T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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721.1 | people: can't live with 'em, can't shoot 'em | ULTRA::ZURKO | Even in a dream, remember, ... | Fri Jul 28 1989 15:11 | 8 |
| Well, I bet lots of people have variants on the can't-find-a-dress-all-the
-bridesmaids-will-agree-to-wear story.
And I know someone who's best woman was very pregnant, and had to make her own
dress.
The only other alternative that comes to mind is, let her wear it long.
Mez
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721.2 | | VLNVAX::OSTIGUY | | Fri Jul 28 1989 15:16 | 11 |
| I think that the bride's wishes should be the final say. But....
It really wouldn't look that strange if she were to wear a long
dress when eveyone else is wearing short (I've seen this at a
wedding just recently, looked fine to me). Or if the mother
doesn't want to cut the dress, maybe they could shorten it by
making a 'ballon' type dress out of it. Or tell the mother to
take pictures of her in the long dress before she cuts it.
Anna
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721.3 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | If you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Jul 28 1989 21:19 | 8 |
| My personal vote would be to let the little girl wear her
dress long. However, if it really matters to the bride that
all the attendants have the same length dresses the dress
can be basted up to a shorter length without pressing the hem.
This will allow it to be let down later without a line from
shortening it.
Bonnie
|
721.4 | only my opinion, but | QUILL::SSMITH | | Mon Jul 31 1989 15:09 | 15 |
| Not to get off the subject, but i've always wondered how people in
weddings could be so inconsiderate of the brides feelings?? I don't
get it. Naturally everybody wants the flowergirl to look nice, but the
bride did ask for short dresses, didn't she? This is "her day". I've
have seen this type of behavior in so many weddings, and i'm fed up
with it!
FLAME!!!!!!!!!
I say, "it's the brides day, do as she asks without question. If you
can't do that, than politely refuse the invitation to be in the
wedding!"
just my opinion,
Shirley
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721.5 | my .02 | SCARY::M_DAVIS | Dictated, but not read. | Mon Jul 31 1989 15:20 | 6 |
| Shirley, that's true if all the requirements are known up front.
However, I've known bridemaids who agreed to be in a wedding, and then
when the bride got carried away, ended up with a $350 dress they'd
never have another chance to wear...
Marge
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721.6 | i agree, but | QUILL::SSMITH | | Mon Jul 31 1989 15:42 | 16 |
| I agree that can happen, but i also think that if you were close
enough to a woman to be asked to be a bridesmaid, you might have a
pretty good idea of how expensive her tastes were.
I'm sticking by my guns on this one, especially in answer to .0's
question. I would definately call this woman and let her know that I
appreciate the fact that she likes this dress to much to cut it, but
it's my wedding and you can 1)by another dress or 2)cut the dress you
already bought.
I think this woman is being extremely self-centered by even having the
nerve to put the bride-to-be in this type of situation.
Shirley
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721.7 | legal requirements | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | Secure Systems for Insecure People | Mon Jul 31 1989 16:29 | 9 |
| RE: .4 (Shirley Smith)
> I say, "it's the brides day,
I believe that most states require a groom, although in some
cultures he may be superflous.
--David
|
721.8 | give the girl a tylenol, not a headache | CYPRES::HERRERA_LI | | Mon Jul 31 1989 20:34 | 18 |
| Please.....give her a break! I just got married in June, and I
can personally attest that being a bride is not an easy thing
(especially if you are having a big wedding.) I say, do what the
bride asks if you've agreed to be a part of the wedding. And, don't
ask her to explain her motives over and over and over.....
Fortunately for me, most of my "people conflicts" were battled early
in our engagement. It seems that many relatives/friends think they
know what is best for us, instead of letting us choose on our own.
IMO, it was rude and inconsiderate to even question the length of
the hem, since it had already been discussed.
I guess I'm rather opinionated, but I know what she's going through.
-linette
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721.9 | the enthusiastic groom | QUILL::SSMITH | | Tue Aug 01 1989 10:01 | 29 |
|
Re .7
she: honey, are you all set to come over tonight and help me make the
floral arrangements?
he: groooaaaannnn
OR
she: honey, are you all set to come over tonight and help me make the
floral arrangements?
he: Oh sure sweetie!! I can hardly wait to get my hands on those
babys breath! I'm feeling extremely creative today. 8*)
question: Assuming that both can occur, which scenario is most likely?
you got me .7, however, in my own experience, I've yet to run into a
groom that was overly eager to spend months working on wedding
arrangements, never mind trying to decide what the hem length should be
on the dresses.
Shirley
|
721.10 | "Always a Bridesmaid..." | CASPRO::MILLER_T | | Tue Aug 01 1989 12:01 | 26 |
| In a three year time span, I was a bridesmaid four times. I was
asked to be in a fifth wedding, and managed to gracefully decline
the invitation(what a story that is!). I have worn colors that
did not look good on me, dresses I was not comfortable in, shoes
that were not flattering, and two dresses that were rather expensive,
but very poorly made. I did this all without complaint in defference
to the bride's wishes. Three of the brides were very dear friends,
the fourth became my sister-in-law.
There are several points to be made from these experiences: never
once was the groom concerned with anything other than not being
bothered with the arrangements; each bride was disappointed to
learn _after_ the wedding that the maids had problems or were not
happy with her choices.
My comment to the basenoter, thus, would be: let the flower girl
wear a long dress if that is what looks good on her. If she is
comfortable and happy, she may be more cooperative the day of the
wedding(you know how kids can be).
I attended a garden-type wedding this past weekend. The bridesmaids
dresses were atrociously made. The flower girl had a very different,
store-bought dress in the color scheme of the day. She was adorable
and comfortable. The girl's mother was happy, the bride was happy,
all was well with the world. Wouldn't you rather have everyone
happy and able to enjoy the day?
|
721.11 | I know of one, anyway | SELL3::JOHNSTON | weaving my dreams | Tue Aug 01 1989 12:16 | 19 |
| FWIW, this past December my youngest sister-in-law had a stupendously
gorgeous wedding.
Karlan, my s-i-l, was entirely neutral to the concept of having a
humungous wedding. Cam, my now b-i-l, had always dreamed of a
fairy-tale glorious church wedding.
She chose her dress. He chose _everything_ else and made all the
arrangements. [ooops, I mispoke...she arranged a bridesmaids breakfast
for the morning of the wedding...very low-key]
no Cam didn't do the florals [as it turned out Karlan's aunt & I
did...she offered], but he picked them all out and went to the florist
to inspect each and every blossom for colour and conformity before
paying for the flowers.
yes, he's a bit of a rarity, but he does exist
Ann
|
721.12 | | SPENDR::CLIFFORD | No Comment | Tue Aug 01 1989 12:28 | 36 |
| I guess, as a man, I see this issue differently. The biggest
problem I had with the root note was figuring out who was
being more childish, the bride or the flower girls mother.
I finally picked the flower girls mother because she was the
one going back on her agreement. I still think that someone
who gets all bent out of shape over the length of the flower
girls dress is being a bit silly. Having been through a wedding
or two I understand how brides get stressed out so I can
accept a little "irrationality" on her part though.
I've been to a lot of weddings where the slower girl dressed
in a different length than the bridesmaids. Usually she's had
a short and they a long but either way one expects that the
flower girl may be dressed a little differently. Is this really
a big enough deal to argue over and possibly lose a friend over?
RE: .4 The single most offensive thing my mother in law ever
said to me was that it was the brides day. When my son gets
married, if anyone says that about his wedding in my hearing
I will absolutely refuse to participate and will not attend the
reception. It is with out a doubt one of the worst pieces of
sexism inflected upon men in our society.
True few men are all that interested in the wedding or the
reception. I myself was very interested in the wedding ceremony
itself (that's religious and important). What people wore or
what the details of the reception were was/is not that important.
I was marrying the most wonderful beautiful woman in the world that
day. Everything else was trivia in comparison. I suspect that
most men feel the same way. I am convinced that more weddings have
been "ruined" by brides who cared more about the details than they
did about the really important thing of getting married then any
other single thing.
~Cliff
|
721.13 | my experience | JAIMES::LESSARD | | Tue Aug 01 1989 16:17 | 25 |
|
I let my sister-in law pick her daughter's dress, as
she was our flower girl. I asked her to pick something
the little girl liked, felt comfortable in, and matched
our color scheme. She was so delighted to wear a "special
dress" and I think it helped her through possible shyness
and/or being afraid of going down the aisle.
It's really aggravating when you have asked for something
specific however! I would not ask this of the bride - but
having dealt with many many minor annoyances (which all
added up much more than one big one) I would let it go
and forget it. You'll make your self crazy!
Whoa .12 - I can understand your feelings about "it's a
brides day". It is a really old-fashioned phase that
people tend to use without thinking, but probably not
meant to cause hurt to anyone. My own mother and
mother in law said it about our wedding, and my husband never picked
up on it, and I let it slide. Like you said about the
dress, better to let these little annoyances drop by
the wayside.
|
721.14 | | AKOV13::JPARSONS | | Tue Aug 08 1989 17:51 | 27 |
| My fiance has helped me in every single planning stage of our up-coming
wedding. Everything from the wedding invitations, to the bridesmaids
dresses to the flowers, he's been fully involved and we've been
having a wonderful time! Like most all brides and grooms, we've
had our share of conflicts and problems, but having him right there
to help carry the burdens and help make decisions has been wonderful.
As far as the problem that .0 has come up with, given it was _my_
problem, I'd let the girl wear it long. My flower girl is wearing
a floor-length dress yet the 6 bridesmaids are wearing "t" length.
I always thought that the flower girl and the ringbearer were suppose
to compliment the bride and groom, thus, the flower girl is wearing
a long dress like me, and the ring bearer is wearing white tails
like Dan, I think it'll look lovely! Granted, it's the Bride and
Groom's wedding and everybody "should" do as they ask and wish,
but believe me, through my recent experiences, it just doesn't go
that easily.
Let me just say, that your friend is going to most likely have bigger
and more difficult problems to deal with and getting stressed out
over this will be hardly worth the energy. She'll need to save
all the energy she's got! IF she doesn't have any problems, than she'll
be one very lucky bride! Wish her luck and tell her to try and
ENJOY this time !! I'm having a ball!
Judy
|
721.15 | The Bride and Groom know what they want | COMET::HULTENGREN | | Tue Aug 08 1989 18:23 | 25 |
| I am also getting married in September. I was going to have every body
in a "t" lenght dress but the "t" lenght was full lenght for one of the
bridesmaids. We tried the full lenght in the same style for the other
"maids" and they looked good in them and the price wasnt any different
than that of the "t" lenght(We are renting them).The full lenght wont
look good on Cheryl because of the ruffle. The store will adjust the
lenght but the ruffle makes her look like a "munchkin"(her word not
mine). I would rather she look nice as an individual person that try to
make the dresses look exactly alike.So she is wearing the "t" lenght
and every one else will wear the full lenght.
If the type of dress was a very important issue to me(Its not for me
personally but I'm not considered the authority) Then I think that I
would try the compromise of hemming the dress without ironing the hem.
that I'm sure someone suggested already I just cant remember who it
was. I do believe the Bride and Grooms wishes should be formost on all
participants minds.
There are aspects of the wedding that are important to my future Groom
to-be. Some of them are things I never would have suspected if I hadnt
asked him about it. Traditional wedding dress was one of them. He didnt
have any thing specific in mind but he did not want me to were Red(His
favorite color) I was teasing him when I suggested it.
janet
|
721.16 | | LASHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Aug 10 1989 07:25 | 6 |
|
out of curiosity, what does '"t" length' mean?
/. Ian .\
|
721.17 | Tea Length | ACESMK::POIRIER | | Thu Aug 10 1989 08:38 | 7 |
| My seamstress told me....Tea Length dresses use to be worn at afternoon
social gatherings where tea is served ("Afternoon Tea"). The length is
somewhere between mid calf and the ankles. They are more formal then
street length dresses, yet a little less formal than full length gowns.
Suzanne
|
721.18 | | LASHAM::PHILPOTT_I | Col. Philpott is back in action... | Thu Aug 10 1989 10:31 | 7 |
|
ah yes ... now if the earlier notes had said "Tea length" rather
than '"t" length' I'd have known what they meant.
Thanx
/. Ian .\
|
721.19 | | MSDOA::MCMULLIN | | Thu Aug 10 1989 18:23 | 22 |
| I've talked to me friend several times since I entered the base
note and come to find out, the flower girl's dress is tiered.
Therefore, all they have to do is turn the bottom tier under and
pin it if the parents don't want to have it hemmed. The last she
heard from her future sister-in-law was that they would "try" to
have it hemmed. I'm just keeping my fingers crossed that they do.
I know, alot of people think this is "silly" for her to be upset
about it, but a wedding is something alot of people dream about
most of their lives. They want it to be as near perfect as it can
possibly be. Perfect to her is to have anyone but herself in a
short dress. Perfect to me was to have everyone but the flower
girl in a long dress. Perfect to you may be something entirely
different. She doesn't want to get started on the wrong foot with
her sister-in-law to be, but she wants her wedding to fit her standard
of "perfect". I went through alot of "changes" when planning my
wedding and although it was pretty and nice, I now finding myself
wishing I had stuck to what I originally said I wanted (don't get
me wrong, it WAS the happiest day of my life). I don't
want my friend wishing after her wedding is over that it had been
differently.
|
721.21 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Even in a dream, remember, ... | Mon Aug 14 1989 12:58 | 5 |
| Oh no, not silly. She should just take care of herself. If taking care of
herself means insisting, fine. But sometimes it just means letting go. And I
remember perspective on situations being very hard to come by when I was
there....
Mez
|
721.22 | On the "perfect" wedding | BRONS::BURROWS | Jim Burrows | Sun Sep 10 1989 20:14 | 8 |
| Someone once suggested that it is sily to want your wedding to
be "the best day of my life", because that de facto means that
the marriage is down hill from there.
Now our wedding wasn't the *worst* day in our marriage, but it
has been surpassed many a time.
JimB.
|
721.23 | Relax | PENPAL::BURGER | | Thu Oct 05 1989 15:40 | 31 |
| I am getting married next week and would like to offer my perspective
on these issues in this notesfile. I do not have any expectations
that my wedding will be perfect. Nor do I want it to be. Because
I realized a while back that if I get concerned with perfection,
then I'm not going to have a good time at my own wedding.
I have done my best in arranging the wedding/reception according
to my fiance's and my tastes. We have hired a DJ, musicians for
the ceremony, a judge to marry us, florist, etc. etc. In most cases,
we let these people offer their suggestions rather than going in
with our demands because we figure they are the experts and know
better. The only information I gave to the florist was that my
tastes are contemporary and that I like bright colors.
As for the dresses, I foresaw potential problems so I took care
of this in the beginning. My sister is my Maid of Honor. She is
6' 2" tall. My three closest girlfriends are between 5' and 5'2".
Both of these groups have special needs as far as clothing is
concerned. My solution to this is that I am only havine one attendant,
my sister. We went shopping and she was able to pick out the dress
that she wanted and one that flatters her height. So that my
girlfriends wouldn't feel left out, I asked each of them to help
me with a particular aspect of the wedding. One friend did the
calligraphy on the invitations, etc. etc. Everybody seems happy.
Well, this is getting long winded for what I really want to say.
That is that if you are looking for perfection, you are going to
be disappointed because nobody and nothing is perfect. Relax and
have a good time at your wedding and your guests will too.
Nancy
|
721.24 | It IS the bride's day! | PSYCHE::LEUNG | | Mon Nov 27 1989 23:55 | 29 |
| Re .0: What finally happened? Was the flowergirl's dress long or
short?
Thinking back on my wedding (for 250), I wished we'd eloped!
But...then we wouldn't have all these beautiful pictures, would we?
For the indignant grooms out there who feel left out of the "bride's
day," let me ask if you see any "Groom Magazines" on the newstands?
Then see all the bridal magazines! We as women are forced to think of
the littlest details because we've always been brainwashed to think the
wedding day as THE most important day of our lives. NOTHING even comes
close to it, so LAY OFF! If you can't empathize, then try not to
antagonize the poor bride who's being pulled in a hundred different
directions.
Well, for my wedding, my husband's sister wanted her barely 3-yr-old to
be a ringbearer, so we wound up with 2 of them and 2 flowergirls.
Luckily the girls were angels, and I made their dresses to match the
maid-of-honor's dress. Even tho they came out slightly bigger than
perfect, the girls were wonderful. Can't say the same for my husband's
nephew! He screamed with fear as his mother was forced to drag him
down the aisle! My advice is: if you can't elope, try not to use
children in the wedding! And even tho I picked the most beautiful
dresses for my bridesmaids, they complained that the style made them
look FLAT!
It's true, you really can't please everyone.
-Stella
|