Wedding Etiquette Invitations
Name The Third
Doing the Wedding
Invitation
Weddings should be well-planned. Any bride or groom will not
want the one important event in her and his life to be just
ordinary. That is why it is important for would-be-wed couples
to be enlightened and follow several wedding etiquettes.
A lot of mistakes, misdeeds and bad gestures almost always ruin
or spoil weddings. Be it on the part of the bride and the
groom, the parents, the guests or even the bride’s maids and
groom’s men, there are wedding and proper etiquettes that could
be adhered to.
Wedding etiquettes are important so people can show to others
that they have been raise well and with good and proper
breeding. People’s actions also speak a lot about a person, and
most uf us want others to speak good of us.
Wedding etiquettes: From the top
Wedding etiquettes are followed even during the initial stage
or phase of the wedding---the planning and short listing of
guests.
Today, soon-to-be-wed couples are almost always hiring wedding
planners to take care of even the smallest details of the forth
coming wedding.
But there are still several aspects where the couple should
attend to personally. For one, doing the wedding invitation
should not be left to the wedding planners.
The soon-to-be-wed couple should make sure that their wedding
invitation is personalized. Of course, they are overjoyed in
their coming blissful matrimony, and it should show and be
conveyed through the wedding invitation.
Sincerity of wordings and aesthetic style of the wedding
invitation will certainly do a lot of wonders.
There are a few other mediums the couple could use today to
convey invitations to short listed guests. For one, the guests
can be reached through e-mail.
E-mails are almost always informal. Through this, the language
used is more personalized, thus, sincerity can be truly and
freely conveyed.
Another informal channel if conveying wedding invitations is
through word of mouth, or the gossip factory.
Words spread faster than we know. Through this, the invitation
is conveyed in the third person manner. For example, a forth
coming wedding of John and Gina is conveyed through the
following word of mouth entry: “Hey, John and Gina are tying
the knot this Saturday, 6 pm at the Imperial Suites. I heard
the couple’s wedding would be strictly formal.”
Doing the formal wedding invitation
Most wedding experts and life stylists still recommend formal
wedding invitations over other forms of invites.
Formal wedding invitations will convey sincerity, style and
seriousness. But did you know that the words used in wedding
invitations will equally hold a great weight or bearing as that
of the message itself?
In adherence to numerous and multiple wedding etiquette guides,
the words in the wedding invitation should be written in the
third person. Meaning, the pronouns used should be he, she,
him, her, their, them.
The invitations, bearing the third-person writing format should
strictly be printed on heavyweight cream, white or ivory paper.
Even the font style should be paid much attention to. According
to several wedding etiquette books, traditional and formal
wedding invitations should be using classic style letter fonts
like Roman.
More on wordings for wedding invitations
In our modern times, the couple usually pays for all the costs
of the wedding. But did you know that traditionally, it is the
bride’s parents who carry the burden?
Western wedding etiquettes have it that the parents of both the
bride and the groom can shoulder the expenses for the coming
wedding. This may not be economical and likely on the part of
the parents, but that is wedding etiquette, and the tradition
must live on.
Usually, since the parents are the one covering the wedding and
the reception, wedding invitations are written, still in the
third person style, but as if the parents are one the inviting
the guests.
To illustrate clearly how wedding invitations should be worded
in accordance to wedding etiquette guidelines, check on the
following examples:
Traditional third-person wedding invitation styles
---when the bride’s parents
are the hosts:
Mr and Mrs Robert Murdoch
Request your honorable presence
At the wedding of their one and only daughter
Cheryl Murdoch
to
Mr Joseph Stokes
---when both the bride’s and the groom’s parents are
hosting:
Mr and Mrs Robert Murdoch
and
Mr and Mrs Ronnie Stokes
Request your honorable presence
At the wedding of their one and only daughter
Cheryl Murdoch
to
Mr Joseph Stokes
The examples above show clear and formal invitations in the
third person style.
So there. If you are planning to get married, pay attention to
the invitations you would be distributing. Remember, the
wedding invitations should be the first statements you would be
releasing as a couple to a number of guests, relatives and
friends.
|