The Wedding Vault Magazine: Is Tianna Evertsen Rebranding—or Recycling?
Status Update & Disclaimer — October 4, 2025
As of the date of this article, Tianna Evertsen has not responded to requests for clarification or provided evidence addressing the concerns raised by customers and former employees of La Belle Vie Charcuterie and The Wedding Vault Magazine. This article reflects publicly available information, consumer complaints, and personal opinions based on that information.
Importantly, we are not stating as fact that Tianna Evertsen is a scammer. We acknowledge that, like many businesses, not every event or transaction works out perfectly. Miscommunication, isolated mistakes, or client misunderstandings can happen to any business owner.
That is why this post also serves as an invitation. Tianna is encouraged to respond quickly and publicly and provide supporting evidence or clarification. DisputeVoice will publish her full, unedited response as long as it is backed by verifiable proof.
Even if Tianna provides proof that disproves some or all of the concerns raised here, this DisputeVoice post becomes a permanent public record—a resource for consumers to review both sides and make an informed decision.

Empty Event Venue with Canceled Decorations
Let Us Begin
In a world where the Wedding industry in the United States thrives on Insta-perfect images and elegant wedding invitations, rebranding can mask deeper issues. But when a local business owner like Tianna Evertsen shifts from La Belle Vie Charcuterie to launching a high-end venture like The Wedding Vault Magazine, it's worth asking: is this evolution—or simply an attempt to escape her past?
🔍 Is The Wedding Vault Magazine Just a Rebrand?
Title: The Wedding Vault Magazine Utah Instagram Page
Alt Text: Screenshot of The Wedding Vault Magazine's Instagram page promoting Utah's elite wedding collective.
Caption: Tianna Evertsen's Wedding Vault Magazine Instagram page presents a highly curated brand image promoting Utah's elite wedding collective.
Description: This screenshot from The Wedding Vault Magazine's Instagram account showcases the polished, professional aesthetic used to market the Utah-based wedding brand. Despite the attractive online presence, consumer concerns and the lack of independent reviews remain unaddressed.
Reddit posts in r/UtahInfluencerDrama leave little doubt:
“Beware! Tianna has created another business scam called the Wedding Vault Magazine and claims to be creating an elite wedding expo.” (reddit.com)
“The owner of La Belle vie charcuterie who has been scamming brides is now calling herself the wedding vault … scamming small businesses out of …” (reddit.com)
Despite heavy self-promotion, The Wedding Vault Magazine shows no Google reviews, no reviews anywhere online, and not even public reviews on its own Instagram page. In today's wedding marketplace, that's unusual—and a potential red flag.
🔗 Tianna's History: From Charcuterie Boards to Bridal Expos
Operating under La Belle Vie Charcuterie, Tianna promoted elegant grazing tables—charcuterie boards with marbled meat, steak tartare, bologna sausage, and accompaniments rooted in French cuisine and Portuguese cuisine. But customer complaints mounted:
"La Belle Vie Charcuterie didn't show up to her client's wedding … They wouldn't refund her." (reddit.com)
"Many of her reviews are fake … Everyone pays the same whether you got the $500 off deal or not." (reddit.com)
Now, with The Wedding Vault Magazine, concerns of similar patterns—hype with no independent reviews—are resurfacing.
🏛 Reddit Voices: Wedding Vault Magazine Concerns
“Beware! … Wedding Vault Magazine … claims to be creating an elite wedding expo.”
"It's the same owner as La Belle Vie Charcuterie—different name, same tactics."
These comments suggest the expo model may follow the same playbook: curated social media, minimal accountability, and silence when things go wrong.
🏢 Wedding Collectives and Expos: What Are They?
A wedding collective is a type of organization or voluntary association where vendors, service providers, and event specialists come together to promote their businesses under one brand or umbrella. These groups often advertise as a community of trusted professionals offering everything a couple might need for their big day. While the idea encourages group cohesiveness and a collective agreement to uphold standards, the reality can vary widely.
When structured properly, a collective reflects the principles of a cooperative—similar to a worker cooperative or intentional community—where members collaborate to elevate their services and reputation. Done poorly, these can dissolve into disorganized groupthink, lack of oversight, and misplaced trust.
A wedding expo or expo is typically a large-scale event where vendors, planners, and venues showcase their offerings. Examples like Expo Tel Aviv, Singapore Expo, or even the historical Expo Axis highlight how expos can successfully bring industries together. But not all expos live up to the hype. Some, like Expo (album) or Expo Channel, are simply names that don't reflect meaningful substance.
With The Wedding Vault Magazine describing itself as an "elite wedding collective," yet showing no independent reviews, it's crucial to apply the same scrutiny you'd apply to any social group, collective, or expo claiming to represent the best of the industry.
📢 Consumer Awareness: How to Protect Yourself
For any business claiming to offer elite wedding expos or collective vendor promotions, ask for:
- Independent Google reviews 
- Confirmed references from prior clients 
- Documented refund and cancellation policies 
- Transparent pricing—no hidden markups or fake discounts 
- A verifiable track record beyond Instagram 
If you can't find real reviews, be cautious.
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✅ Final Thoughts
Weddings are built on trust. With no Google reviews, minimal transparency, and lingering complaints, The Wedding Vault Magazine deserves scrutiny. Consumers should ask hard questions before committing—and demand real proof, not just curated Instagram highlights.
We invite Tianna Evertsen to respond publicly with documentation. Her full, unedited response will be published if provided.
Related Public Records, Documentation & Resources

