Out and about

































I was lucky enough to be invited to a Korean friend’s wedding. Korean weddings share many similarities with a western one, along with some Korean traditions. After the main ceremony, the bride and groom change into traditional Korean dress (hanbok) and have to catch dates thrown by the parents and parents-in-law in a big piece of fabric that they are holding - the number of dates caught symbolises the amount of children they will have.











On our final weekend in Korea, we decided it was about time we visited one of the most famous tourist attractions, Gyeongbokgung Palace.







Visited a really cool teahouse in Seoul which had little birds flying around and a stone goldfish bowl on the bathroom floor!















Photos include: Kimchi making, couples outfits, honey toast, pikachou and origami Rudolph cards.

















