Best etiquette.

“Do you, CCB, take Mrs CCB… and… Lisa…?”

the former. the latter could be intending to go but last-minute emergency, babysitter cancels etc. shit happens

weddings are so selfish, every day is your own anyway.

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If you’re doing a sit down meal then you probably need a seating plan, and if you’ve already made a plan that considers relatives who don’t speak English, friends who had a very messy breakup, people who don’t know anyone else, a father of the bride who doesn’t want to sit near his grandkids and a blind grandad with specific needs then having to find a seat for one extra person can cause an unreal amount of hassle.

Made it work but I was pretty grumpy about it for a bit.

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Can obviously avoid all that by having a buffet and let people sit where they like

styles out knee bend
puts box back in pocket

Who knew DIS had so many #opinions about Weddings/marriage ?

would be nice if it was down to friends and family to decide if they wanted to celebrate people as a couple rather than the couple themselves.

This happens every wedding thread, it’s a sneaky hot button topic.

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here’s some alternatives to weddings (not marriage) from my head:

. every year all your friends get one vote on who the best couple they know is and whoever gets the most gets celebrated and the rest have a little cry - bit risky this one might not work.

. just send out cards on a “couples that are lovely” day like a reverse valentines or something.

Quite

But in general DiS has a lot of #onions when it comes to ettiquette - especially when it involves trying to please parents, friends & partners (&colleagues) whose values differ greatly

Several wedding issues would be resolved if people just did away with this day/evening guest distinction. Invite people to the whole gig or not at all. Done.

Bringing an extra person.

People honk on about people not turning up = COSTING LOADS OF MONEY but each person who doesn’t turn up costs you an absolutely miniscule % of your wedding budget so… just chin it off as the risk you take.

Obviously not turning up without advance notice is pretty rude and should never be done, mind.

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as someone who’s been to more than one wedding as a +1 who knows no one but their other half recently, I can confirm I would rather not have been invited.

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It’s not just a cost thing when people don’t turn up at the last minute though. It’s more a matter of ‘oh, we thought enough of you to invite you, and then you just fucked it off’. Could have invited someone else, or spent less cocking money, etc.

At our wedding we had a hog roast so cost per head wasn’t really an issue. What we didn’t want was loads of people we didn’t even know at our wedding (as it is the best man and one of the ushers brought girls they’d been seeing for a few months, who we’d never met before and haven’t seen since, but are in loads of our photos).

Luckily she turned out to be awful and we’re not married any more, but you can see why people don’t want random folk at their big day.

Yeah but if you cared enough about this ‘someone else’ you’d have invited them in the first place and made it work. Not a criticism of yourself but I think weddings would be better for all concerned if people went “who do we want to invite?” first and then sorted the venue based on those numbers rather than going “this is our venue, now who do we have to sack off to make it work?”

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that really doesn’t seem like that much of a big deal to me, idk. and your last paragraph there really highlights the silliness of looking for complete perfection in every aspect of a wedding

We didn’t have a limit, we just picked our best friends. Was using it as an example – I don’t think there’s anyone we didn’t invite who we wanted to.

I went to a wedding last year and a few people just sent a text on the morning to say they weren’t coming. That’s pretty shitty, especially as that’s when everyone’s getting ready, bride’s excited, etc.

edit: why the fuck did I write that?

Certainly made not spending much money that bit sweeter.