
A Fairy-Tale Wedding Amid the Kentucky Bluegrass
Bespoke linens, gorgeous gardens, and heartfelt heirloom details made for a romantic farmhouse wedding
By Haskell Harris
March 5, 2026
Photography by The Browns
If it’s true that rain brings good luck to impending nuptials, then surely Will and Talley Pike are set for life. Because it didn’t just sprinkle the night of their June wedding in Kentucky. There was a deluge. The mother of the bride, Jane Scott Hodges, describes it aptly as “biblical rain.” “Friday night, the skies opened, and it poured and poured,” she says. “I called my brother immediately and dispatched him to Tractor Supply to buy every pair of rain boots they had. Everyone was bonded together. We knew we would marry Talley and Will come hell or high water.”
Footwear procured, the dramatic weather took an instant back seat to the showstopping ideas that the bride and her mom had dreamed up. After all, together they run Leontine Linens, the storied New Orleans company known for its bespoke monogrammed bedding, towels, and place settings. The wedding work had begun nearly a year and a half prior, following the couple’s storybook engagement in Ravello, Italy—which had required both a helicopter and a boat to pull off—with Talley and her mom feverishly designing ten separate monograms for both the linens and paper, a custom quatrefoil-inspired dance floor, lavender satin curtains to frame the entrance of the wedding tent, and a truly epic emblem for the cake (topped with Herend porcelain lovebirds, naturally).

All of those exacting details were a tribute to the legacy and quality of Leontine, which Jane Scott founded nearly thirty years ago when she was compiling her trousseau for her own wedding and discovered a gap in the traditional monogram industry. The decision to hold the ceremony and reception at Millers Run Farm, a private property in Georgetown, Kentucky, was also a nod to family history. Jane Scott and her husband, Philip, tied the knot there, and the locale is right down the road from the house where they relocated their family (including then eight-year-old Talley) from New Orleans in 2005 after Hurricane Katrina. “I spent the bulk of my childhood in Kentucky with donkeys and Pygmy goats and my horse, Irish,” Talley says. “My happiest memories are in Kentucky, and having the wedding at the farm just felt like us.” Jane Scott agrees that the full-circle homecoming provided a soulful backdrop. “The very best compliment we received came from a childhood friend of mine who said, ‘The wedding felt like a big hug.’ That’s exactly what we were after. Something warm, personal, and welcoming.”

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