What You Need to Know About Wedding Invitation Etiquette

When preparing for your wedding day, there are lots points to keep in mind regarding proper protocol. There are certain ways to conduct the ceremony, the reception and all of the fine points that are essential for a marriage. There are standards for things such as attire, behavior, processes and announcements. Likewise, there is wedding invitation etiquette.

Wedding invitation etiquette comprises the proper procedures to announce your wedding. Invitations are distributed to friends, relatives and additional acquaintances who you want to attend. When conducting a big church affair, invitations go out to family and friends of both the bride and groom. When inviting individuals connected due to business, it ought to be done out of friendship, not for connections. For intimate weddings at home, the list can be narrowed down to relatives and dear friends. Thought has to be given to how many individuals can easily fit into the gathering area.

Here are some simple rules when it comes to wedding invitation etiquette:

*Wedding invitations are supposed to convey the mood of the occasion, be it formal, contemporary, low-key or intimate.

*Wedding invitations ought to convey the details about the events of the day.

*You must be obvious in both the words and the implication concerning time, location, attire, directions or any further facts necessary for the big day.

*You must mail your invitations far enough in advance of the event to permit your guests to respond and make their plans accordingly.

*When inviting a guest to the ceremony, it is correct protocol to also ask them to the reception.

There are two types of wedding invitations, informal and formal. Formal wedding invitation etiquette, the time-honored style, is most often employed when planning a large elaborate gathering or a big church wedding. Informal etiquette can be for small family weddings where things will be more casual.

Formal wedding invitations usually have the subsequent convention:

*Names are normally written out in full, including middle name

*All words are supposed to be spelled out, including the hour, date, time and year. All street addresses must abide by this guideline also.

*Rather than 3rd, or “the third”, use III (Roman numerals)

*Formal invitations have two envelopes, the main one and the response envelope

*Religious circumstances “request the honor of your presence” while non-religious events “request the pleasure of your company”

Informal invitations usually follow these rules:

*Hand written, email and telephone invitations are acceptable

*Decreased conventional use of tone and vocabulary

*Uncomplicated statements of date, time, place and directions, together with who is to be married.

Formal wedding invitations are the most universal. However, informal invitations give couples more opportunity for originality.

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This entry was posted on Friday, July 31st, 2009 at 07:26 and is filed under family. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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