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| Inviting
Your Guests |
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Either
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interested in.
Introduction
When to compile your guest list
Who to invite
Inviting guests' unmarried partners
Inviting children
How many guests to invite
Who sends the invitations
Style of invitations
Invitation
wording examples
Addressing your invitations and envelopes
When to send your invitations
Enclosing your wedding list
Enclosing further items
Receiving replies
Compiling your guest list can become the most contentious part of
your wedding preparations since it is usually not possible to invite
all your family and friends due to the constraints of your budget
and venue capacities.
In particular, difficulties will arise if you both have large families
and circles of friends, since you will need to decide where to draw
the line between family and friends you know well and those that you
don't. Usually, parents will want to invite many relatives, whereas
you may want to invite more friends. Consequently, unless you have
a budget
and venue that enables all your family and friends to attend, difficult
decisions may need to be made. Therefore, great tact, diplomacy and
above all, tolerance will be needed if conflicts are to be avoided.
One of the first tasks you should undertake once you start your wedding
preparations is to make an approximate assessment of the number of
guests you and your families would like to attend. Taking into account
the size of your families, your circle of friends and your budget.
This will then help you with the task of choosing your ceremony venue
and, in particular, the reception venue to ensure that they have the
capacities you need. Once you have booked your venues you will know
the maximum numbers that can be invited to your wedding.
You should then consider compiling your detailed guest list at least
six months before your wedding. This will allow you two to three months
to carefully consider exactly who you will be inviting and to overcome
any difficulties that will undoubtedly arise.
Since weddings are family occasions, you and your partner's immediate
families and relatives (usually one step removed such as grandparents,
aunts, uncles and cousins) are always included. You would also invite
your close friends and possibly work colleagues who you have known
for some time. Both of your parents may also have close family friends
that they would like to attend, especially friends that have taken
a close interest or involvement in your upbringing. You should also
consider inviting important people in your lives that you know will
not be able to attend due to, for example, infirmity or because they
live a great distance away. An invitation would be seen as a very
thoughtful gesture. It is also customary to send invitations to your
bridesmaids, your best man, your groom's parents and the church minister
(but not the registrar in the case of civil marriages).
It is considered that the perfect wedding guest list should provide
a balanced picture of the lives of the bride and groom and their families,
regardless of who is paying for your wedding. Therefore, as a starting
point, it is recommended that invitations are allocated using the
following ratios: one third the bride's parents' guests; one third
the groom's parents' guests and one third for the friends of the bride
and groom. However, it is often the case that adjustments to this
ideal solution will need to be made, especially where family sizes
differ greatly. For example, it would be unfair to exclude one side's
close family and friends while the other side's numbers have to be
made up of distant relatives and slight acquaintances for the sake
of making up the numbers.
Although both families will be involved in compiling the list to ensure
a good representation of family and friends, ultimately the host who
is paying for your wedding, must give the final approval.
Whether to invite the unmarried partners of your desired guests is
a common and contentious dilemma. Although it is usual for each party
to adopt a system to help them ration the number of invitations they
have, long term unmarried partnerships are almost socially equal to
marriages. However, short term relationships are not and therefore
do not need to be acknowledged socially at an important event such
as your wedding.
Whether to invite children to your wedding is an emotive and therefore
important decision to make from the outset, since venue capacities
make no distinction between young and old (from a numbers point of
view). For some couples, especially those who are having several children
in their bridal party, children are an essential ingredient to the
day. For others, the thought of young children disrupting their wedding
ceremony and running riot at the reception is too much to bear!
If you decide to have children at your wedding, there are a few things
you can do to help minimise the possible disruption:
Ask your ushers to request that guests
with children under the age of five seat at the rear of the church
(or marriage room in the case of civil ceremonies). Therefore, if
the children become noisy, the parent can remove them quickly.
Arrange for a children's entertainer to
amuse the children at the reception venue while the ceremony is taking
place. This could also be extended to cover the wedding reception
during the meal and speeches.
A less expensive option than the above would
be to provide a children's entertainer or crèche facility at
the reception venue during the meal and speeches only. You can obtain
a list of registered child minders from the local authority that covers
the area that the reception venue is situated.
Make up or buy children's activity packs
to keep them occupied during your wedding reception.
If you decide not to invite children to your wedding, therefore omitting
their names from the invitations, the hosts will probably receive
enquiries requesting clarification. Therefore, it would be wise to
have a prepared response along the lines of "Because of the restriction
on numbers at the venues (or limitation of your budget), we are unable
to invite children because we have so many close family and friends
we wish to invite". Most people will be understanding and even
welcome the opportunity to have a break from their children! However,
you will no doubt, receive some refusals, especially from those with
very young children and from women who are breast feeding.
.
Although this point may seem to have been covered above, not all those
you invite will be able to attend your wedding due to prior commitments
such as holidays or the inability to get time off work particularly
if your wedding is held on a weekday. Therefore, you should draw up
a reserve invitation list comprising of about 20 per cent by number
of your main list to cover for refusals. It is important to bear in
mind that there is no problem with sending out a second wave of invitations
so long as you do not leave it insultingly late and thereby making
it obvious to the recipients that they were not your first choice!
There is also the need to split your invitations between those guests
you would like to attend your ceremony and wedding reception and those
you wish to come to the evening reception only. This split will, obviously,
depend upon your venue capacities, your budget and the closeness of
family and friends.
It is traditional for the bride's parents to host their daughter's
wedding and therefore be responsible for sending the invitations,
receiving the replies and dealing with wedding list enquiries. This
is even the case where the bride's parents are separated or divorced
or where the groom's parents are making a financial contributution,
whether small or large. In the latter case, the generocity of the
groom's parents should be appropriately acknowledged in the speech
by the father-of-the-bride.
Where the bride and groom are paying for the whole of their wedding,
it is acceptable for them to be the hosts and therefore be responsible
for the invitations etc.
Once the other parties concerned have drawn up their guest list, they
should send a list of names and address to the host so that the invitations
can be written and posted. If you are allowing children to attend
your wedding, it is usual to send a separate invitation to each child
that is 16 years of age or older.
The style of your invitations will give your guests clues about the
style and formality of your wedding. Many wedding invitations remain
in the traditional form as shown below, with black script printed
on folder white or cream matt card. An invitation of this style clearly
indicates a traditional and formal wedding.
Today,
however, there is a tremendous choice of beautiful wedding stationery
designs available ranging from inexpensive pre-printed designs to
elaborate and personalised designs to co-ordinate with your colour
scheme and/or theme. Clearly, your own personalities and the formality
of your wedding can be reflected in your choice of invitation design
and style.
To view the advertisements of wedding stationery companies advertising
on our site please visit wedding
stationery in our products and services section.
The numerous permutations of invitation wordings can be found in our
separate article Wedding Invitation Wording. Please click
here to visit this page.
Unless a space is provided for filling in the guests' names within
the invitation wording, the guests' names should be written in the
top left hand corner of the invitation. Guests' names should always
be hand written using a fountain pen.
Your guests' names are written in a 'social' style. For example, Mr.
and Mrs. David Cox, Miss Sally Cox etc. Prefixes and decorations are
not written on the invitation but should be included on the envelope.
For less formal wedding invitations, it is usual to omit the hosts'
titles such as Mr. and Mrs. Therefore, the invitation would read "Jeremy
and Jane Smythe request the pleasure of..." When writing the
guests' names on your invitations, you should match the style of the
hosts' name, for example, "Jeremy and Jane Smythe request the
pleasure of the company of Michael and Jackie Cox..." You would
also substitute pm for o'clock.
The following table gives a guideline of the "socially correct"
forms of address for your invitations and envelopes. You will see
that in the case of married couples, both are named on the invitation
but the envelope is addressed to the wife. The only explanation we
have found for this is that a wife was once seen to be resonsible
for the couple's social arrangements. However, in theses days of sexual
equality this is not normally seen as a social requirement and most
people address their invtations to Mr and Mrs. The exception to this
is where you do not know the wife of a guest. The envelope should
then be addressed to the husband.
| Written
on the Invitation |
Written
on the Envelope |
Notes |
| Mr. and Mrs. David Cox |
Mrs. David Cox |
Married couple where
both are well known. By omitting children's names excludes them
from the invitation. |
| Mr.
and Mrs. David Cox, John and Clare |
Mrs.
David Cox |
Married
couple with children invited. |
| Mr.
and Mrs. David Cox |
Mr.
David Cox |
Married
couple where only the husband is well known e.g. a male work
colleague. |
| Dr.
and Mrs. David Cox |
Mrs.
David Cox |
David
Cox is a medical doctor. This form of address applies even if
the wife is a medical Doctor. Doctorates of other disciplines
are ignored in the social style. |
| Mr.
David Cox |
David
Cox Esq. |
Single
man. |
| Miss
Sally Cox |
Miss
Sally Cox |
Single
woman. |
| Mrs.
David Cox |
Mrs.
David Cox |
Widowed
woman. |
| Mrs.
Jane Cox |
Mrs.
Jane Cox |
Divorced
woman still using married surname. |
| Miss
Sally Cox and Mr. Adam Keys |
Miss
Sally Cox and Mr. Adam Keys Esq. |
Unmarried
couple in an established relationship. |
| Mr.
Adam Keys and Mr. Tom Smith |
Adam
Keys Esq. and Tom Smith Esq. |
Same
sex partnership in an established relationship. |
| Mr.
Adam Keys and Miss Sally Cox |
Adam
Smith Esq. |
Single
man and guest where the guest is not well known. |
| Miss
Sally Cox and Mr. Adam Keys |
Miss
Sally Cox |
Single
woman and guest where the guest is not well known. |
| Reverend
and Mrs. Paul Jones |
The
Reverend Paul Jones |
Church
of England vicar where the wife is not well known. |
| Father
Jones |
The
Reverend Father Jones |
Roman
Catholic priest. |
The
use of the words 'and guest' and 'and family' after a guest's
name should be avoided if possible. It would appear much more
personal if you were able to establish names.
It is recommended that you send your invitations three months before
your wedding. This should ensure that your guests have adequate time
to make arrangements to attend. However, if your wedding is taking
place during popular holiday periods such as Easter, August or Christmas,
you should consider sending out your invitations up to three months
earlier. It will be very disappointing, for both you and your guests,
if they cancelled. This is particularly relevant for weddings in July
and August since many people book their summer holiday early in the
year.The use of the words 'and guest' and 'and family' after a guest's
name should be avoided if possible. It would appear much more personal
if you were able to establish names.
Although the idea
of enclosing information about your wedding list with your invitations
seems practical, it is generally considered ill-mannered and
tactless to do so as this might imply that buying a gift is conditional
upon accepting your invitation. If your guests wish to buy you
a gift, they will make contact with the hosts or yourselves and
ask for your wedding list or for a specific item they can give
you.
It is an extremely
well known and established nuptial nicety that those attending
your wedding will make a contribution to your future marital
comfort! Appearing to ask or prompt your guests for a gift may
cause offence to many of your guests, particularly older relatives
and friends of your parents.
For further information about your wedding list, please read our separate
article The Wedding List.
There are three items that you may consider enclosing with your invitations,
although the second and third items could be sent to only those who
accept:
1. Reply
Cards
Although reply cards are more of a continental and American custom,
they are becoming more popular in the UK because they will facilitate
a prompter response to your invitations. Reply cards are usually
small pre-printed single cards, supplied with a stamped addressed
envelope.
For those guests invited to the wedding reception, you may wish
to add a note asking for any special dietary requirements or allergies.
You will note that no provision has been made for a refusal since
invitees will usually wish to write to the hosts giving a reason
for their refusal.
In case the reply cards are returned and the guests' writing is
illegible, it is suggested that a number is written on the reverse
of the card which corresponds to a number put against each guest
on your master list.
2. Maps
Unless your guests live locally, it is advisable to enclose a
map that clearly shows the ceremony and reception venues together
with written instructions of how to get to the ceremony venue
from the main roads into the area as well as instructions on how
to get from the ceremony venue to the reception venue.
3. Accommodation
Information
Some guests may not wish to travel home immediately after your
evening reception, so a list giving details of local hotels and
guest houses would be helpful. You should ensure that all budgets
are catered for and include single and double room rates. If your
evening reception is in an establishment that has rooms, such
as a hotel, it should be possible to negotiate reduced rates,
especially if your wedding is on a Friday or weekend when business
guests are absent.
As an alternative to sending out all three items with your invitations,
you may wish to just enclose a reply card. When you recieve an acceptance,
you could then send out a map and accommodation information together
with details of your wedding list, if requested.The use of the words
'and guest' and 'and family' after a guest's name should be avoided
if possible. It would appear much more personal if you were able to
establish names.
Most guests will respond to your invitations fairly quickly. However,
there will undoubtedly be those who do not respond within a reasonable
time (within two to three weeks), and who will need a telephone reminder.
This should still give you sufficient time to invite guests on your
reserve list should the calls reveal any refusals.
Click here to find wedding stationers in our Products and Services Directory.
If you still have any unanswered questions about inviting guests
to your
wedding, please post your question on our Wedding
Forum.
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