Dressing Your Wedding
Guests
When Renae' began to plan
her wedding, she ran into one novel problem: how to dress her
wedding guests.
Normally, this isn't a problem. By tradition, a wedding is a
formal event where guests are expected to show up either in
tuxedos and gowns if part of the wedding party, or in suits and
formal dresses if an invited guest.
By and large, everyone understands and accepts this. The
details of proper attire for the guests is left entirely to the
guests themselves. The bride has enough trouble worrying about
her own and her bridesmaids' gowns. Usually this works
splendidly. Most people already know what they should wear to a
wedding, or if not, they at least have enough sense to ask a
mother or sister who will be delighted to explain exactly what
they should and
should not wear.
Of course, even this does not always work. Now and then you
find a poor schmuck with a sister who has a vindictive streak
and you get a wedding guest who arrives wearing a plaid jacket,
red and green striped tie and a yellow beanie with a propeller
on top. But this is rare. Mostly your guests are well behaved
and arrive appropriately dressed, sober and with the suitable
amount of discomfort required of all wedding guests
everywhere.
Renae''s wedding was going to be a little different. She (and
her fiance of course) had decided to have a casual dress
wedding at a country club overlooking the beach. The bride's
dress was still planned as a formal gown, but the bridesmaids
would wear sun dresses and the best man and groom would wear
khaki slacks and summer jackets.
Renae' wanted her guests to know that they were encouraged to
wear casual clothes. At least, fairly casual clothes. She
wanted the ladies to come in summer dresses or skirts with nice
blouses and the men to come wearing sport shirts and slacks
with a jacket. No suits or ties, but also no T shirts and cut
off shorts if you please. And especially no swim suits and
bikini tops, thank you very much. The total effect was going to
be a casual, country club style atmosphere. Relaxed but not
scruffy. No, definitely not scruffy.
Renae' wanted to say this in a nice way, without having to
include a lengthy and offensive dress code decree in her
invitation package. There is nothing quite so objectionable as
having someone tell you in specific and didactic detail how you
are supposed to dress. Renae' was very much aware of this
potential etiquette land mine and wanted wholeheartedly to
avoid it.
On the other hand, she couldn't just leave it to chance and
simply say "casual attire" because sure as tank tops, someone
would construe casual to mean T shirts, shorts and
sneakers.
Renae' fretted about this for days, trying several versions of
her dress code message, none of which satisfied all the
conflicting requirements of brevity, inoffensiveness and
clarity.
Finally Renae' hit upon the solution: a short, humorous poem,
printed on an index sized card along with the invitation.
This would immediately let people know exactly how to dress and
would offend no one. Since the poem would also be humorous, it
had the benefit of being entertaining and therefore easily
remembered.
Renae' overcame the last hurdle of being unable to write poetry
by hiring a poet and working with him through four drafts until
she had exactly what she wanted: eight lines of lighthearted
verse which told the guests how they should dress and left them
with a smile.
With a sigh of relief, Renae' could now focus on the next
problem which needed her attention: the
weather....
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