My venue's coordinator sent me a timeline suggestion for the reception. I'm not sure how I feel about where the toasts are though. I was going to switch the toasts and the first course so at least guests would have some food in front of them, but then I realized that with my parent's hosting, my dad probably wants to say something. And it probably wouldn't hurt for us to say a few (seriously, just a few) words as well. All of the orders I see online say you do best man, MOH, parents, couple. I'm just worried that would be a lot cram in between toasts. Should I do best man/moh before the salad and then my dad and us between the courses? Thoughts? I don't want to bore everyone, but I'm not going to tell anyone they can't give a toast (though I have re-iterated to them that it should be a toast, not a speech).
Also, it's worth mentioning that I have a photobooth for 3 hours as well. She recommended 7:30-10:30, but I was thinking 8:30-11:30. I think it's netter later in the night. Thoughts?
7:00pm Cocktail Hour
8:00pm Guests are seated & Bridal party are lined up
8:10pm Bridal party introductions
8:15pm First Dance
8:20pm Blessing & Toasts
8:30pm First Course (Salads)
9:00pm Main Course (Entrée)
9:45pm Bride & Groom cut the wedding cake
9:50pm Parent Dances
10:00pm Cake & Coffee Station (DJ will announce)
10:00pm Dance Floor opens
11:30pm Last call at the bar
11:45pm Bar closes
11:45pm Last song is played
12:00am Guests Leave
Re: Reception Timeline and Toasts
I think we're going to have our photobooth available during cocktail hour to give guests something else to do, especially since we'll have some kids (teenagers) in attendance. Are you going to have the photobooth brought in while the reception is going on or will it be set up and the attendant just arrives later?
Once you have your first dance, the floor is open. People can and likely will dance between courses. Once the mains are served you can do any remaining toasts.
Have everyone's salads pre-plated and at their seats, then do the blessing, followed by all of the toasts while people are eating. That's the way all of the weddings I have been to (30+) have done things. And make sure main course is served no later than 8:30pm.
And personally I'd skip the bridal party entrance/introductions, especially if you have a large wedding party. Your guests honestly don't care who is in your bridal party- they want to see you and your FI announced and entered, and then they want to eat and dance.
This also! So I would have you and your FI announced and enter, you could even cut the cake at this time so that the venue staff has time to cut and plate it for dessert, then do the blessing, then toasts- MOH, Best Man, FOB- while people are eating their salads. Encourage ppl to keep things short- these are toasts not speeches, and to keep all the inside jokes out of it.
Main course served by 8:30pm. After dinner, do all of the spotlight dances and then open up the dance floor for everyone. That gives people plenty of time to dance. The DJ can announce dessert is available at 9:30pm in case people want to get going early.
I have never seen the spotlight dances done before dinner nor split up as you described, and I think splitting them up would be awkward and disrupt the flow of the evening.
I'd have the photo booth open during cocktail hour, closed during dinner, and then opened again during dancing.
At the end of the night you and your FI should thank everyone for coming, yadda yadda.
"Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends time and space."
As a guest I'd rather get them all out of the way together so that open dancing can begin.
"Love is the one thing we're capable of perceiving that transcends time and space."
Yeah, I guess my thought on that is open dancing isn't starting anyway. We're dancing immediately after introductions (no one's doing to start dancing while salads are being set down) and then while people are eating cake. Most of the adults at our reception didn't start invading the dance floor until a good hour after dinner.
Although our first dance felt like it lasted an eternity. H and I don't have any serious moves, we mostly just swayed back and forth. Everyone else said it was quick (really, I think it was a 3 minute song), but by 2 minutes in we were looking at each other laughing asking if the song would ever end.
ETA: Actually, now that I think about it, if wanting the 'open dance floor' is your issue, doing all three in a row after dinner is actually the WORSE idea. Breaking them into two times when people definitely aren't running onto the dance floor (Who watches introductions and then barrels onto the dance floor before dinner starts?) actually impinges on people's opportunity to boogie less than all three at once.