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Curated wedding supplier

Marisol Reid Events

Wedding planning & day-of production Curated partner

A planning-aware profile on why this collaborator stands out, where they fit well, and what couples should understand before booking.

We recommend partners when the work is strong, the collaboration is reliable, and their presence helps the wedding feel better rather than harder.

Real weddings & credits

Published stories where this partner is credited on the wedding team, grouped so you can judge fit by venue, role, and the kind of day they helped shape.

No published stories list this partner on the team yet. When a story goes live with them attached, it appears here automatically.

Who they are

Kinesis does not charge referral fees; listings reflect repeat collaboration on real wedding days.

Fit-first planning for estates, ballrooms, and Tobago weekends—run sheets that still make sense for photo, film, and real Saturday pressure.

This partner is best understood through how they shape the day — not just the category they belong to, but the role they play in making the wedding feel polished, calm, and well supported.

We’ve shared north-coast estates, downtown Port of Spain hotels, and multi-day Tobago itineraries with their team. The through-line is calm authority—your mother isn’t negotiating the timeline in the parking lot because the plan was already socialised in the week-of call.

Why Kinesis recommends them

The best recommendations come from real working experience: communication, consistency, standards, and how well they hold up once the wedding is live.

Photography and film need honest buffers, not aspirational ones. Marisol’s run sheets tend to survive contact with Trinidad traffic, long Catholic homilies, and emcees who love the mic—so we’re not rebuilding the day at 4 p.m.

They speak hotel banqueting and estate gate rules fluently. That matters when load-in windows, generator placement, or tent sidewalls affect where we can stand for vows.

Where they are strongest

  • Ceremony-to-reception transitions on tight urban timelines.
  • Outdoor estates: shade plans for elders, wind-aware ceremony flow, realistic portrait slots.
  • Tobago weekends: ferry-aware scheduling and backup beats when weather slides portraits.
  • Vendor diplomacy—one point of contact when photo, film, band, and house AV need the same fifteen minutes.

Who they tend to suit best

  • Couples who want a single authoritative run sheet—not a Google Doc everyone edits the morning of.
  • Diaspora planning with family on multiple continents and a need for week-of calls that actually include vendors.
  • Estate, hotel, or Tobago itineraries where traffic, ferries, or weather can rewrite the afternoon.

Fit, coverage & booking

Category and service-area lines stay tight—use the stories above for day-level context.

What to ask before booking

The right questions usually have less to do with marketing language and more to do with workflow, flexibility, communication, and how their strengths match your actual plans.

Ask how they brief sound reinforcement for open-air vows before you sign the DJ separately—mic strategy should be one conversation.

If you’re diaspora-planning, confirm how many week-of calls they run and who joins (planner only vs. full vendor roll call).

Partial planning still needs a named owner for the run sheet on the day; clarify what you’re holding vs. what they execute.