11 Sep Tipis at Riley Green Wedding Magic
Wedding Magic at Tipis at Riley Green
Amy and Stevan's tipi wedding in Lancashire. Sun blazing, Aperol flowing, an Office-themed table plan, and a hundred guests in beautiful chaos.
Sun blazing, Aperol Spritz flowing, carbs doing their worst - and there I was, summoned to the stunning Tipis at Riley Green for Amy and Stevan's big day, ready to do battle with the post-wedding-breakfast slump. For one glorious Lancashire summer's afternoon, my job was simple: keep the party alive before the first dance and the cake cutting. (No pressure, right? Just a hundred guests teetering on the brink of food coma.)
Let's be honest, this is the Bermuda Triangle of any wedding. You've got over-fed guests, questionable dance moves on standby, and spirits as high as that one groomsman's third refill. If there was ever a moment that screamed "Send in the magician!" - this was it.
Armed with nothing but a deck of cards, plenty of sarcasm and some frankly illegal levels of enthusiasm, I mingled, dazzled, and stopped the dreaded energy dip dead in its tracks. Turns out, a bit of close-up magic isn't just a party trick - it's life support for celebrations in danger of flatlining. If you're already sold and want to skip ahead, see my wedding packages. Otherwise, here's how the day went.
The venue, the booking
Super lush, super green, neatly presented. Not too pretentious.
Tipis at Riley Green sits in the countryside between Blackburn and Preston, all greenery and clean lines, smart enough to feel premium without trying too hard. The kind of venue that lets the day do the talking instead of the décor.
Stevan booked me the year before the wedding. Smart move - the good ones get booked up fast, and if you're working out when to book a wedding magician, the answer is usually "sooner than you think".
By the time I rolled up, Amy and Stevan had a glorious afternoon, a relaxed crowd, and a programme that left me one job: keep the energy up between the wedding breakfast and the first dance. Fine by me
Faces don't lie. The proof is in the gasps.








Garden games and the limbo bar
Garden games. Let the guests look after themselves whilst the sun goes down. Ideal.
I'd been booked for the post-breakfast slot - the lull after the food, before the room kicked back into gear. While the sun was getting lower and the bar was getting busier, I set up my table well away from the limbo bar. (You don't compete with a limbo bar. You wait for it to pause.) Then I started building enough of a scene to casually attract a few punters over.
The Office-themed table plan was the detail that made me grin - I'm a huge fan of the show, and Amy and Stevan had clearly put proper thought into it. Stuff like that tells you everything about a couple before you've shaken their hand.
From there, the gig basically ran itself. A small group at first, then the gasps, then the watchers became participants, then the participants pulled their friends in. Five minutes of warm-up and there was a rolling tide of guests cycling through the table.
"Set up away from the limbo bar. Create the scene. They come to you."
When the room turns
There's a moment in every gig when the work stops being work. The first few faces land, then the watchers double, then double again. The people who'd never normally cross the room start crossing it.
Picture the inner monologue of a guest wandering past as the crowd builds: "And that, ladies and gentlemen, is as hard as it gets! There's some slick hot shot doing knock out tricks over there. He just stole your dad's watch and your aunt's PIN number. Hold my beer, I'm going to watch!"
A crowd attracts the crowd. Word gets out.
Once the crowd locked in, this is where it stayed.






The kind of gig you can't fake
This is without doubt my favourite type of gig. Everyone relaxed. No f's given. Sun bright enough to not wear an overcoat but not so hot you need a lolly. Gaggles of guests who love close-up magic. And as a side bonus - there were zero children. I detest children.
That's not just one gig - that's the whole job summed up. When the venue earns its hype, the couple book early enough to get someone they actually want, and the guests bring their own energy, my job becomes the easiest one in the room. Riley Green sits a short drive north of Manchester - one of the parts of the country I cover most often.
If you've got a wedding coming up and you're trying to work out whether close-up magic fits your day, the advice I give every enquiry is the same: see the videos, read the reviews, and book the person whose work you can't stop watching. Don't overthink it.
The whole gig in one sentence: a venue that earns its hype, a couple who book early, and a roomful of guests who didn't see what hit them. If your wedding has a slot to fill between the eating and the dancing, that's where I live.
Got a wedding of your own coming up?
If you're a year out and looking for someone to fill that exact post-breakfast slot, drop me an enquiry. I'll send you availability and a pricing PDF, usually within hours. 28 years in, 200+ five-star reviews, and (if it matters) zero children.
Photography by Caroline Goosey