7 wedding rules you can break

from Martha Stewart Weddings

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Gone is the era of the cookie-cutter wedding; you can celebrate your own way. Forget the “have tos” and “shoulds” about nuptials. There are no hard-and-fast rules. Except one: Be a gracious bride and groom while letting your true style shine.

1. You don’t have to wear white
No matter its hue, you’ll look radiant in a knockout frock. This season bridal designers showed scene-stealing creations in blush, pale blue, and even rich red.

2. You can ask anyone to be in your party 
Your mom may have had to line up friends to pair off with your dad’s groomsmen, but you two needn’t be so matchy-matchy. Have anyone you want stand up with you both — a man of honor, groomsmaids — and don’t worry about having an equal number of hims and hers. They can walk up the aisle solo or in groups of three. They don’t have to wear the same thing either. Devise a palette of up to three hues, hand your ‘maids swatches or paint chips, and let them choose their own outfits. If they stick to the colors, even prints are fair game.

3. You can send out a handwritten invitation
We love letterpress, adore embossing, and fall hard for flat printing. But if those aren’t your type or the traditional wording of an invitation doesn’t feel like you, write something that does; it’s bound to be one of a kind. Use your invitees’ names to make it personal, and be sure to include all the pertinent details. Thick card stock and lined, oversize envelopes that let the pages slip out unfolded set a formal tone. To elevate the concept further, hire a calligrapher to copy your text, or have it printed and just the guests’ names calligraphed.

4. You can have a ring in any setting
Diamonds are some girls’ best friends, but other brides prefer garnets, pearls, or sapphires. As long as it came with a proposal, any stone can function as an engagement ring (ditto for the setting). You don’t need to limit yourself to just one; many brides choose stacked bands, which could act as engagement or wedding rings or both. You don’t even need to follow the fourth-finger, left-hand custom; in Europe, many people wear a wedding band on the right hand. Any ring, given and worn with love, is a fitting symbol of something with no beginning or end.

5. Your flowers and favors can do double duty
Less really is more when you combine two elements. Ceremony flowers can reappear at your reception, for example, and gorgeous escort cards will work as favors, too. Offer them as thank-yous that will dress up any desk after the party’s over.

6. You can make your reception venue feel more like home
You probably can’t spend lots of time with each guest. But you can promote an intimate at-home dinner-party atmosphere by surrounding invitees with a few of your favorite things. Create a unified table with the same flatware and china at each place, then fill the center with an array of beloved objects — from registry gifts to a stash of personal curios.

7. You can serve whatever you want with dessert
If your sweet tooth is satisfied by the cake, offer something savory, like cheese, after dinner. To set up an appealing array, order a mix of mild and strong flavors, different textures, and cheeses made with goat, cow, and sheep milk. Add name tags so guests know what they’re diving into, then pair them with breads, stone fruits, and nuts, and display on pedestals of varying heights. Finally, introduce an element that will surprise everyone, such as a honeycomb.

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Read this article on the Huffington Post.

Martha Stewart Weddings on Twitter @MarthaWeddings
Op-ed pieces and contributions are the opinions of the writers only and do not represent the opinions of Y!/YNaija.

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