Our work is meant to be experienced, inviting guests into a space that feels thoughtful and memorable.
Herella offers a full scope, design led approach through florals, day of details, and custom builds that work together to create cohesion . Each element is designed to support a singular vision. Through close collaboration, we translate ideas into tangible spaces that feel personal, elevated, and lasting.
Herella is a name with meaning.
It speaks to sisterhood, to heritage, to feminine strength, and to the act of creating something from the ground up with your hands. That has always been at the center of our work.
Not just making things beautiful, but building spaces that feel intentional, personal, and lasting.
This name feels like us.
Introducing Herella Design, our new name and the clearest expression of what our work has become.
After nearly eight years of building Vine & Oak, we found ourselves in a season of reflection. Growth has a way of clarifying what matters. It asks you to look at what you have created with gratitude and then gently question whether it still represents who you are becoming.
Vine & Oak shaped us. It carried our early ambition, our creative risks, and the foundation of what we now know to be true about ourselves. Letting go of that name felt less like an ending and more like watching something you raised step confidently into its own life. Emotional, yes. But undeniably right.
At our core, nothing fundamental has shifted. We have always believed design is not simply what we do, but who we are. It informs how we see, how we build, how we serve. Our commitment remains the same. Every client should feel deeply heard. Every experience should feel intentional. Every detail should work in harmony with the next.
This is not a departure, it is a refinement.
Welcome to Herella Design.
@graceandardor@bardotbridalhair@diana_k_beauty
3....
The higher the budget, the louder the self doubt.
I didnât expect that part. I thought charging more would feel like a clean confidence upgrade, like you hit a new level and everything clicks. Instead, the rooms got bigger, the expectations got sharper, and that little voice got really good at asking, âAre you sure you can pull this off?â
When you start leading larger builds and putting bigger numbers on the proposal, it can feel like everyone is watching for you to slip. But hereâs what I keep realizing. Most of the people in those big rooms still feel unsure too. They just got practiced at moving forward anyway.
So if youâre stepping into a higher tier and feeling the nerves rise with it, youâre not failing. Youâre expanding.
@shannonwellingtonweddings@graceandardor@harrisonfilms@airhairandmakeup@freshdesignsflorist@alexandrasebastionco
Evolving is such a strange mix of feelings. Exciting, uncomfortable, clarifying. Itâs letting go of what worked before, even when youâre grateful for it. Itâs trusting your taste as it sharpens, and allowing your business to grow into what it was always trying to become.
Weâve been in that season lately. Quietly refining, making bigger decisions, and building with more intention than ever. And it finally feels like itâs time to share whatâs next.
We have a very exciting announcement coming this week. The kind that feels like a deep exhale and a big leap at the same time.
Stay close.
We actually love small at home events, because you can feel every choice.
When itâs done well, itâs never because the house is overflowing with âdetails.â Itâs because someone thought through the night. The lighting is warm. The music is right. Drinks are easy. The table feels pulled together, but you can still actually sit and talk.
The biggest tell is comfort. Are guests relaxed within five minutes of walking in. Can they move around easily. Does everything feel cared for without feeling staged.
It's not always just about creating that "wow" moment but also a cared for moment.
@lovehausevents@the.social.events@chezmichaelcapemay@sunnstudio.co@gotoshout@mysterymachinemusic@airhairandmakeup@makeupbysarahgt
Thoughtful design feels inevitable. Overdesign feels anxious.
Thoughtful design starts with a point of view. Itâs clear what the room is trying to say, and every choice supports that message. There is restraint. Space to breathe. You notice proportion, light, texture, and how people move through the experience. Nothing is there just because it was available or trending.
Overdesign usually comes from fear. Fear the room will feel empty. Fear someone wonât âget it.â Fear that more detail equals more value. So things get layered on top of each other until the story gets noisy. Every surface has a moment, every corner is styled, every choice competes, and the event starts to feel busy instead of intentional.
A simple gut check we use is this: if you remove one element, does the design get quieter and stronger, or does it fall apart? Thoughtful design can handle editing. Overdesign collapses without its extras.
@shannonwellingtonweddings@moorestowncommunityhouse@dusoleilphoto