Wedding Suggestions
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ... Well thats a bit strong, let me rephrase, all I am saying is I would be deepily suspcious of it, make damn sure she isn't going to tell you a month before the wedding that she isn't happy how it worked out. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch -- modified at 11:18 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
bwhittington wrote:
fiancé
You mean fiancée (as you mentioned it was your girlfriend). You are her fiancé (which is the masculine form)
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." --Charles Babbage (1791-1871) My: Website | Blog
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Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ... Well thats a bit strong, let me rephrase, all I am saying is I would be deepily suspcious of it, make damn sure she isn't going to tell you a month before the wedding that she isn't happy how it worked out. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch -- modified at 11:18 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
I agree with this thought process. When they agree to cost saving methods, they are conceeding life long dreams of the perfect wedding. Now that she has a face for the groom, do not do anything to take away from her dream. Do the best that you can to give her a dream come true wedding - limited only by what you can afford. Saving money is nice, but spending it on your wedding is an investment in your future with your wife. I suggest you ask your bride to be to describe what her dream wedding would be - if she could have anything she wanted. Then see what you two can manage. Even if it does end up as a cruise, you still have demonstrated your willingness to give her happiness. It is a gesture that will remain with her forever.
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
bwhittington wrote:
does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings
Elope? ;P Okay, seriously: Keep it small. Immediate family (parents, siblings) + best man + bride's maids. Get married in the same place as the reception (therefore no transportation costs to get to the reception afterwards)
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." --Charles Babbage (1791-1871) My: Website | Blog
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I agree with this thought process. When they agree to cost saving methods, they are conceeding life long dreams of the perfect wedding. Now that she has a face for the groom, do not do anything to take away from her dream. Do the best that you can to give her a dream come true wedding - limited only by what you can afford. Saving money is nice, but spending it on your wedding is an investment in your future with your wife. I suggest you ask your bride to be to describe what her dream wedding would be - if she could have anything she wanted. Then see what you two can manage. Even if it does end up as a cruise, you still have demonstrated your willingness to give her happiness. It is a gesture that will remain with her forever.
couldn't agree more, articulated much better than I did ... Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch
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Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ... Well thats a bit strong, let me rephrase, all I am saying is I would be deepily suspcious of it, make damn sure she isn't going to tell you a month before the wedding that she isn't happy how it worked out. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch -- modified at 11:18 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
I am pretty certain that she likes the idea since she was the one that brought up the idea of eloping. She gave me several reasons of why too. 1. She hasn’t seen most of her extended family ever and the one she has she has only met once. Even in her immediate family only half of her family would come. (Two of her half siblings are in jail; she doesn’t know where her dad ran off too) All in all, she estimated she might have 20 people showing up for her as opposed to my 80 people if I limited it 2. Her mom has a record of ruining weddings. At the last one she was extremely rude to the bride and the groom and she put a whole downer on the wedding herself. 3. Her parents are extremely poor and cannot help pay for the wedding at all, which by custom the bride side pays for a lot of it. Eloping puts the burden only on her and I which is what would have happened anyway. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
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bwhittington wrote:
fiancé
You mean fiancée (as you mentioned it was your girlfriend). You are her fiancé (which is the masculine form)
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." --Charles Babbage (1791-1871) My: Website | Blog
Never knew there was a difference, thanks for the correction!:omg: Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
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Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ... Well thats a bit strong, let me rephrase, all I am saying is I would be deepily suspcious of it, make damn sure she isn't going to tell you a month before the wedding that she isn't happy how it worked out. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch -- modified at 11:18 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
Ray Kinsella wrote:
Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ...
That wasn't the case for my wife. We thought about a big wedding, but she suggested why not save the money and go to the justice of the peace. That worked for me. Almost 2 years later, she's never mentioned that she wanted a big wedding or said anything about being unhappy about going to the JOTP instead of having a traditional wedding. :)
Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Is Jesus the Jewish Messiah? The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
My wife and I were married in August of 2004. The 'traditional' wedding was at MY insistance, she wanted to elope. My reasons for the traditional wedding: she is the only daughter (she has one brother) and her mother had waited 31 years for this occasion. Yes, it was Beth and my wedding, but a wedding is more than a ceremony... it is a celebration of life, it is a hand off from parents to a spouse, a change in life, a change in status. We had a very simple wedding... she wore a wedding dress, she made the bridesmaids' skirts (they each wore a white blouse); the men wore dark suits with white shirts and purple ties. The reception was held at a hunt club building with essentially covered dish/pot luck type food... cold cuts, buns, pasta... and soft drinks. We paid for the wedding and kept the cost, including her dress, under $2000. The wedding should be a cause for celebration, not an account busting event. And, if YOU pay for it, YOU can have more control. Tim
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
First, Congrats! We saved money by taking recommendations from friends and family about caterers, florists, flowers, bought the booze ourselves, etc. Plus we rented the lobby and roof of an office building that used to be a hotel for the reception. None of that sounds like it will apply having the wedding on a cruise, but they probably have a package deal and handle everything for you.
Using the GridView is like trying to explain to someone else how to move a third person's hands in order to tie your shoelaces for you. -Chris Maunder
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I am pretty certain that she likes the idea since she was the one that brought up the idea of eloping. She gave me several reasons of why too. 1. She hasn’t seen most of her extended family ever and the one she has she has only met once. Even in her immediate family only half of her family would come. (Two of her half siblings are in jail; she doesn’t know where her dad ran off too) All in all, she estimated she might have 20 people showing up for her as opposed to my 80 people if I limited it 2. Her mom has a record of ruining weddings. At the last one she was extremely rude to the bride and the groom and she put a whole downer on the wedding herself. 3. Her parents are extremely poor and cannot help pay for the wedding at all, which by custom the bride side pays for a lot of it. Eloping puts the burden only on her and I which is what would have happened anyway. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
1. I am just recommending being careful, you don't need me to tell you that women can be tricky about this kind of thing. 2. The cultural differences between us are obviousily significant, so it would be silly of me to try apply Irish rules to your situation. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
My wife and I (fiance and I at the time) wanted a simple wedding with pies instead of cake, but my now mother-in-law took over and tripled the cost and hastles of the entire ordeal--she was paying for most of it, so we weren't really in a position to reject it (ironically, my wife's preferred dress was half the price of the one her mother insisted on buying.) All in all, our wedding reception was horrible. To this day, we both wish we had held our ground and had a simple wedding and reception on our terms. My younger brother did that and though I wasn't able to attend (no money; 3000 miles away) it was, by all accounts, a very pleasant occassion. I have long told my eighteen-year-old daughter that I would pay for her to elope, and I still hold to that. She's leaning toward a pseudo-elopement--she, her fiance [none yet, but she has a long time boyfriend] and us fly to Hawaii where she gets married on the beach. (Given my current financial situation, though, she may just have to settle for the local courthouse and a bag of Dorritos.) Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine. - P.J. O'Rourke
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
congrats!
bwhittington wrote:
We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time.
we have friends who did that. they booked a 6 day cruise from NYC to Bermuda and back, in May. i think 40 people or so showed. the wedding itself was on Bermuda, and the rest of the trip was just a big non-stop party - this was a family that really liked to let loose and party together. it rocked. everyone loved it. you can buy Cuban cigars in Bermuda. Cleek | Image Toolkits | Thumbnail maker
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
bwhittington wrote:
We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise
Just to clear things up; Would you be paying for their cruise tickets? regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry!
eh, stop bugging me about it, give it a couple of days, see what happens.
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bwhittington wrote:
We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise
Just to clear things up; Would you be paying for their cruise tickets? regards, Paul Watson Ireland Feed Henry!
eh, stop bugging me about it, give it a couple of days, see what happens.
[This was supposed to be under Paul's Post] No, it would all have to be paid by the guests. The prices right now for trips in October and November are reasonable. We've seen interior rooms for 255-450 dollars a person. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer -- modified at 11:43 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
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Any woman who says she doesn't want a traditional wedding is liar ... Well thats a bit strong, let me rephrase, all I am saying is I would be deepily suspcious of it, make damn sure she isn't going to tell you a month before the wedding that she isn't happy how it worked out. Regards Ray "Je Suis Mort De Rire" Blogging @ Keratoconus Watch -- modified at 11:18 Wednesday 26th April, 2006
Not true. My wife quite honestly did not want a traditional wedding. We had a destination wedding in Hawaii instead (with immediately family only). We were both very happy with the way it turned out.
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
Congratulations! My husband and I had a wedding that I am proud of to this day. It was beatiful, but did not cost a fortune. We had decided early on to only invite the people closest to us- meaning parents, siblings, a few close aunts and uncles, and closest friends. We had under 50 people. This meant no Aunt Tilly from Missouri, no relative that we hadn't seen in years, etc. By doing this, it made the occasion intimate and special. We had the ceremony in our local church, and the reception at a Sheraton Tara. I had made all of the table centerpieces myself, and bought a ton of tiny white lights, all of which the Tara staff put up for me. We had flowers professionally done, but kept it to a minimum (they weren't the centerpieces, ie. less expensive). We did not skimp on the meal- we had three choices (filet mingon, chicken of vegetarian) which guests chose from on their invitations. Oh I should mention, that while our pictures were being taken, hors-d-oevres were servedin a reception room, while a strolling violinist played. That violinist was later joined by a celloist in the reception room, where both played as background dining music. Since we had a small group of people, we decided not to have dancing, just the live classical duo. We had a cake, but skipped the "shove in your mouth" part- just all very elegant. We received soooo many compliments on how classy the wedding and reception was. Comments ranged on everything from how honored the guests felt because it was such an intimate setting, to my husband's relative muttering to his wife "whoa she must be loaded to have done it up like this". A friend (from England) said our wedding was akin to a traditional English wedding- very nicely done. And I spent 1/3 of what I knew some of my friends had spent on theirs. People can go nuts with what they spend. Just do as much as you can yourself (or your fiancee and her friends can) and you save oodles of money. Also limiting guests will help greatly. BTW, even though a cruise (or destination wedding) sounds lovely, please keep in mind that you'd be asking your guests to come up with cruise ticket money and vacation money for your wedding... Why not just go on a cruise after your wedding, and in that way, not impose upon others as much? Just a thought.
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I am not a very active member on CP. I normally just read the lounge and any articles that catch my attention. I am one of the silent members as some have described it. But I am really excited about this piece of news in my life. I am proud to announce that as of April 11th, 2006 I asked my girlfriend of three years to marry me and she accepted. We have not decided on an exact wedding date as of yet but we are hoping to have it sometime during October or November of this year. One reason we haven’t decided on a date yet is because we are not sure what type of wedding we want. We both see the benefits of having a traditional wedding; namely, being able to invite friends and family with ease and knowing exactly what to expect. However, my fiancé and I are looking to save some money doing a wedding and we are also thinking of getting married on a cruise. We have been checking prices for fares and overall we think we can save several thousand dollars if we book early. We also had the idea of inviting our friends and family to come along on the cruise also so that they can share our experience and get a little vacation in at the same time. My parents aren’t too thrilled about the idea and they haven’t said they would or wouldn’t get yet either. My fiancé and I do realize though that it is our wedding and it should be special for us no matter what anyone else thinks. Basically, besides the announcement, does anyone have any tips on saving money on weddings or any other cool ideas besides a traditional wedding? Also, if anyone has been married on a cruise, how much did it cost and how many people did you have attend? Thanks in advance for any suggestions. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
Congratulations!!! :rose: I'm afraid I've no suggestions I can offer...my marriage was a mess, quite frankly, and if I were to do it again I'd change just about all of it. ;) Anna :rose: Currently working mostly on: Visual Lint :cool: Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "Be yourself - not what others think you should be" - Marcia Graesch "Anna's just a sexy-looking lesbian tart" - A friend, trying to wind me up. It didn't work.
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I am pretty certain that she likes the idea since she was the one that brought up the idea of eloping. She gave me several reasons of why too. 1. She hasn’t seen most of her extended family ever and the one she has she has only met once. Even in her immediate family only half of her family would come. (Two of her half siblings are in jail; she doesn’t know where her dad ran off too) All in all, she estimated she might have 20 people showing up for her as opposed to my 80 people if I limited it 2. Her mom has a record of ruining weddings. At the last one she was extremely rude to the bride and the groom and she put a whole downer on the wedding herself. 3. Her parents are extremely poor and cannot help pay for the wedding at all, which by custom the bride side pays for a lot of it. Eloping puts the burden only on her and I which is what would have happened anyway. Brett A. Whittington Application Developer
In that case just go on the cruise. I wouldn't even worry about your family showing up if it would run the risk of her family showing up it sounds like. Whatever will make the two of you happy will be fine in the end. We only had about 50 people total show up to our wedding and it was fine. If you do decide on the traditional wedding don't worry about the lower number on her side. At our wedding my wifes side only counted 10 people and most of them were mutual friends from college while my side was about 20-30. Of course that's because most of her family lives in another state and couldn't make it but still, just saying it would be ok. ------------------------------------- Do not do what has already been done. Absolute power corrupts absolutely.. but it ROCKS absolutely, too.