Showing posts with label ceremonies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ceremonies. Show all posts

Monday, 7 May 2012

You Are (Un)Cordially Invited To... - Keeping the guest list simple

A nightmare that'll have you sweating and shivering.  Quite possibly the worst experience you'll ever have.  I am of course referring to compiling your wedding guest list.  Mind boggling, headache inducing, row causing... guest lists have been the death of more than one relationship before now.  Make sure yours is not the next casualty by following these basic tips:

 From author's private collection

When deciding who to invite to your big day, start with yourselves and who MUST be there and work out.  So many people I see start by panicking about the tangent relatives and former colleagues in far flung places.  There's the bride and the groom; that's two guests down already.  Your attendants must come next.  Then your parents: that's another 4.  Any siblings and other close family next, e.g. grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins.  Then go to closest friends, token family (i.e. godparents, step family etc).  Having gone through all of these, if you have any space left over you can start thinking about work colleagues, distant family and neighbours.

From author's private collection

Your venue will dictate exactly how many people can be accomodated.  If you're holding your venue and sit-down reception in the same venue, find out the capacities of the ceremony room and the reception room.  If there is a discrepancy between the two, go with the smaller figure for your guestlist.  (As per previous blog entry, it is the epitome of bad manners to invite someone to the ceremony and not invite them to the sit down reception.)  Trust me, erring on the side of smaller numbers not only cuts costs, but it also makes putting your guest list together much simpler.  If you're worried about cutting some people out, no one is unlikely to be cross with the line "The venue is strictly limited as to the number of people we can invite."


Author's own


My most important rule is that your wedding is YOUR day, yours and your husband-to-be's.  No one else's.  If anybody makes that bigger a fuss about who should be there and not, they don't love you enough to care about what is really going to make you happy.  And frankly, their invite is the first one that can go in the bin!


From author's private collection

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

Anywhere, Anytime - the right to get married whenever and wherever you like

I say this a lot yet it always gives me great pain to say this:  The Americans are better than us at organising weddings.  I find conceding to Americans very hard to do, but there are some times when there's simply no point in denying the blindingly obvious.  Apart from having to have a blood test when you get married, which I do not agree with, Americans have the law on their side when it comes to planning weddings.  You can get married almost anywhere, any time, by any one.  In the UK however.... Oh boy!


 

The marriage laws in this country are so far behind the times they are RIDICULOUS.  We've only been able to marry outside of a religious venue or register office since 1994!  Historically, the Church of England had a stranglehold on marriage from 1754 until 1836 when civil ceremonies became legal.


All ceremonies must take place under a roof with no locked doors.  No one can be prohibited from attending a wedding.  All ceremonies must take place between 08:00 and 18:00.  This anachronism dates back to before there was electric lighting.  All ceremonies had to take place in the hours of daylight so that priest could be sure who he was marrying and the groom could be certain he had the right bride.


Currently in England and Wales, both the person carrying out the ceremony and the venue must be licensed in order for a legal marriage to take place.  In Scotland the laws are more flexible if slightly more bizarre.  Here a religious ceremony can take place absolutely anywhere, but if you want a civil ceremony north of the border, it can only take place in a register office.

Gretna Green weddings

It's time to stop all this bureaucracy.  Weddings are meant to be happy, fun celebrations and worrying about fitting in lots of groundless criteria in order to make their wedding ceremony legal.  The ANY Campaign is fighting to change the law.  People should be allowed to marry anywhere, any time.  Beaches, ancient ruins, gardens and night-time candlelit ceremonies are all prohibited under current law.  This needs to change.  The Church is looking into dropping the requirement for banns to be called on three consecutive Sundays before the wedding.  This is not only an acknowledgement of how behind the times are legal system is, but it's great news for your budget too!


In the mean time, while we're waiting for the law to catch up with the rest of society, we just have to bend the rules, not break them.  Dreaming of a night time wedding bathed in candlelight?  Head to Scotland in mid December.  Fancy paddling in the sea straight after your ceremony?  Marry in a venue overlooking the beach.  Want to marry in a garden, breathing in the floral scent of summer?  Tie the knot in a conservatory filled with flowers and scented candles.