There is only one person coming to our wedding that I would consider to be a child. He is 7. Then there is a decent group of young people between ages 13-17. I don't consider them to be children. I consider them teenagers or young adults. They will be sat together (they all know each other) or with their older siblings and not with their parents. The 7 year old will be sat with his brother after consulting with his parents. Someone commented that I shouldn't have kids tables because they can cause trouble. What I'm curious about is what you would consider a "kids" table. These tables never occured to me to be kids tables, but maybe I'm wrong. Thoughts? Did you put teenagers with parents or together?
ETA: The current plan is to put parents at the next table over.
Re: What age do you no long consider a person a "child"?
I'm curious why. Is it for behavior or because you think they would prefer it? I'm wondering if this is really just a family-to-family difference?
Hmm. This sounds like it may be a know your crowd thing. My family is blessed with a giant collection of 15-17 year old girls that look like they are 25 and mostly just complain about boys but don't get in much trouble. They keep the few boys in check. haha.
We also have a pretty tight age range minus the one outlier. I also wouldn't call these kids tables. More like who you are closest to tables. For example, one 16 year old has 21 and 23 year old brothers. She always sits at our table with her brothers, my brother (28), me (26), and my FI. It makes sense to me since I grew up really close to those three. Then we have these two sets of sisters 15 and 16 for both sets that are super close, and they always sit together. Our parents all sit somewhere else.
I like all the perspectives. I'm not sure how my FI's family is, so it sounds like I'm going to have to pow-wow with his mom to figure out how best to seat the teens on that side.
The only reason for sitting them separately is because that is where they would prefer to sit. And honestly, what the parents prefer too. Although I don't think this is the case for all families. My family is similar to the PP's fiance's family. I guess I sit at the "big kids" table. We ranged from 16-31 at the last wedding. It was awesome.