WHERE
TO START
Your
wedding day can be a celebration of great ceremony, it can be traditional,
it can be a dramatic statement about you both, or it can be a casual,
intimate occasion.
It
can be unusual, individual, bizarre or fun to reflect your lifestyles.
It should be one of the happiest days of your lives.
Traditional
weddings are now being overtaken by less formal weddings with many
couples planning theme weddings or even fantasy weddings.
The
wedding day is a cause for excitement and happiness, a day filled
with overwhelming emotion and an electric atmosphere.
Weddings
these days are often a mix of elements, tailored to the wedding
couple’s requirements.
Rarely
is tradition completely dispensed with. The words ‘I do’
or the superstition of ‘something old, something new, something
borrowed, something blue’ are not usually dispensed with.
The
bride continues to wear white, ivory or cream. There is always a
wedding ring, a kiss and more often than not the sound of ‘Here
comes the bride’.
At
all weddings one of the highlight is always the tossing of the bride’s
bouquet and always a cake.
WEDDING
CHECKLIST
SIX
TO TWELVE MONTHS
Decide
the date and time of your wedding.
Arrange meeting between families to decide
size, style, and cost.
Draw up a draft guest list.
Book ceremony venue.
Appointment with a minister, priest, celebrant
to discuss the ceremony.
Book:
Reception venue and caterers
Photgrapher
Videographer
F lorist
Musician
Cake decorator
Car hire
Honeymoon
FOUR
MONTHS BEFORE
Finalise guest list.
Choose & order wedding rings.
Confirm arrangements for ceremony;
incl. music, readings & order of service.
Choose & order invitations & other stationery.
Finalise honeymoon plans & check passports.
Confirm reception venue &
advise selected menu.
Book musicians & entertainment.
THREE
MONTHS BEFORE
Begin a gift register with chosen department store.
Book groom's & groomsmen's suits.
Make appointments with hairdresser & beautician.
Shop for lingerie.
Order flowers, cake, bomboniere & accessories.
Book cars or other transport.
TWO
MONTHS BEFORE
Send out invitations & gift list.
Choose gifts for attendants.
Pick up rings & check engraving.
Plan a bridesmaids' party.
Mark off acceptances as they arrive.
Confirm final photographer shot list.
Confirm programme with musians.
ONE
MONTH TO GO
Confirm honeymoon reservations, pick up tickets.
Reception seating, advise reception venue.
Time the journey from home to ceremony venue.
Notify your bank of change of name details.
Arrange hen's & buck's nights.
ONE
WEEK TO GO
Wedding
rehearsal.
Pack for honeymoon.
Throw party for bridemaids.
Prepare your speech.
Check all final reception details.
Have a trial make-up & hair session.
Arrange for someone to ensure return of hired items.
Arrange for someone to take gifts home safely.
Take some time out for yourself;
have a massage or facial, go to a health spa or
away overnight with a friend.
BOMBONIERE
An
European tradition that is becoming increasingly popular in Australia
is bomboniere or ‘sweet favours’. Usually, bomboniere
is left on the wedding reception tables for guests to take home.
Traditionally
bomboniere is five sugared almonds presented within organza or tulle
circles, organza bags, or keepsake boxes. They are usually white
or pastel coloured and even gold or silver dipped.
The
tradition of giving bomboniere represents health, wealth, happiness,
long life and fertility. According to tradition, the almonds were
given to each of the female guests at the wedding. These guests
will take the bomboniere ( sweet favours ) home and place under
their pillow so as to encourage sweet dreams of the man in their
life.
Modern
interpretations of wedding bomboniere can include chocolates, small
cakes and other confectionery sweets. It can also include take-home
candles and even small presents such as a champagne flute, wine
or shot glass in memory of the occasion or bottles filled with bathsalts
or potpourri.
Disposable
cameras can be left on each of your reception tables so your guests
can take cadid and fun snapshots of each other, a great way to supplement
your professional photos of your wedding celebration.
WEDDING
VEIL
The
veil can be traced back to Roman Times when it was a complete
head to toe cover.
In a custom dating back to arranged marriages, the groom's family
very rarely let him see the bride prior to the ceremony.
The groom if displeased with the brides looks may have refused
to marry her.
Only after completion of the wedding ceremony was the groom permited
to lift the veil and see his bride for the first time.
WEDDING
RINGS
Wedding
and engagement rings are traditionally worn on the third finger
of the left hand. Any other finger is considered unlucky. This
possibly dates from the time of the Egyptians and the Greeks,
who wrongly believed that an artery ran directly from the finger
to the heart. The symbol of the unbroken circle of the ring has
certainly been a powerful one from ancient times, symbolising
unity for lovers.
Wedding
rings were often made from gold which was believed to have magical
powers and until quite recently wedding rings were rubbed on warts
and styles to charm them away. Taking off your wedding ring or
lending it to someone was thought to be a bad idea because if
it was lost your marriage could suffer the same fate. Second-hand
rings were also thought to bring bad luck.
WEDDING
GARTER
Garters
were originaly used to hold up stockings and are still regarded
by many brides
as an essential wedding accessory.
Wearing something BLUE often takes the form of a
blue wedding garter or
a garter incorporating a blue bow.
The
significance of the colour blue is that it represents Constancy and Loyalty, also Purity.
These associations have been absorbed into folk wisdom and passed
on in the form of rhyme.
Something
old, Something new. Something borrowed,
Something blue and a silver sixpence for her shoe.
BRIDAL
HORSESHOE
"LUCKY
HORSESHOE" TRADITION
The
symbolism of the "lucky horseshoe" is lost in the mists
of time but
is still a potent reminder of our culture and historic roots.
The horseshoe is "U" shaped to retain the good luck
forever.
To be effective it is essential that the horseshoe is hung by
the ribbons
which are attached to the shoulders.
The horseshoe should not be turned upside down
or else all the good luck of the marriage may fall out.
THE
ORIGIN OF THE WEDDING CAKE
In
the first century B.C. in Rome, the cake was thrown at the bride
or broken over her head as one of the many fertility symbols which
then were a part of the marriage ceremony.
SUPERSTITIONS
It
is considered good luck for the fully attired Bride to glance in
her mirror just once before leaving for her wedding,
but it is bad luck to look in the mirror after she has left the
bedroom to commence her journey to the ceremony.
It
is bad luck for the Groom to see the Bride in her wedding gown before
they get married.
It
is traditional and thought of as good luck for the Bride to throw
her wedding bouquet backwards over her shoulder towards the guests
when she leaves for the honeymoon. The one who catches it is supposed
to be the next one married.
The
first of the couple to make a purchase after the marriage is said
to be the domineering partner.
CARRYING
THE BRIDE OVER THE THRESHOLD
In
pagan times, evil spirits were thought to lurk everywhere and
carrying the bride over the threshold was
believed to be a way of avoiding them.
Another old superstition warned that tripping at the doorway would
bring bad luck to a marriage.
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