So this question has been on my mind for a while and i would love to hear some peoples opinions and stories. What is the best wedding you have ever attended and why? was is the time of year? the food, drinks? The entertainment? The theme? The favors? Size of wedding? Venue? Special suprises?
Please list anything that really stuck out to you, as a guest, something that really made the whole experience enjoyable beyond any other nuptial event you attended.
Re: Best wedding you have EVER attended
1. the dj at one wedding called the bride by the wrong name, not once, but twice.
2. the b and g did not think much about the layout of the event, so the dance floor was no where near everyone else and it was boring to watch them do their first dance.
3. I don't like buffet lines
4. the band's speakers were going haywire during the mother son, father daughter, and the MOH's ballad to the couple.
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One was in December, and it was Christmasy without being overly Christmasy. It was beautiful. The decorations were stunning, the food was top notch, everyone was having fun. You could tell it was also very expensive.
The other one that was awesome was a $5,000 wedding. It was in the groom's parents' back yard. It also had awesome decorations, food, and booze. You could tell that the bride and groom had put a lot of thought into every little detail.
all other weddings run together and seem the same. except for one i went to last year where the bar was outside the ballroom. HORRIBLE mistake. no one was in the ballroom for the first dance because they were out getting drinks. it was very awkward.
We then walked to the reception listening to a man playing bag pipes, calling the guests to the party. It poured rain at the reception, but once it stopped everyone had a blast. It was at an old winery/house. Everyone jumped into the pool at the end. The parents of the groom even did a keg stand. My friend and I ended up camping out in the woods with the rest of the guests by the camp fire.
She had 9 attendants, all wore fushia.
She drove up in a stretch suv (white).
There was over 250 people at the reception.
She had a long enough gap inbetween the ceremony and reception for me to get finished work, dressed and out to the reception place.
It was a Romanin wedding (need i say more?).
Her father hired two salsa dancers.
Signature drinks.
Big appy platter.
Midnight sweet table.
I could go on and on about this wedding. It was amazing!
Jes
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[QUOTE]So this question has been on my mind for a while and i would love to hear some peoples opinions and stories. What is the best wedding you have ever attended and why? was is the time of year? <strong>No it was winter and FREEZING but it still rocked!</strong>
the food <strong>Was amazing, the chef at the hotel had 2 Michelin Stars to his name, oriental duck starter, Beef main.</strong>
drinks? <strong>Open bar all day/night</strong>
The entertainment? <strong>DJ who was great, everyone was up dancing</strong>
The theme? <strong>I really don't remember</strong>
The favors? <strong>No Idea</strong>
Size of wedding? <strong>about 100 people</strong>
Venue? <strong>Stunning Georgian Mill that had been converted into a boutique hotel, complete with beautiful gardens & a duck pond in the middle of the English countryside</strong>
Special suprises? <strong>None, there were supposed to be floating candles on the duck pond and I watched in hysterics whilst my BF and the other Ushers tried in vain for an HOUR in the freezing cold to get the candles lit, when the wind didn't put them out the ripples from the pond did,</strong>
Please list anything that really stuck out to you, as a guest, something that really made the whole experience enjoyable beyond any other nuptial event you attended. <strong>It was just generally being made to feel very welcome by the bride and groom and their families, the fact that the focus was on the celebration as opposed to spending lots of money on making everything look pretty for the bride.</strong>
Posted by RogueQueen[/QUOTE]
KA
One of our vendors/friends is a bagpipe player and we hired him to play before & after the ceremony since we were doing an Irish theme and it was 2 days before St Patrick's Day. When the wedding party walked to the reception location, he preceded us piping the whole way in a parade like fashion!
We entered to the Munsters theme, I made a chain maille garter for the toss, and we asked all the couples join us for a dance to "I Got You Babe". We also honored my grandparents whos 66th anniversary was 2 days later.
Lovely food and drink (open bar). Touching and witting (and brief) speeches by the FoB, MOH, and best man. Lots of cute little touches, like dried wildflowers hand-glued onto the place cards. After dinner there was a lovely view of the fireworks going off in a nearby town. At the end of the night the B&G left as the guest waved sparklers.
Part of the reason the wedding was so great is that it really reflected the bride's personality and style. You could see all the hard work she put into making sure all the details went together (without being too cutesy).
The food line was setup inside an old barn, and there were two bars - one at each end of the tent.
The party went on late into the evening, and I just remember having such a good time dancing and celebrating with people I had just met!
The bride hand made the invitations and centerpieces which was just a simple planter watering can with a plant in it- too cute!
For favors (which my FI and I are also doing) they rolled out a candy bar. Everyone was able to stuff their favorite candy in to little doggie bags and take home. I don't care how old you are, everyone enjoys candy! I loved this idea and it was the first time I had ever been to a wedding that did this.
One down fall was when the sun started going down the mosquitos came out- :-(
After the recpetion which only ended at 9:30pm, the bride and groom along with a bunch of us went out to local bar and stayed there until 2am! SO much fun.
The weather was perfect, and everyone had such a great time. It's my hope that my wedding this summer tunrs out just as wonderful!
What made the wedding was the DJ and bartenders. Everyone was so lively and genuinely happy for my brother and wife. Dance floor was full, drinks were flowing, people were mingling. Two families became one and we all had an amazing time.
I think it says a lot about a wedding when everyone stays until the end because they are having such a good time. I have been to a few weddings where people left right after dinner because it was a bit drab.
The two best weddings I ever attended were both in Colorado. The first was my sister's. They got married on Peak 8 in Breckenridge, Colorado, with the beautiful Rocky Mountains in the background. Our bridesmaids dresses were awesome, and I actually wore the dress again to a friend's wedding. They had a Native American flutist (sp?) playing during the processional and after the ceremony. The reception was at a restaurant in Breckenridge, with delicious salmon and filet mignon. There was an assortment of fruit and cheeses during the cocktail hour, which was beautiful, tasty, and relatively healthy! There were about 100 people in attendance, and in my opinion, this was a great number. Intimate enough, but not so much so that it seemed "small."
The other wedding was my sister's friend. The wedding ceremony and reception were in the back yard of her husband's parents' home, and they had worked on landscaping for months prior to the wedding. The ceremony lasted about 10 minutes, which was AWESOME as a guest!!! It was very lighthearted. I don't recall the food, but they had a great selection of drinks, and I think one of their friends tended the bar. This was another small wedding, with maybe 75 guests. Again, it was intimate, and I had a chance to meet a lot of fun people.
The highlights: Beautiful centerpieces with cut limes. Colors were sort of lime and fushia. Gorgeous. I don't know why, but that stood out.
Favors: Bride and Grooms respective alma matres. Michigan cookies and chocolate buckeyes from Ohio.
Probably my favorite/most memorable wedding was one where I wasn't a BM (thank god) and it was up at a funky camping cabin place high up in the Sierra's in CA in June. The weather was lovely all week, and then right after the ceremony a huge storm let lose. We all ran around and tried to cover up the tables as fast as possible. It was intense and everyone pitched in. Then we waited out the storm in ponchos and boots. By far the most beautiful ceremony. And even though the weather was a mess, we had a great time. It was nice to get away and just be relaxed before the wedding. It took some of the ordinary out.
The other thing...I remember the weddings of people I'm close to. The ones I'm not fade away. So either spend a lot of money and have elephants and a circus act, or don't invite people you aren't close to.
My two cents.
I always remember the weddings with good DJs. Its so much fun when everyone is up and dancing all night. Bars or smoking areas away from the reception area are bad ideas. People tend to disappear. Cheesecake wedding "cake", chocolate fountains, great non-alcoholic pineapple punch, local wine, and laid-back atmosphere are some of my all-time favorites.
That is a great question and one I am also curious about with my up-coming wedding. As a past guest, two weddings stand out in my mind as being very special;
-Don't sweat the little things but don't forget them either. I went to a wedding celebration where 1/3 of the guests were vegetarians. The couple who are happy carnivores took the time to find great meals for their vegetarian guests but also made it into a learning and fun experience. The menu with every food item was listed near the bar in a gilded frame with exact ingredients. For those with special food allergies knew what not to eat and the pressure was off the wedding planner and the couple. It was done really well and every guests were amazed at the consideration and respect.
-Go the extra mile; A few months ago my fiance and I attended a wedding in Alberta which required flying to celebrate with our friends. They really went the extra mile by placing a small yet personalized gift in our room thanking us for coming from far away to celebrate their big day. It was small but lovely and it set the mood. Every guest were talking about it at the reception upon arrival which also helped people break the ice.
Lovely ideas which I also intend to incorporate in our wedding. Looking forward to other views.
A prime exmaple was a college friend's wedding in Vermont. It was in a cozy historical barn in March. It wasn't super expensive, but it was nice. The reason it was such a wonderful wedding was because everything there screamed them and intimate. They served hot chocolate to the guests before the ceremony. They had a guitarist playing acustic as people were coming in. The tables were named after ski resorts they had traveled to. They changed into nike sneakers for the reception. And after the cake, they handed out smores.
I got a glimpse into their history and who they were as a couple because they had details on display that reminded me of those aspects. And for me, it's the sinle-most reason why I enjoy a wedding and the goal my fiance and I have for planning our wedding - how it can be memorable to them and to us and not worrying about what nobody will even notice to remember.
Weddings are like new people - if they are generic and lack individuality/pesronality, you might have a good time hanging...but they won't be memorable!
It was a beautiful moment.