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Abell Press Printing
300 Abell Ave.
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WEDDING INVITATIONS
Helpful Hints for the
Bride and Groom
In the many years that we have been in business
we've encountered countless happy brides and grooms. Not all of them
were calm. This is the most important and special day of your life
and with careful planning and organization you can increase your
enjoyment of not only your "big day" but all the days
leading up to it.
Our hope is that this information will help
all brides and grooms better plan their wedding and make it one of
the most perfect memories of their life.
Bride and Groom's
Planning Calendar
Etiquette Questions Wedding
Expenses What You Need, When You
Need It, Why It's Proper
BRIDE AND GROOM'S PLANNING CALENDAR
Six To Twelve Months
Before Your Wedding
- Announce engagement. Use formal printed
announcements and/or the newspaper.
- Select a wedding date and time.
- Choose size and style of
wedding-formal, informal, special theme.
- Set a preliminary budget.
- Schedule a meeting with both sets of
parents to openly discuss wedding expectations, costs, and
responsibilities.
- Hire wedding consultant if you plan to
use one.
- Buy a wedding planner or a notebook to
remain organized and record decisions.
- Invite attendants to be in your
wedding.
- Reserve the ceremony location.
- Choose the officiant for the ceremony.
- Reserve the reception site. Find out
what services are included or available.
- Interview caterers, florists,
photographers, videographers, musicians, etc. Be sure to taste
food options, see the work of florists, photographers and
videographers. Listen to or watch tapes of musicians. Ask for
references and discuss deposit requirements and the cancellation
policy. Hire as soon as possible.
- Create a preliminary guest list,
including addresses. Ask all parents to do the same. Include the
relationship (friend, uncle), this helps if the list needs to be
shortened.
- Begin planning the wedding ceremony and
reception.
- Write out directions and or a map to be
included on a separate card with invitation.
- Shop for a wedding gown and
accessories. Order your dress at least 6-8 months in advance.
-
Choose and order attire and accessories
for bridesmaids. Keep in mind the time of year and style of
wedding.
-
Start planning the honeymoon. If you
are leaving the country, make sure your passport is up to date
and verify any visa requirements.
-
Register for wedding gifts. Develop a
system for recording gifts as they arrive and for recording when
you wrote the thank-you note.
Three To Six Months Before Your
Wedding
-
Finalize guest list. Write each guest's
name and address on an index card and use these to track
responses.
-
Order wedding and reception
invitations, response cards, place cards, announcements, thank
you notes, informals, at home cards, hold the date cards and
accessories. Always order extra invitations and envelopes to
allow for addressing mistakes and surprise guests. It is less
expensive to order extras from the start.
-
Send out Hold the Date Cards so your
guests can reserve your special day on their calendar.
- Address invitations and announcements
as soon as possible.
-
Arrange to have someone mail the
wedding announcements the day of the wedding.
- Start making final decisions and
arrangements for the ceremony and reception, including food,
music, flowers and any rental equipment.
-
Sign contracts and place deposits with
caterer, photographer, videographer, florist, musicians and
other service providers if you have not already done so.
-
Plan rehearsal dinner. Time, menu and
guest list.
-
Arrange for wedding day transportation
for important guests and wedding party.
- Reserve a block of hotel rooms for
out-of-town members of the wedding party and guests. It is nice
to provide a list of local restaurants and attractions.
- Order engagement rings and make
arrangements for engraving.
- Have both mothers select their wedding attire.
- Confirm the delivery date for the
wedding gown and bridesmaids dresses. Schedule fittings.
-
Choose and order formal wear for
groomsmen. Remind men to submit their measurements to your
formal wear provider.
- Finalize honeymoon plans.
-
Shop for trousseau and special attire
for parties, showers and honeymoon.
-
Write thank-you notes as gifts are
received. If you are using preprinted thank you notes to
immediately acknowledge that a gift was received, be sure to
send a hand written thank you on your informal notes within two
months after the wedding.
Two To Three Months Before Your
Wedding -
Finish addressing invitations and
announcements.
- Finalize the ceremony details with
officiant.
-
Finalize details with caterer, florist,
musicians, photographer, etc.
- Order wedding cake.
-
Finalize plans for bridal luncheon or
any other wedding events.
- Check requirements for medical tests
and marriage license.
-
Schedule appointment to have a picture
taken for newspaper announcement.
- Ask someone to be responsible for the
guest book.
-
Choose small gifts of appreciation for
the wedding
party.
- Collect the forms necessary to change
your name (if you are changing your name) on your Social
Security card, driver's license, insurance, etc.
-
Continue to write thank you
notes.
Six Weeks To Two Months Before Your Wedding
- Mail the invitations (six weeks is
customary, 8 is becoming increasingly common). It is not
uncommon for guests to mail their response card without writing
their name. To identify guests if this happens, assign each
guest a number. Write this number very small on the back of
their response card before you put it in with the invitation. An
incomplete response card can now be matched to a guest.
-
Use the index cards with each guest's
name and address to track responses.
- Order wedding programs and reception
accessories such as napkins, cake boxes etc.
- Make final menu decisions.
-
Set rehearsal time and verify with all
participants.
- Have first wedding dress fitting.
- Schedule to have formal bridal portrait
taken two to four weeks before wedding. Make sure wedding dress
and shoes will be ready.
-
Make sure members of the wedding party
have their fitting.
-
Make an appointment with your
hairdresser to practice your wedding-day hair style. Bring
headpiece. Have a makeup consultation at the same time. Schedule
hair and makeup appointments for yourself and bridal party on
the wedding day. Schedule a manicure for the
day before wedding.
-
Give photographer a list of all
pictures you would like taken, including pictures you may want
of the tent, flowers, cake, etc.
-
Give videographer list of all shots you
would like included
in the video.
-
Purchase gift for fiancé, if
gifts are being
exchanged.
-
Choose thank-you gifts for parents and
any others who helped with wedding.
-
Submit wedding announcement and
photograph to newspaper. Specify date for publishing.
- Continue to write thank you
notes.
One Month Before Your Wedding
- Have your final wedding dress fitting.
- Verify that all members of the wedding
party have had their final fitting.
- Get blood test and obtain your marriage
license.
-
Make sure you have all accessories,
toasting goblets, cake knife, ring pillow, guest book, etc.
-
Create a detailed wedding schedule for
all attendants. List all events participants are expected to
attend. Include date, time, location and any responsibilities.
Give attendants the schedule two weeks before the wedding.
- Give musicians final music list for the
ceremony and reception. Specify any music you do not want
played. Have the music start 30 minutes before the ceremony.
-
Prepare your wedding toasts.
- Pick up and try on your wedding bands.
-
Confirm honeymoon reservations.
Two Weeks Before Your Wedding
- Confirm final details with all wedding
professionals you have hired. Confirm wedding night hotel
reservation.
- Give caterer your guest count.
-
Finalize seating chart for reception.
- Submit names for place cards to
calligrapher or write out yourself.
- Give a wedding-day schedule to all
attendants.
-
Finish addressing announcements.
- Pick up wedding dress.
- Have your bridal portrait taken.
-
Break in your wedding shoes.
- Fill out a change-of -address form at
the post office.
- Arrange for someone to collect gifts
brought to the ceremony and bring them to your home.
One Week Before Your Wedding
-
Verify final details with all service
providers. Inform them of any changes.
- Finalize the guest count, making
necessary changes to seating chart.
- Confirm transportation for the wedding
party.
- Confirm that the photographer
understands the list of pictures you have requested.
-
Confirm that the videographer
understands your specific requests.
- Verify that
all wedding attire has been picked up
and fits.
- Confirm that all attendants know when
to arrive at the rehearsal, rehearsal dinner, and the wedding
ceremony. Confirm that all attendants have
a copy of the wedding schedule you
created.
-
Pack for your
honeymoon.
-
Stop mail and newspapers during honeymoon.
-
Pay bills that will be due while you are away.
- Continue to write thank you notes, if
possible.
-
Pick up your marriage license.
The Wedding Day
- Be
sure that both of you eat something.
- Try to relax and enjoy the day. If
anything goes differently than planned, chances are you are the
only ones who will notice.
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ETIQUETTE QUESTIONS
Other than friends,
the groom's family and my family, who should receive wedding
invitations?
Send invitations to the
members of the wedding party and their parents. It is also
appropriate to include the officiant and his/her spouse. All
children over the age of sixteen should receive their own
invitation. Plan to order an additional twenty-five invitations to
allow for the unexpected. It is less expensive to buy extras
now.
Should I have a
return address printed on the back flap of the invitation's outer
envelope? Yes! The U.S. Postal Service
suggests that all first-class mail have a return address. It gives
the wedding guest an address to which to send a reply (if you don't
use reply cards) or a gift. Also, it ensures that you will know if
the invitation does not reach its destination as it will be returned
to the sender.
Is it acceptable to
send gift registry cards with the invitation?
It is not proper to include with your wedding invitation any
card that mentions gifts you expect to receive. Let friends and
family spread the word on where you are registered.
My fiancé and
I have had several showers and other parties given in our honor.
Therefore, some friends have given us more than one gift. Can we
write one thank you note to cover both gifts, or does each gift
require a separate note?
Gifts given at
separate parties require separate thank you notes. If you use
preprinted thank you notes to immediately acknowledges that a gift
was received, always follow up with a hand written note to the gift
giver. These notes should be written no later than two months after
the wedding.
How do you address
the outer envelope of an invitation to a married couple if the woman
has kept her maiden name?
If the woman
kept her name, address the envelope with both names on the same line
if space permits:
Mr. William Greenberg and Ms. Laura Vargas
28
Brookview Avenue
For an invitation to
an unmarried couple living together, list their names alphabetically
on separate lines without "and":
Mr. William Greenberg
Ms. Laura Vargas
28 Brookview Avenue
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WEDDING EXPENSES
The expenses listed below are divided
according to tradition. There may be variations due to local customs
or special circumstances.
Bride (or her family)
- Wedding invitations (including Response
Cards, Reception Cards etc.), all stationery and announcements.
- Wedding consultant
-
Wedding cake
-
Wedding gown, accessories and trousseau
-
Engagement and wedding photographs
- Ceremony expenses (excluding officiant's fee)
-
Reception
expenses
-
Flowers for ceremony, reception and brides attendants
- Transportation of wedding party to ceremony and
reception site
- Lodging for out-of-town bridal
attendants
- Groom's ring
- Gifts for bride's attendants and groom
-
Bridal luncheon (optional)
Groom (or his family)
- Bride's
engagement and wedding rings
- Personal wedding attire and traveling
expenses
- Marriage license
- Officiant's fee
-
Transportation of groomsmen and groom
to ceremony; bride and groom to ceremony
- Rehearsal dinner
expenses
- Bride's bouquet
and going away corsage; corsages for both mothers
- Boutonnieres for groomsmen
-
Gifts for groomsmen and bride
- All honeymoon expenses
- Lodging arrangements for out-of-town
groomsmen
-
Bachelor's dinner (optional)
Attendants
- Wedding
attire
- Traveling expenses
- Wedding gift
Bride and Groom
-
Gifts for attendants
- Thank you gifts for parents and others who helped with the wedding
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WHAT YOU NEED, WHEN YOU NEED IT, WHY IT'S
PROPER
|
WHAT YOU NEED |
WHEN YOU NEED IT |
WHY IT'S PROPER |
| Engagement Announcements |
Because of
school, military service or other plans, your wedding
date may be far in the future. If you want people to
know you are engaged, plan an Announcement using the
Wedding Invitation format. |
Either formal
or informal copy is proper to let people know your
exciting news. |
| Hold the Date Cards |
Mail them three
to four months in advance of the wedding. |
It is a good
idea to give family and friends as much notice as
possible of the coming event. This is especially true if
you have many out of town guests. |
| Wedding Invitations with Envelopes |
Used for anyone
you want to attend the ceremony (even if they are ill or
too far away to actually come.) Always lists who is
getting married, on what day, of what year (spelled out
in full), at what time, and the location. |
An occasion
this important rates more than a casual invitation.
Elegance is enhanced by coordinating with lined inner
envelopes. |
| Reception Cards |
Traditionally a
Reception Card is only used when a select number of the
guests invited to the ceremony are invited to the
reception. Nowadays, a Reception Card is included with
the invitation, even when everyone invited to the
ceremony is invited to the reception. |
This invitation
says, "You are special." Mailed along with the
invitation, this card announces the time and location of
reception. |
| Response Cards with Printed Return
Envelopes |
A must in
today's busy times, or you simply won't know who is
planning on attending. Plus, you will end up chasing
down guests who do not send a handwritten reply. |
The Response
Card has become an accepted part of wedding etiquette.
Including one with invitation is a thoughtful way to
ease the guest's responsibility to reply to formal
invitations. As a courtesy to guests, enclose a stamped,
self-addressed envelope with Response Card. |
| Wedding Announcements |
If your circle
of friends and relatives is larger than the list you
intend to invite to the ceremony, or if you have a
private wedding, you will want to send an announcement
of your wedding. |
Wedding
Announcements include the wedding date, but never the
time or location of ceremony. Mail the day of the
wedding. |
| At Home Cards |
If you are
moving to a new home and want to inform family and
friends of your new information. |
Informs family
and friends of your new address and to lets them know
whether you are keeping your maiden name. Usually mailed
with the announcement or mailed separately after the
wedding. |
| Thank-You Notes |
A perfectly
proper time-saver for those very busy days leading up to
the wedding and immediately following the
wedding. |
It's a
thoughtful way to let gift givers know their gift was
received. Always write a personal thank-you note later.
Send within two months of wedding. |
| Informals |
With or without
the name of the groom, this personalized stationery is
needed to hand write thank-you notes to those who gave a
wedding gift. |
People who took
the time to pick out a wedding gift deserve a
personalized thank-you note. Also excellent for many
other occasions where only brief correspondence is
needed. |
| Wedding Programs |
A great way for
guests to follow the ceremony and learn who is in your
wedding party. Enables you to share a special message or
poem with your guests. |
Provides guests
with a nice memento of your special day. |
| Place Cards and Table Cards |
Makes sit-down
meals less chaotic if people have assigned seats, or at
least assigned tables. |
Place Cards
list the guest's name and table and are often displayed
in envelopes on a table outside the tent or reception
room. Table Cards list a table number inside the folder
and the guest's name appears on the outside of the
folder. |
| Ceremony Cards |
Used when
everyone is invited to the wedding reception but only a
limited number are invited to the ceremony. |
This invitation
says, "You are special." Mailed along with the
invitation, this card announces the time and location of
reception. | back to
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