| At a formal Christian wedding
or a large civil ceremony, the bride’s
family and friends sit on the left, and the groom’s
family sit on the right. Decorate the first few rows with flowers
or ribbon to indicate seating for immediate family and whichever
special guests you may have included. As long as they can maintain
civility, divorced parents may sit together in the front row.
If they are remarried or would prefer to sit separately, the
father and his wife should sit in the third row. The ushers
will seat guests as they arrive, from front rows to back. The
final guests to be seated are grandparents, mother of the groom,
the groom's father, and just before the couple makes their appearance,
the mother of the bride.
From the seating of wedding
guests in the pews to the entrance of the bride and groom,
every wedding ceremony
demands a certain amount of choreography and placement in order
to run successfully. In order to organize your event, you may
wish to follow some traditional guidelines for seating arrangements,
procession, ceremony formation, and recession. You can choose
to conduct your ceremony in a new way, but be sure to ask the
officiant if he or she is agrees to the variations before enacting
them.
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