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Centerpiece Activities
The question of who will get to take home the centerpiece can sometimes be a central discussion at reception dinner
tables, particularly if the centerpiece is particularly pretty or original.
Making a game of who gets the centerpiece, then, can be an amusing diversion and one many guests will enjoy
participating in. Here are some ideas for giving away that reception table centerpiece.
How about a game of 20 questions? Give each guest a piece of paper and a pen or pencil. The MC or DJ asks a series
of 20 questions, but first gives the guests the basic background information, that is, that the answer is an
animal, place, person or thing. Once that's taken care of, people can shout out questions and the MC or DJ will
answer yes or no, and whoever figures out the answer first gets the first centerpiece, and that particular table is
done playing. The game is repeated until one person at each table has won the centerpiece.
One of the most popular ways brides give away the table centerpieces is to put a number on the bottom of the
centerpiece and give each guest a number. At some point in the evening, a number is called, each guest checks his
or her number and whoever has the called number gets the centerpiece. There are many ways to put a twist on this
traditional activity.
For example, you might provide each table with a number, but make it a lower number (ie. between 1 and 10) and the
DJ or MC could move from table to table and have each guest do something a certain number of times. So, at the
first table, for example, the guests might need to do "head, shoulders, knees and toes" six times and whoever does
it first gets the centerpiece. Or, at the second table, the guests might be required to sing the alphabet 3 times
or sing "twinkle, twinkle, little star" three times and whoever does that first get the centerpiece.
Another fun activity for divvying up the centerpieces is to require guests to produce a certain item. The DJ or MC
moves from table to table, announcing what guests at that table will be required to produce in order to get the
centerpiece. Maybe it's a Georgia quarter or a mint, or a doctor's appointment card. Whatever it is, the guest at
each table who produces the requested item will get the centerpiece.
You can always make it easy and offer the centerpiece to the oldest person at the table, or the one who took the
most number of years to finish college. Perhaps you could create an activity where the person who has the strangest
talent (as voted on by the tablemates) wins the centerpiece. Then, if possible, that person might show off the
talent for the entire reception party.
If you like musical chairs, you can play a game of musical dollar bills in order to give the centerpiece away.
Someone takes out a one-dollar bill and music begins playing. Everyone at the table passes the dollar bill around
the table and when the music stops, whoever is left holding the bill gets the centerpiece. Or this game can be
played a bit more traditionally with the person with the bill being eliminated, and the game continuing until only
one person is holding the bill. That person can then be awarded with the centerpiece. Or, for a fun twist, the bill
can be passed around and when the music stops, the person holding the bill is told to return it to the person who
first supplied it. That is the person who gets the centerpiece.
Some fun, and fairly traditional, ideas include the birthday person getting the centerpiece. At each table, the
person who has a birthday closest to the wedding gets the centerpiece. Or if there are married couples at the
table, the couple who have been together the longest can get the centerpiece, or the couple who were married most
recently. Perhaps the centerpiece should go to the person with the longest hair, or the strangest shoes (again,
this would be voted on by tablemates).
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