wednesday wisdom

wednesday wisdom- the plus one dilemma

The “plus one” dilemma. There is a lot of controversy surrounding the idea of whether or not you should always receive a +1 with a wedding invitation so I thought I’d weigh in. Of course, since this is my blog I will be giving my personal option on the matter, but I am also going to try and explain the dilemma from the soon to be married couple’s side. Hopefully, this will give a little more perspective to those who haven’t had to deal with the wonderful world of guest lists. (Anyone pick up on that sarcasm? Good.)

Also, please remember that while I am focusing on weddings, this goes for any social celebration in which you received an invitation.

First, let’s go back about 5-8 months before you received the invitation. Imagine your friends- the newly engaged couple- sitting at a table with pen and paper ready. They’ve discussed what they hope their reception celebration will be and after working out the numbers they have decided on inviting 100 people. Max. (I picked 100 because that’s what we attempted to stick around.) Sounds like a lot right? I mean, think of your last birthday party. Most likely, 30ish people tops (well unless it was a milestone in which think of your last non-milestone birthday.)

So picture your happy friends jotting down the 100 nearest and dearest who will be in attendance. Enthusiastically, they start with family. Moms, Dads, Aunts, Uncles, Grandparents, and cousins- your friends are probably nearing 30-35 people.

ALMOST ONE THIRD OF THEIR GUEST LIST.

And it’s not that the happy couple doesn’t love their family, but they are just now realizing that 100 people aren’t as many people as they thought.

Now the slightly less enthusiastic couple starts listing out the “should be considered family” people. You know, the ones who helped raise them, the ones their families went on vacations with, the ones who they actually see when they visit their parents. Between the two of them, that’s probably another 30 people. Then they add the pastor/rabbi/person marrying them and their spouse/date. I mean, they are the ones who are making this whole shindig legal and common courtesy says they should be there to celebrate as well. We loved our pastors (yep. 2 of them.) and couldn’t imagine them not being there. (They were are our rehearsal dinner too!)

Anyhow, back to the head count. The now slightly tired couple has 67 people on their 100 person max guest list. No problem. That’s still 33 friend spaces.

Then the phone rings. It’s the bride’s grandmother. She heard that they were working on the guest list and was hoping that they could invite her sister (the bride’s great aunt) because it would mean so much to both of them. This is her grandmother asking. The woman who means so much to the bride, has never asked for anything besides for the couple to visit more, and here she is asking (politely) if her sister can come. “She probably won’t make it, but her and her husband might be able to, and the invitation would mean so much to them.” Did I mention the bride actually really loves her great aunt and uncle? How sweet and thoughtful they have always been to her? No? Well. They’re great people.

And did I mention the bride just received a surprise package the day before from her grandmother containing the handkerchiefs hand embroidered by the bride’s great grandmother for the bride’s “something borrowed?” Yep. That’s right. Her grandmother is an angel. A thoughtful angel who is only asking for 2 additional people.

They say of course (and thank you for the something borrowed, we promise we will visit soon!)

Total space left for friends: 31.

They add their wedding party to the list. Total friend places left- 23. Then they remember 2 are married, (21 spots left) and three of the girls are in serious relationships (18 spots left.)

They now have to discuss the +1 dilemma. They have 18 spots left for friends. That’s either 18 friends individually, or 9 friends and dates. The couple weighs the options and decides to write down everyone they’d “like” to invite and go from there.

50 friends are written down. Damn. That didn’t work.

Bride gets phone call from best friend. Her serious boyfriend can’t make it because his sister is getting married on the exact same day. Couple bummed. They love best friend’s beau. On the plus side though, 19 spots.

Hmm. Couple decides that since it’s an intimate wedding and that people will have friends there, unless they are in a serious relationship, they don’t get a “+1.”

Couple begins to feel horrible as they group their friends. (By grouping I mean, you can’t invite 4 sorority sisters from a group of 6 who are all still really close. Much like you can’t invite 2 of your 3 best friends from high school. Hence, grouping.) Then couple has to rank the groups. It’s a horrible feeling because couple loves all 50 friends and doesn’t want anyone to feel like the kid who didn’t get a friendship bracelet.

Groom-to-be brings a Kit Kat bar and a Coke to the bride when he sees her tearing up over having to “cut friends.” Couple looks at budget again and decides again, that yes, only 100 people are going to be invited.

Couple decides each of them gets 1 person that the other maybe hasn’t met (best friend moved away, etc) but the rest has to know BOTH of them well. In seconds, the 19 spots are gone, and there are still 10 people left off of the list that fit “in a group” of people who are invited.

Bride rationalizes that there is some statistic that says something like 10% of people won’t be able to make the wedding. Guest list is pushed up to 110 to include the 10 other friends. Even with the additions, 30ish friends still won’t get an invitation.

Couple is exhausted, emails guest list to parents, and goes to Dairy Queen to split a blizzard. Happily stuffed, but still a little sad and worn out, they decide to call it a night.

The next morning, calls start coming in from the families. Couple didn’t invite so and so’s best friend. What about parent’s work associates? Why do they get more people than we do? Can so and so also bring their high school aged children?  And so on.

Bride starts crying from frustration. Groom begins screening calls.

And this was all BEFORE you even received your beautiful invitation.

I cannot tell you how many friends and brides I work with that specifically address envelopes to certain family members and then have the guests RSVP with an additional +3. Or when it’s addressed to John Smith, and John writes, “we can’t wait to be there!” Everyone, please hear me when I say this: Your invitation was addressed to YOU. That means YOU are invited. Not you and friend, not you and boyfriend. YOU.

Do not call the bride or groom and ask if you can bring someone else unless you are a) married and not sure why your partner wasn’t invited or b) you’ve been dating the same person ever since you and engaged couple met and you aren’t sure why they weren’t invited.

Otherwise, you put the couple in a very awkward/emotional situation. They know whom they invited and whom they did not invite, trust me.

Now I understand how not getting a +1 can be REALLY annoying. No one wants to eat alone, travel alone, or stand by the wall because you don’t have a dance partner, but hopefully your friends wouldn’t put you in that situation and invited a lot of your friends as well (who also didn’t get a +1.) And while it used to be that if the wedding was a destination wedding, that everyone got a +1, now that’s not always the case because almost every wedding is a destination wedding for someone since most of us don’t still live in our hometowns with the same friends since birth.

So here is the take away message.

For the couples- Make a decision on “+1’s” and stick with it. Only married folks and really serious couples who have been together at least a year? Fine, but stick to that. No picking and choosing. And try to put yourself into your friend’s shoes. You will never make everyone happy, but try to be as fair as possible. Make sure those who do not get a plus one, have friends there too. Don’t purposely make people uncomfortable.

For the guests- whoever the envelope is addressed to, is who is invited. Kids/ the word family not on there? Then they aren’t invited. No “and guest?” Then you didn’t get one. I know it can suck, but remember that the guest list is their guest list and it probably took a LOT of time to make, brought about a lot of fights, and led to a lot of compromises. Do not put your friends in an awkward situation/add stress by saying you just have to bring someone. (If you are the MOH or something or are really close to the couple and feel it’s okay to ask, then take your chances; just don’t get upset if you don’t get your way.)

And remember that the couple wants you there- hence they invited you- but if the lack of a “+1” is a deal breaker to you, then you can always RSVP “no.”

there is no way this piece of paper weighs 140 pounds. (wednesday wisdom)

Paper terminology can be really confusing. The weight, how it's pressed, the types of paper... it can be really confusing. So let's break it down. Types of paper.

There are so many different types of paper- especially when you start talking about specialty papers (onion paper...rice paper... the list goes on and on)- but what people are most familiar with is bond, cover, and newsprint paper.

Bond paper is commonly used for computer paper, envelopes, office letterhead, etc. If you run it through your printer, more often than not this is what you are using. It's really thin, really smooth, and can vary in colors. Cover paper is commonly referred to as card stock.  It's thicker than bond, comes in all different colors, and if usually used for pamphlets, brochures, and anything else that needs to be just a little more durable than regular computer paper. Newsprint is exactly what it sounds like- it's what newspapers are printed on. You'll also find a lot of artists who sketch on newsprint because it's cheap and great for simple sketches. (I love the gray dirtiness of it and how cheap it is, but hate how it smudges.)

These days, invitations can be printed on just about anything- from paper, to wood, to cloth, but traditionally, wedding invitations are usually printed on a cotton fiber paper (as opposed to a tree based paper like bond.) Cotton fiber has a beautiful tactile quality, holds ink beautifully, and can be cut to just about any size or shape you can imagine. (Cotton fibers also stretch as oppose to rip, so cotton papers work very well with printing techniques like engraving or letterpress.)

So let's say you've picked cotton paper for your invitations. You think you're done, when you are then asked questions like whether you'd like cold or hot pressed or what weight paper you would like. Before you get frustrated and mutter "whatever looks best" let's look at an example. All of my invitations are created on 140 lb 100% cotton cold pressed paper. What a mouth full right? And what does it all mean?

Well you already know what cotton paper means- and being 100% cotton (sometimes called rag) simply means just that. 100% cotton. No tree fibers.

Now on the the cold pressed part. Simply put (unless you are a watercolor artist you don't really need to know all of the details) cold pressed paper is smooth(er) and hot pressed paper is rough(er.) If you would like to really see the difference I'd suggest you go to an art store and head to the watercolor section. There you can see and touch all of the different types of paper and really get a better feeling for what I'm talking about. (But that could just be helpful to me. I'm more of a visual person and retain a lot more if I can see and touch something as opposed to just reading about it. If you're not a visual person then "smooth or rough" is probably a good enough description.)

Lastly is the paper weight. The first time I heard that paper could be 140 lbs (high school maybe?), I just nodded and tried to act like that made sense to me (when in all actuality I couldn't wrap my mind around it.)

So I picked up the paper.

Well that was the first sign that it wasn't 140lbs. I couldn't lift 140lbs with one hand. (Hell, I doubt I could with two hands...even if I was "lifting from my legs.") So when I got home I googled it and now get to share the knowledge with you.

The weight of paper is determined by how much a ream (usually 500 sheets, though sometimes 1000 sheets) of the uncut paper weighed. In other words, 20lb bond paper means that 500 sheets of that specific paper weighs 20 lbs. 140lb paper means that 500 sheets on that specific paper weighs 140lbs. The higher the weight, the thicker and nicer the paper.

So there you go. You've passed Paper 101 :)