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Rev. Rebecca Nagy with Charlotte Wedding Planner Jackie Fogarty |
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Family, friends, and family friends: Where should they sit during
your big moment? With parents, stepparents, divorced parents,
grandparents, and extended family, all in attendence, you'll need a
plan. Here are our guidelines.
Ushers: Who Are They?
You
can enlist a few of your groomsmen to play ushers, or you can ask some
relatives or friends to seat your guests. The rule of thumb is one usher
for every 50 guests. If you're having an intimate ceremony, you may not
need ushers, but you might want to put someone in charge of "sensitive"
seating issues -- like keeping your mom and stepmom apart.
Ushers
really need to know where everyone's supposed
to sit -- so print out a list for them! Traditionally, female guests are
escorted to their seats; the usher offers his right arm to the woman,
and her male companion follows them down the aisle. (With a group of
women, the usher might offer his arm to the oldest woman.) These days,
it's fine for ushers to simply greet guests at the door and lead them to
their seats, saying, "Please follow me."
Taking Sides
Ushers
needn't ask guests whose "side" they are on. (In Christian ceremonies,
the bride's side is the left side of the church when looking from back
to front, and the groom's side is the right; for Jewish services, it's
the opposite.) But should someone express a preference for one side or
the other (many guests will say they are friends or relatives of the
bride or groom), they should be seated where they want to sit. If one
side of the family will have more guests than the other, ushers should
try to even things out, explaining that everyone will sit together so
guests can get the best view possible.
Who Sits Where?
Quick answers to your most frequent seating questions:
- Elderly guests should be seated near the front.
- Guests in wheelchairs or on crutches should sit at the end of a pew.
- The first four or five rows may be reserved for immediate and
extended family (like aunts, uncles, cousins, and godparents) and other
special guests (like the parents of a child attendant) by tying ribbons
across those rows.
- Immediate family is seated just before the ceremony begins. Siblings
(if they're not in the wedding party) are seated before grandparents
and great-grandparents. They sit either in the first row with parents or
in the second row with grandparents. Start seating with the groom's
side.
- If you have step-relatives, make sure ushers know who they are. Step-relatives should be escorted to their seats first
-- for example, step-grandparents precede birth grandparents. You may
want to reserve a few extra rows directly behind immediate family for
step-grandparents and step-siblings.
- If the bride's or groom's parents are divorced, seat the parent who
primarily raised the bride or groom in the front row with his/her
spouse, and seat the other parent and his/her spouse in the third row.
Alternatively, birth parents may sit beside each other in the first row,
or they may share the front row with stepparents. Discuss this in
advance to avoid awkward moments.
- The bride's mother is always seated last at a Christian
ceremony; the groom's mother is seated just before her. (In Jewish
ceremonies, parents stand under the huppah with the couple). The seating
of the bride's mother signals that the ceremony is about to begin.
- Brothers of the bride and groom usually seat their mothers; the head
usher can do it if the brothers are in the wedding party, or a brother
can seat his mom and then take his place with the other groomsmen.
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