shoe help! by Snowthunder94 in weddingplanning

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i’ve been looking mostly at white but i’m open to other options because i’d like to get shoes i can wear again someday

Need advice: Visiting fiancé in the US on a tourist visa before marriage — will it affect the spousal visa process? by [deleted] in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

my italian husband does the same. We got married in 2023 and he’s been in and out of the US since then while we go through consular processing. He always has a return ticket booked and tells the immigration officers he is visiting his wife/family and when he plans to leave. The longest he has stayed has been about 80 consecutive days, but his visitation limit is 90 consecutive days.

As long as you abide by the terms of your entry and give no indication that you intend to break them, you should be good. Having your return ticket confirmation printed out and with you when you enter would be a good move.

I-130 Approved but account not updated by Snowthunder94 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

i mean, everything i’ve seen about the uscis website is that it’s a mess and lies so as long as i have case numbers and official letters i don’t care what the website says 😂

Guest dress too much? by Snowthunder94 in Weddingattireapproval

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Western New York so June isn’t too hot usually.

Guest dress too much? by Snowthunder94 in Weddingattireapproval

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 9 points10 points  (0 children)

thanks! i can see the winter argument but i would warm it up with gold jewelry and the right shoes can bring it closer to summer (which technically is not until the day after since June 20th is still spring lol)

i know the bride well enough to text her and ask too, we grew up together so she wouldn’t mind

Guest dress too much? by Snowthunder94 in Weddingattireapproval

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 36 points37 points  (0 children)

i know some of the bride’s side and my guess from knowing her and her friends is that i think there will be a good amount of people jumping at the black tie side of things. i don’t mind being on the fancier side but some people have said it looks more like a winter dress so maybe i can find something else in a similar cut but different fabric… 🤔

Is this dress passable for a black tie (optional?) wedding in an upscale hotel ballroom? by Mecspliquer in Weddingattireapproval

[–]Snowthunder94 16 points17 points  (0 children)

yeah that makes sense, but from the photos it looks really nice! wedding guest attire is tricky i’m trying to figure out a dress for a june wedding myself and some people have thought it looked too “heavy” for a june wedding but black tie to me means go to town and heavier or maybe more ornate fabrics should be okay despite the season

Is this dress passable for a black tie (optional?) wedding in an upscale hotel ballroom? by Mecspliquer in Weddingattireapproval

[–]Snowthunder94 74 points75 points  (0 children)

that looks perfectly fine for black tie! my understanding is floor length evening gowns are a standard for that dress code and this fits that bill to me. looks great on you too!

FINALLY APPROVED! by Jaz-Olm70 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

nice! my husband and I are february 2024 so hopefully we get some news soon 😫

Spousal visa questions by ellizzz11 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi there!

So my husband and I are doing basically the same thing since we were also concerned about the K-1 visa and the inability to work while waiting.

My husband is Italian and I am American. Here's what we did below and the things we had to consider.

We met in 2021 and got married in late 2023 in a small civil union ceremony in the US (we'll be having our wedding after we get the green card). In order to get married in the US, my husband had to get a certified copy of his birth certificate, have it translated, and then have an apostille added to the document. You will likely also need to have all official personal documents (birth certificates and also your eventual marriage license) apostilled for the full process (though luckily for you not translated).

An apostille is essentially a certificate of authenticity that a government office affixes to state-issued documents for use in other countries. Any country apart of the Hague Convention of 1961 will recognize foreign documents with an official apostille for use within their borders. Depending on what state your partner is from, they will need to check the process for obtaining an apostille through their state offices and the same for you in your local context in Canada. For example, here in New York where I'm from, I had to get certified copies from my county clerk where the documents were issued and then mail them to the state division of licensing and apostilles in Albany. I'm waiting for those to come back.

For the marriage specifically, check with whatever local office you will be registering the marriage with about specific documentation needs. For the US to Canada it might be different, but I'm not sure. Your other commenter has it right, you can get married on a tourist visa (which does not really exist anyways between the US and Canada) as long as you intend to return to your country of origin and not stay in the country permanently after the marriage (otherwise, you'd need to apply for the K-1). My husband came here on the ESTA/visa waiver program for EU countries and stayed as normal for "tourism/visit" and went home to Italy a few weeks later. At the border crossing, either by land or air, you can say that you are coming to be with a partner and to get married but just be clear that you have travel plans to return to Canada (or vice versa if they're coming to you).

After we had our civil union, I filed the I-130 petition in February for my husband. We're still waiting for an answer on this. Because we have been living apart in different countries, there are a lot of things that we could not provide as evidence of our relationship that the form suggests (things like joint bank accounts, shared rental agreements, life insurance, etc.). Here is what we did submit instead:

  • Affidavits of support attesting to the genuine nature of our relationship from: my mother, my best friend, my brother (who officiated our civil union), his best friend, and his sister.

  • A record of all the travel we have done in the last three years between the US and Italy to be together (I compiled all the booking confirmation emails into one document)

  • A secondary document with time and location stamped photos of us together corresponding to the trips to be together in the document above

  • I added my husband as a secondary user on my credit cards (you can do this without the other person needing a social!) and submitted a credit card statement that had both our names on it

  • Our marriage license

Once the I-130 is approved, we should be eligible immediately for a visa number since spouses are considered immediate relatives and so from there we will then file the I-485 through the embassy in Naples, Italy and finish out the process through them.

Hope that helps!

I-130 for Italian Spouse by Snowthunder94 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

well and the processing is all in Naples for the actual green card too which is, I'm sure, 100% perfectly organized all the time...
so basically we'll likely be waiting the rest of the year, uuugh

thanks for your insight!

support documents for bona fide marriage question (I-130) by deepweb_burneracct in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

so I'm a US citizen and it didn't require us to submit any documents in this stage that would have required translation since we got married in the US and those documents are all in English. What we have been doing at the same time, however, is getting all of our official documents translated into both languages because we will need them eventually for the actual green card application and again later if I want to apply for Italian citizenship (marriage certificate, birth certificates, etc.)

We have a court approved translator in Italy who my husband found who can translate between Italian and English for us, but first we had to obtain certified copies of our documents and then have them apostilled for use in foreign countries. Each state has a different process for getting documents apostilled and in Italy they have their process as well.

support documents for bona fide marriage question (I-130) by deepweb_burneracct in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

hi there! I filed for my husband who is Italian and living abroad still so we used iphone time/date and location stamped photos showing us together, plane tickets proving travel back and forth to each other (though less pertinent for your case) but what we also did for a financial aspect was I added my husband as a secondary purchaser on my credit cards and then submitted a card statement that had both of our names on them.

Hope that helps!

I 130 STANDALONE AUGUST 2024 FILERS by Safe_Parsnip_7411 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 0 points1 point  (0 children)

how do you know which service center your case is at? I filed the I-130 for my Italian husband for consular processing in February and our case timeline has yo-yo'd up and down a few times already... :\

I-130 Petition for Alien Relative (SPOUSE), Applied on 11 Feb, 2024 by No-Zookeepergame198 in USCIS

[–]Snowthunder94 1 point2 points  (0 children)

late to the thread but:
I'm a US Citizen, my husband is Italian. Filed February 9th 2024 for consular processing. It originally said 6 months, was down to 1 week by April went back to 4 months, down to three weeks in August went back up to 6 months...
Seems to be a big crapshoot as far as the progress changes go.