Asian
An
Asian bride will change 1-3 times, showing how wealthy and prosperous
her family is. One dress may be a white gown, while another may be a
dark red dress with a phoenix crown and a folding fan. The groom will
wear a black silk coat, an embroidered dragon robe, and a black hat
with red tassels. Serve your guests a feast of colorful vegetables and
rice. Give your guest favors of walnuts, peanuts, sunflower seeds, and
candy (symbols of good luck). Use traditional soup dishes/tea cups,
chopsticks, folded origami cranes.
Japanese
- The couple takes nine sips of sake, becoming husband and wife after
the first sip. Chinese - during the ceremony the couple drink wine and
honey from goblets tied together with red string.
Celtic
The
bride looks very nice in an ivory dress, pearl jewelry, a crown of
flowers, and long flowing hair. The bridesmaids can wear ivory or dark
green velvet dresses. The groom is best dressed in a tartan, while
groomsmen should wear kilts. Baby’s breath, and ivy are popular
flowers for decoration, as well as Celtic knot designs on linens and
fabrics. Serve your guests potatoes and roast beef. A horsedrawn
carriage is popular for transportation for the bride and groom.
Compilation CDs with Irish music make good favors.
Greek
Koumbara
is the custom of exchanging two crowns joined by a ribbon between the
bride's and groom's heads, which symbolized the joining of two into
one. Serve stuffed mushrooms, Spanakopita (pastry filled with spinach
and feta cheese), and Baklava (filo pastry layered with honey and
nuts). At a Greek wedding, the ritual of breaking dishes symbolizes
joy as well as the permanence of the marriage.
Hindu
Serve
brie and papaya quesadillas, wild mushroom ravioli with fresh tomato
concasse, and a large white wedding cake with chocolate icing in an
intricate lace pattern in the henna designs that are on the hands and
feet of the bride. Be sure to include the Mangal
phera, a
tradition in which the couple circles a fire in the center of the mandap
seven times.
Jewish
Traditionally
couples will separate for a week before the wedding. Both the mother
of the bride and the groom feeds the bride seven times each during a
henna party – honey, sugar, olives, and almonds. Before
a wedding, Jewish brides immerse themselves in a Mikvah, a ritual bath
in running water. Traditionally, a Jewish bride circles the groom
seven times, representing the seven wedding blessings and the seven
days of creation, and demonstrating that the groom is the center of
her world. Serve your guests chicken and fish, the signs of fertility.
Polish
Polish
brides wear a wreath of fresh flowers and rosemary in their hair.
Serve your guests roast duck or veal, smoked sausages, potato leek
soup, and almond-filled pastries. Parents
give the couple a ceremonial gift of bread and salt to the bride and
groom before the wedding, which represents both prosperity and
bitterness. During the dances, guests link arms and form a circle
around the bride, her mother takes the bride's veil off and places it
on the head of her honor attendant, who then dances with the best man.
The maid of honor then passes the veil to the next bridesmaid in the
circle, who dances with the next groomsman in line, and so forth. The
significance of the passing of the veil is that the bride is offering
her bridesmaids good fortune for marrying themselves one day. Include
polka dances at your reception. Guests
can throw oats and barley down on the couple rather than rice.
Wedding
Themes Index
Wedding Ceremony Index
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