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Living With Relationships | 19 May, 2008
Traditional anniversary gifts include linens, china, and household appliances to the happy couple. Traditional wedding anniversary gift is a theme of excitement. There are so many anniversary gift packages are available of different years.
A traditional wedding anniversary gift is favorite gift which is traditionally given one each year of the wedding anniversary.
The traditional gift for the first anniversary is paper. The second anniversary traditional gift is cotton. Traditional gifts for the fourth anniversary are fruit and flowers or the things having made of fruits.
The fifth year traditional gift is wood and things which are made of wood like deck furniture, an artistic wooden sculpture and so on. Iron is the sixth anniversary gift. Iron skillets, golf clubs, wrought iron furniture are the important gifts of sixth year anniversary. Wool or copper are gifts for the seventh anniversary. Gifts of blankets, hats, coats and sweater are important gifts of these categories. The eighth anniversary’s traditional gift is bronze.
Eighth year is a year to make and impression with a bronze sculpture. Pottery is the traditional gift for the ninth anniversary. Live planters, bowls and coffee mugs come in this category of gifts.
Traditional gifts for the tenth anniversary are of tin or aluminum and so on. The thirteenth anniversary traditional gift is lace like lace doilies, tablecloths and lacy curtains work.
The fourteenth anniversary calls for the traditional gift of ivory. Crystal is the gift for the fifteenth through the nineteenth anniversaries. Crystal chandelier earrings or a crystal chess set are more up to date. Traditional gift is wonderful gift for each couple.
A complete list of anniversary gifts by year is at Anniversary Rock.
Mrs. Party… Gail Leino is the internet’s leading authority on selecting the best possible party supplies, using proper etiquette and manners while also teaching organizational skills and fun facts.
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Living With Relationships | 17 April, 2008
The Maid of Honor and the bridesmaids usually give the wedding shower. Often, with the help of the brides mother. There may be more than one shower, sometimes co-workers will give a shower at the workplace or in a restaurant close to the job. The groom’s family if they live far away, my want to give a shower of their own. One word of caution, you shouldn’t invite anyone to a shower who isn’t invited to the wedding. That’s like saying “I’ll take your gift but don’t want you at my wedding.” Ask the bride who she wants at her shower.
If this is to be a surprise shower, get help from the bride’s mother. She will be able to tell you if Great Aunt Millie who lives several states away, will be insulted if she doesn’t get an invitation even though everyone knows she can’t come. Here are a few tips to help make it easier for you to manage.
Guest list - get names, addresses, phone numbers and email addresses of all who will be invited.
Budget Decide how much you can spend, this will determine where the shower will be held, what kind of food if any will be served, and even how you will decorate for the shower.
Invitations can be printed, store bought, done on your computer, by word of mouth telephone or email. The invitations should include the date, time, place, theme, the names of the bride and groom, and at least two RSVP contacts.
Follow up verbal invitations with a printed or handwritten note with all the information. Be sure to mention if it is “ladies only” or a “couples” party. Also include whether or not children are welcome.
Menu the time of day and your budget will influence the menu. If you will be having the shower close to lunch or dinnertime, then you will have to serve more than cake chips and drinks. If most of the guests are close friends and relatives of the bride and groom. You can ask people if they would bring a dish. In some areas, this is the way all but the most formal occasions are handled. Buffets are less work and more informal than a sit- down dinner.
Use pretty paper and plastic products when possible. Don’t forget to buy or make a cake.Location, this should be easy to find. Include a map for locals. Out of town guests can get maps from the internet.
Choose a date The shower should be held between 6and 8 weeks before the wedding, The bride’s mother will be the best source for a suitable date.
Theme Ask the bride’s mother, what she thinks they need the most. Some typical wedding shower themes are kitchen, bedroom linens, bath, and lingerie showers.
There are a few other things you need to take care of. Make sure you have enough tables and chairs, a place of honor for the bride to sit while she opens her presents. Remember to pick up plates napkins cutlery, and cups. Have someone bring a coffeepot, assign one of the bridesmaids to pick up drinks, chips etc. Make sure someone can transport the gifts. Get film for your camera and take lots of pictures.
If you scrapbook, make a nice album of all the pre-wedding activities from the engagement party to the dress fittings and the showers. What a fantastic gift that would be.
Mary Jane Holmes can help you. Find out how thousands of people have been helped with the advice and information. Visit this link for details: Wedding Dresses
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Living With Relationships | 11 April, 2008
Throughout the millennia, the concept of family and marriage
have been so closely knotted together that it is sometimes
impossible to separate one from the other.
Marriage is present in every culture in some form. Although the
laws, norms, and cultures may differ, they all still recognize
the union of man and woman under one roof.
Marriage has evolved in so many ways from the different cultures
all throughout the world throughout the ages. For each culture,
there are diverse ways of celebrating something like marriage.
But in each culture, there has always been one thing that has
remained the same - that in every culture, and every tribe,
marriage has always been one to be celebrated with the utmost of
festivities, with singing, eating, and celebrating.
Along with these festivities, man has also adopted a growing,
and evolving number of traditions each filled with meaning and -
believe it or not - shocking origins.
The Wedding Cake Today’s tall, elaborated, and delicately
crafted wedding cakes evolved from the simple grooms-cakes made
by family members for the bride. Before the wedding day, one of
theses cakes was put under the pillow of the bride. The bride
would then sleep and “dream” of the groom, and yes, squish that
cake into oblivion.
The real wedding cake would be a pound cake that would be “pound
up” and crumbled and tossed at the couple as a sign of
fertility. That is where we get today’s custom of sprinkling the
couple with rice after the wedding.
Cakes during weddings are usually stacked up in large layers.
The higher the stack, the more ‘glamorous’ the cake. People
usually regard these arrangements are mere style. However, they
were done so in the past as a symbol of fertility. Couples would
stack these cakes to symbolize how many children the wished to
have. So in the past, the higher the stack, the more the
children.
Tying the Knot Now the truth can be told. Tying the knot did not
necessarily mean getting knotted together. During ancient tribal
times, the bride would usually be wrapped in a sheep with a knot
out in front. This was to symbolize virginity. ‘Untying the
knot’ was the groom’s privilege after the wedding the night.
Best Man - Secret Agent And startling enough, the best man used
to play a different role in the early days. During tribal times,
it was the best man’s duty to abduct potential brides from other
tribes. He would usually do so by clubbing the poor damsel over
the head and drag her back home - just like those comic skits
about cavemen seem to suggest. It was also the best man’s job to
ward off the angry relatives of the bride. So in the early days,
it was the best man swinging his axe while the groom got hitched.
Today Although we are a little less barbaric than earlier times,
we still see an evolution of the wedding ceremony and its
tradition. These traditions are filled with meaning and can only
serve to make your wedding day more memorable.
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Living With Relationships | 5 April, 2008
How you wear your hair at your wedding is important. Above all else you Wedding Hairstyle has to be comfortable. It should compliment not only your face but your dress as well.
It does no harm to have your regular hairdresser practise on you a few times. By doing this you may decide that the particular Wedding Hairstyle you have dreamt about having since you were a small child actually does nothing for the shape of your face!
If you want a wedding updo and you have relatively short hair then although with many grips and much hairspray it is possible, do remember that your hairdresser can do the impossible but miracles are outwith their reach!
Try to get a rough idea of what sort of style you are looking at for your wedding hairstyle as far in advance as possible. This gives your hair a chance to grow to a length that is more manageable for your hairdresser. After all long hair can easily be cut but it is harder and more expensive to add to your hair.
Always remember it is you that is getting married and not some fairytale image of you that you have held in your imagination since you were six! You dont want to walk down the aisle to your beloved and have him not recognize you because you wedding hairstyle is so different!
Try not to go for something very different. Chances are you will get fed up with it. If an updo requires a lot of help to stay up then as a wedding hairstyle it probably isn’t right. Your wedding hairstyle has to stay in place for up to 10 hours, a lot to ask of any hairstyle but particularly difficult when a veil is shoved in, you are being swung around the dance floor and everyone wants to hug you!!
I would suggest go for elegance and comfort. Something that suits you and brings out your best features. If you can mange a wedding hairstyle that looks just as good down as up then you grab it with both hands, a comb and some grips!!
Lorna McLaren has an information and resources website at http://www.a1-ourwedding.com where you can gather everything for your Wedding Day!
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