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One tradition follows that rings should use the birthstones of the bride and her parents (on the left) and the groom and his parents (on the right). It would follow mothers on the outside, fathers on the inside and the bride and groom adjacent in the center. De Beers is credited today with popularizing the diamond engagement ring instilling "A Diamond Is Forever" into the hearts of young men and women everywhere standardizing the diamond engagement ring in the middle of the 20th century. The first diamond engagement ring ever given was by Arch Duke Maximillian to Mary of Burgundy in 1477. Diamond engagement rings used to only be popular in the United States and parts of Europe until WWII when soldiers who were in Japan met many of their wives there. Through the mixing of cultures and many Japanese women who received diamond engagement rings from their GI fiancé', led to the adoption of diamond engagement rings in Japanese culture.
Escorting guests, which arm should be used?
Garter Toss The tradition is that having a piece of a bride's clothing is good luck. It used to be that as the bride and groom would leave guests would grab a piece of her dress for good luck. Grooms and families grew angry that others were ruining and nearly taking all of the brides clothes off and over time brides gave away the garter and other items at their reception to bestow the brides luck upon others. To stop others from attempting to get the garter off themselves the tradition of the groom removing the garter at the reception was started.
Bouquet Toss
The Toast Ancient Greek culture had a fear of poisoning and to accommodate this fear at large gatherings the host would pour glasses of wine for his guests from the same decanter and then take a first drink and toast everyone to show that the wine was suitable for drinking and guests would follow.
The actual term
"toast" was also gathered from this time when pieces of toasted bread
would be dipped in the wine to reduce the acidity and make it suitable for
drinking. There are 3 components to an official toasts. It starts with the
verbalization or the reason for the toast, why they are making a toast,
and what the purpose of it is. Shortly following is imbibing, taking the drink symbolizes the sanctity of the toast and conferring the toast upon the toastee. It is viewed as bad luck to toast with an empty glass. Not actually drinking from the glass or leaving the toast is considered disrespectful and bad luck. If more than two toasts are given, most of the time with weddings, the second toast should have a different focus or a different purpose than the first toast. This is normally taken care of by the best man chiding the groom, the bridesmaid chiding the bride and then together reassuring their commitment to their marriage and that they wish good luck and good will upon them.
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, and Something Blue Something new represents optimism, happiness, and a fresh start into the future. Something borrowed represents using family and friends to help you in your relationship to each other, and that having a strong family and friend connection in your marriage is key to each other's happiness and strength of the marriage. Never being afraid to ask for help when needed. Blue has, since classical times, represented purity, faithfulness, love and good luck. Blue is characterized as strong, steadfast, and steady, all of the things marriage is based on. Brides used to wear something blue, or a blue ring at the bottom of their dress to symbolize the power of blue in their future.
The Best Man and Bridesmaid Bridesmaids originated around the same time. These women would help the bride prepare for her wedding and make sure that she got to the church in time. These roles started out as one person, but it is acceptable to have groomsman and bridesmaids to assist the Best Man and Maid/Matron of Honor help the couple prepare for their wedding day.
The Veil
The Honeymoon
Wedding Cake
Wedding Dress
The Train Believe what you will of these traditions, hopefully the explanations will help you you decide what to include as part of your own personal traditions. There is no "one-size-fits" all for a wedding and it's up to the bride and groom to decide these in accordance to their personal wedding journey.
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Wedding Traditions
Whether you're the bride and groom
to
be or perhaps a family member or friend of one, there's a good chance that
until now, you've never really given much thought to wedding traditions or
their history.
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