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The following article was published in our article directory on March 1, 2012.
Learn more about SpinDistribute Article Distribution System.
Article Category: Advice
Author Name: Spencer Crane
Wording for wedding invitations has gotten a lot more complicated with divorce being more and more prevalent in our society. Before this the wording was relatively simple for a wedding invitation. Here is a basic example.
Mr. and Mrs. John Smith
request your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Mary Ann Smith
to
Michael Josh Miller
So if you don't fit into the traditional model of one set of parents don't worry about it. If you are from a blended family and both sets of parents insist in helping with the cost of the wedding there is wording for that as well. If both sets of parents are helping the wording would look something like this:
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Allan
and
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Manganero
request your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Jessica April Allan
to
Garrison Michael Levitt
If you find yourself in a complicated situation within a blended family, it is best to ask a professional bridal consultant as to the best way to word your wedding invitations so nobody is at risk of being offended.
There are also many people out there that have a deceased parent and want to know if they should add the name of the deceased parent to the wedding invitation. The answer may surprise you. You are not actually suppose to put the name of a deceased a parent on a wedding invitation. The reasoning behind this is that someone that is deceased can not actually invite anyone to an engagement.
With this being said however there are still many people that would like to add their deceased parent out of respect. If you are going to do something like that you might consider using the following wording.
Mr. and Mrs. Justin Spencer
request your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Jessica Tracy Spencer
to
Tommy Tyler Jefferson
In the example above you won't need to make mention that one of your parents has passed away. You will just treat it as a normal wedding invite wording. If that bothers you another way you can word the invite would by like this:
Mrs. Jessica Edwards
and the late Mr. Jon Edwards
request your presence
at the marriage of their daughter
Tiffany Coral Edwards
to
Jack Timothy Bartel
Now you need to remember that it is never good etiquette to include the deceased parent on the invitation but many people do it. So the 2 examples above are a couple of ways that you could do it if you so decide.
Keywords: wedding invitation etiquette, wedding invitation wording, wedding invitation wording examples
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