Here are tips from a mom who nursed her son till he was two.
Drop one nursing session at a time. Don't try to push it, be creative and gently distract. Replace that time spent nursing with other loving activities. Use things to your advantage like a playground trip that will distract him anyway during the usual time that he nurses.
Each nursing session can take a while to drop so be realistic about how long the whole process takes. If your son nurses a lot then he's not going to understand a dramatic change and many women are disappointed by the level of independence a baby weaned too fast (not too early, too quickly if I'm clear) will show. I wonder if that's because they got the wrong message from mom when the weaning was so abrupt?
Anyway, personally I think tweaking things till you have only a morning and bedtime nursing seems reasonable. Let that be a comforting routine for a while then introduce a new lively morning routine with a bounty of fruits and include something like The Wiggles song Fruit Salad, Yummy Yummy to make it interesting. That process won't take long and as with each nursing session that you drop, you are still Mommy in these moments so remember that it's okay to follow his cues and if you think he's just not ready yet, put it off a few days and try a different way later.
To drop that last night time session, it takes changing the bed time routine. And for my son, he was nearly two when I started making his nursing session shorter and shorter at night through various ways. Like not letting him fall asleep at the breast, offering him a cup of milk before bed to tank his belly up, etc... And I even would sometimes express a little discomfort and he'd ask what was wrong and I'd say Mommy's milky hurts and he'd ask for the other side. And then I'd say okay happily but after a few moments say the same thing. And he'd be content just to be rocked at that point, not wanting to hurt me. But I was gentle and if he still wanted to nurse I wouldn't protest it, and after a few minutes I'd find another way to stop him gently.
Eventually I had to cut him off totally so I told him mommy's milky was all gone and he was pretty upset that first night, but I assured him it was okay and that he could have it a different day. He understands different now. That first difficult night was one week ago today. It was the only difficult night. The following night we had the same discussion but he accepted it easier. And we have worked new elements into our night time routine to replace the comfort he got from nursing. Now I make up elaborate stories about giraffes and lions playing hide n seek and you name it!
He's not even expecting it anymore.
The gradual weaning is not only easier for the baby, it's a lot easier on your hormones and patience levels. At least that was true for me. I noticed when I cut too many nursing sessions at once (like all night time feeding at once) I was extremely moody and irritable and realized why only after suffering through it confused for a while. Then when he went without nursing for three days recently I cried with a broken heart because it felt forced (his father started putting him to bed abruptly out of embarassment when his family visited from out of state). So I backpeddled and went about it a lot gentler and on my and the baby's terms. Best advice I ever got was to ignore the rest of the world when it comes to the one facet of life that is unique to me and my son only.
Good luck and congrats on making it so far!!