ner orders; and a painted scrim was incorporated into the decor (fabric backdrop creating an illu- sion often found in dramatic per- formances). According to wedding planner Darin Asselin of Bootsie, Winkie and Miss Maude's in Rochester, "The evening was a theatrical production." — Carla Schwartz STYLE AT THE iN • JUNE zoos • 1 7