Twice as Nice



WRITER CREDIT: 
Twice as Nice | From Ghana to Charleston, a playbook on blending traditions and planning two celebrations
When Ebenezer Eduafo proposed to Micheala Bennekin beside London Bridge, the engagement set in motion a flurry of multinational revelry. With him hailing from Ghana and her from the Lowcountry, the couple quickly realized that their wedding festivities couldn’t possibly be contained to just one country. For this bride and groom, who met at Clemson University, that meant double the merriment with back-to-back bashes. First, in December 2023, they held a celebration rich in symbolism and tradition in Ashalaja, Ghana. Micheala stunned in a hand-beaded, pink corset gown that she purchased from a Ghanaian boutique; Ebenezer donned a caftan and kente cloth in coordinating hues. The festivities, set at his brother’s house, carried into the evening and continued the next day with a traditional “thanksgiving service” at church. Then in January, it was back to Charleston to exchange vows at Morris Brown AME—the home church of Micheala, who grew up on Morris Street—and dance the night away at Trident Technical College’s College Center.
 
With only a handful of close family members and friends able to attend both events, the pair seized opportunities to blend their cultures, serving Ghanaian food at their rehearsal dinner in Charleston and sharing a video they compiled of loved ones on both sides enjoying special moments with the couple. All told, it was no small feat planning and delivering two distinct events in a year and a half across international time zones, but Ebenezer and Micheala pulled it off, thanks to expert planning support, helping hands, and their focus locked on what truly mattered: gathering their people and celebrating their love. 
 
Tackling Two Events
- Channel a sense of place. A pink, champagne, and rose gold palette anchored both events. In Ghana, lush floral arrangements, abundant greenery, and gold and wooden accents nodded to the country’s rich natural resources. Later in downtown Charleston, the short jaunt from church to reception practically begged for a powder pink Cadillac Eldorado.
 
- Divide and conquer. Planning even a single wedding can feel overwhelming, but for a bride and groom who play to their strengths, it becomes more manageable. Here, Michaela was the “ideas person” and keeper of the timeline. Ebenezer, on the other hand, organized and tracked all finances with spreadsheets.
 
- Lean on your people. Family is central to the couple, and they didn’t hesitate to tap their network for help (especially crucial in Ghana as they planned from afar). The wedding coordinators were either family or family friends, and others close to the duo helped with everything from printing invitations to photography and emceeing. 
 
- Stay focused. There’s a lot to juggle—and pay for!—when planning two events. Streamline vendor selection and decision making with a venue that includes rentals and catering. Michaela also found cost efficiencies by designing the invitations herself and seeking affordability in personal items, like her shoes. “People don’t remember the lavish details,” she notes. “They remember the special moments.”

The Wedding Row

October 23 2018
If how they saved their wedding foretells how they’ll live their marriage, we have every confidence in Jess and Geno. (And yoo-hoo to you other hurricane season brides, listen up extra close.) The...

October 22 2018
The Wedding Row: Tell us about how you two met. Kathryn: Hunter and I met through mutual friends in the fall of 2011 at a bar called Town Hall in Washington D.C. It was the “Clemson bar”...

October 19 2018
With couples getting anointed “Mr. and Mrs.” every weekend in the myriad nooks and crannies of Magnolia Plantation & Gardens, the site’s seen more than its fair share of wedding day décor. And as...

October 18 2018
Becca and Tanner started dating when she was at Sweetbriar College and he was at Hampden Sidney College. Seven years after they started dating, they were happily ensconced in Charleston while he...

October 17 2018
TWR: Where did you meet? Madison: At work. A role in my job “allowed” me to go to Paul’s desk every day. Four months of professional interaction and happy hours led to us dating. TWR: When did you...

October 16 2018
If you’re a bride-to-be whose addicted to happily ever after stories; if you’re a romantic looking for some fuel to add to your hope tank; or if you have a friend who falls into that category (and...

October 15 2018
Katie and Mike met through work (she was the chief of staff for the Republican National Congress and he was her predecessor), so it made sense that his proposal was touched by politics as well,...

October 12 2018
Wimberly Fair not only has one of the coolest names (yep, it’s her real moniker) in the wedding world, she’s also one of Charleston’s biggest, most whimsical talents. Today she shares about the...