Gowns galore
From ready-to-wear to couture gowns, you'll be spoiled for choice when it comes to wedding dresses
View now
A step-by-step checklist of things to be done before your big day
Keep track of all spending associated with your big day
A contact list of all the suppliers you’ll use for your wedding day
Share your wedding news and progress with this free wedding site
See which guests are coming and which aren't at a glance
Organize your guest seating visually with this drag and drop tool
From ready-to-wear to couture gowns, you'll be spoiled for choice when it comes to wedding dresses
View now
You could find your dream dress at a fraction of the cost in our pre-loved gown gallery
View gowns
We'll take the work out of finding the perfect supplier by connecting you with only the most relevant suppliers
Find supplier now
We have dozens of exclusive deals on wedding products and services. Click here to see the latest ones
View now
Take your wedding planning wherever you go with our FREE iPhone, Android and iPad apps
Read more
Every year we give away tens of thousands of dollars in fabulous prizes. Click here for the latest ones
View competitionsShop By:
You May Be Interested In
Our suite of planning tools offer checklists and guides that will prepare you for your big day
Browse the galleries
Read the fairytale love stories behind real life romances with 1000+ photos from real weddings
Browse the galleries
Share your experiences with Australian wedding suppliers to help thousands of future couples - and you could win an iPad
Review suppliers nowYou May Be Interested In
Keep up with the latest wedding news, views and trends on the Easy Weddings blog network
Visit the blogs
Join tens of thousands of brides (and a few grooms) on Facebook, Google +, Twitter and Pinterest
Visit the Facebook page
Share your wedding news, views, advice and progress with tens of thousands of brides-to-be
Visit the forumYou May Be Interested In
Drawing up the guest list for your wedding might not sound like a difficult task,
but unless you can send an unlimited number of invitations, there is bound to be indecision and conflict when it comes to choosing your guests.
The golden rule is to make sure you only invite people that both you and your fiancee really want to be there, but this is not always easy to stick to. There are always people that you feel you should invite out of duty, perhaps because your parents want them there or because you went to their wedding. Here are a few of the common questions people ask when choosing the guests for their big day:
Often parents see the wedding as more their party than yours, especially if they are paying for it, and some want to invite people that you don’t really know. Times are changing, however, and it might be that simply sitting down and explaining to your parents that your ideal wedding only involves close family and your own friends will be enough.
Another solution is to allocate a certain number of invitations to each set of parents, so if your venue can accommodate one hundred guests each set of parents could invite twenty five guests and you and your fianc?e could invite fifty. Make sure you agree the figure with both sets of parents before you ask them to put together their guest list so they don’t have to cut their list down. Make it clear if you expect them to include relatives such as aunts and uncles in their lists. Stand firm if parents start asking to invite extra guests, you can usually use the capacity of your venue as a good excuse.
When you are writing your guest list there will always be questions such as ‘should we invite second cousins or just first?’ or ‘should we invite people from work?’ Ideally you should follow the all or nothing rule, meaning that you invite everyone from a particular group, or nobody at all. Be consistent with both your colleagues or relatives, and your fiancee’s. The exception to this is if you have a particularly close friend in that group, in which case it is fine to invite just them. It is also acceptable only to invite your boss from the office.
Try to hold off announcing your engagement until you have some idea of the size and scale of your wedding, that way you can set people’s expectations when you break the good news. If you announce you are having small intimate family wedding, or a destination wedding, people won’t necessarily expect to be invited, but if they just hear that you’re engaged they may be waiting for that invitation through the post. If people do assume they are invited, you will just have to explain that you are only having a small wedding. This might not be easy, but real friends will understand.
Whether you invite single guests ‘plus one’ will depend greatly on the size of your wedding. Whatever you decide, you need to be clear about whether you are inviting partners or not. Try to print actual names rather than ‘plus one’ on your invites, and if possible on your reply cards as well so guests can’t add uninvited partners. Call up single guests in advance to see who they want to bring.
Try to have a consistent policy on partners, such as they only get invited if they’ve been together for a year, they live together or they are engaged. However, you might also need to use some common sense regarding individuals. If you are inviting a big group of work colleagues it is fine to omit partners, but if you are inviting a friend who won’t know anybody else it’s only fair to let them bring a date.
This is a tricky question, and the answer is no, it is not compulsory for you to invite people just because you went to their wedding. Perhaps they had a bigger wedding than you, or they had less relatives to invite so could invite more friends. Maybe they got married a few years ago when you spent more time together but now you hardly ever see each other.
If the couple in question is getting married within twelve months either side of your wedding date, it is perhaps only polite to invite them. However, if that will mean inviting a lot of other additional people as well to avoid bad feeling, don’t feel obliged to.
On the day try to stop, relax and enjoy the special moments! These are the memories that will stay with you forever. ~ Leigh & Alan - Married 13/03/2010
Copyright© 2000 - 2013 Easy Weddings Pty Ltd. All text, images, designs, software and content on this site are covered by copyright.
All information on this site is subject to change. Use of this site constitutes acceptance of our User Agreement and Privacy policy.
Connect with Easy Weddings