• Type:
  • Genre:
  • Duration:
  • Average Rating:

Month: March 2023

What is the best reception timeline?

Q: WHAT IS THE BEST RECEPTION TIMELINE?

VIDEO SUMMARY

How many of you have been to a wedding and waited over 2 hours for the bride and groom to join? No amount of free booze and food is going to make you be okay with that.

Picture this you’re scrolling Facebook. And in one of your wedding groups, you see someone saying, Help. My wedding is this weekend and I have no idea how the flow of the reception should go. You stop and you think, Oh, shoot, I better start thinking about that. And after over seven years in the industry, here is what I think works best.

We’re here with a couple unpopular opinions when it comes to reception timeline, but a few things that we really love to do.

Okay, this is my number one way to run a timeline. We did this for my wedding, and this is for the brides who are prioritizing the party, Right? Like you want to maximize fun.

Here are some things and tips that I talk to my clients about when it comes to how the wedding reception can unfold.

After doing over a hundred weddings, I find that this timeline works the best for the couple, for the guests and the dj.

Do I need to feed vendors?

Q: Do I need to feed Wedding Vendors? When? Where do they sit? What is the Cost?

VIDEO SUMMARY

I have been personally victimized by this topic. So let’s talk about it.

This is a great question. As a planner I get asked this a lot from our clients, and I think it’s just a question that’s very common because we just don’t know what is edicate and how we should handle this. Always provide a nice guest meal for each vendor that is working the duration of your event.

Yes, you should definitely feed your vendors that are with you for more than 4 hours.

1,000%. Yes. Please feed your vendors at your wedding.

Yes. You need to feed your vendors. You can’t have vendors working 12 plus hour days and not be getting fed.

In order for your vendor team to do their best work for you. We need to fuel in the tank.

The easiest way to tackle this is a transparent conversation with your vendor team because the answer is going to lie with them.

What is the best timeline to keep people on the dance floor?

Q: What is the best timeline to keep people on the dance floor?

answers:

1 Videos
VIDEO SUMMARY

If you have a dancing crowd, I would totally give the people what they want and I would have a long dance set. The only thing I would take into account is talking to your band and your DJ and making sure find out when they need to take breaks or what their traditional sets are. I’ve seen it done a couple of ways. Traditionally, what I see is after you do your first dance and your parent dances, we’ll usually see everybody invited up on the dance floor, have a nice like 40 to 60 minutes, depending on where you are and who you’re working with. Dance set, then break for dinner, do your toasts, and then after your toast, sort of roll into like a dance set through the end of the night. That’s when your venue will serve dessert and stuff, and then it’s up to the person. If they want to sit and break and have a coffee and have a piece of cake, great. If they just want to keep dancing, go for it. But talk to your band or your DJ and see what they say. But I think if you add in that little bit of a dance set in the beginning, it’s not going to feel like so hardcore of a dance set at the end of the night.

Do I really need wedding programs?

Q: Do I really need wedding Programs?

VIDEO SUMMARY

I’m not really a huge fan of programs, especially if you’re having like a quick 1520 minutes ceremony and, like, your best friend is officiating. If you are having more of a religious ceremony at like a place of worship or you’re infusing different cultures or traditions that people aren’t super familiar with, then that’s the exception. When I think you should have a program, I think it’s nice to have just something that gives some context so that people can follow along and know what’s going on and why. But otherwise, I think you can forego that. I think it’s just an extra expense and people tend to just leave them behind anyway.

What should I include on my wedding day timeline?

Q: What should I include on my wedding day timeline?

answers:

1 Videos
VIDEO SUMMARY

I think the priority for your wedding day morning should be relaxation and joy and not stress or making sure you have everything timed out to the exact minute. That being said, you do need kind of an order of events or a schedule for what’s going on the morning of your wedding because you’re usually not alone or not in a small group of people that are nimble and easy to get through those several very important hours. You often have the entire wedding party to account for both bridesmaids and grimsmen the couple. The parents are often involved in the morning activities and then at some point in your morning, all of your vendors show up with all their supplies or their services. So typically what my clients wedding day mornings look like is hair and makeup starts decently early. Obviously depends on what time your ceremony is, but I’ve seen hair and makeup start anywhere between 07:00 A.m. And noon. Depends how many people you have, if the hair and makeup people are coming to your hotel room or your house, or if you’re going to their salon, and then how long the hair and makeup artists say they need per application or per hairdo. I’ve seen that range anywhere from 20 to 60 minutes. So make sure you know how long they’re expecting to have on the day of. Always make sure you have food for everyone while they’re getting ready, both the bridesmaids and groomsmen or anyone else around during the morning. I know you want to look your best and you’re in this pretty dress and you’re going to be photo taken all day, but you have to eat something, otherwise you’re going to end up passing out in your ceremony or throwing up before your reception is even over. So hair and makeup once that is done, a lot of my clients do like the pajama photos if all their girls were in matching pajamas, maybe pop some champagne or throw confetti for some cute photos when hair and makeup is done but you’re still in your pajamas. And then I usually have the bridesmaids get dressed first and then if the bride and groom exchange like letters or little gifts that she might want to open in private, I’ll have her do that. Then if she’s okay doing that in her pajamas or like in her robe for the morning, we can do it later if she wants to do it in her wedding dress. If it’s being photographed or videographed. After the bridesmaids are dressed, the bride starts getting dressed. Because the bride getting dressed usually always includes the bride’s mom or the maid of honor or sister of some sort, both for the sentimentality of the moment and also usually physical assistance of getting into the dress and buttoning it up. So around that time I usually have photo and video already arrived, usually just when hair and makeup is ending. The bride might want some photos of the hair and makeup finishing, but definitely want those PJ photos. And then the bride getting into her dress with her mom or sister or something. If you want a lot of detail shots like those flat lay images of your invitation and the rings and the perfume bottle and all that, those usually need to happen before any of photos of your bridesmaids and you getting in your dress again, talk to your photographer. They may need 20 minutes for that. They may want an hour for that. Once the bride is in her dress, sometimes they do a first look with all their bridesmaids, a first look with a dad or grandpa, brother, really. Anyone else important that they want to have a moment with to show the big outfit at that point? What happens next between then and the ceremony? Depends if you’re doing a first look or not. If you are doing a first look, we usually do first look, couple photos and then wedding party photos. Especially if you have two photographers you can split and do bridesmaids and groomsmen at the same time. And then if you’re not doing a first look after everyone’s dressed, you would just do photos with your bridesmaids and then head to the ceremony. The timing of all that and how long each one takes is very nuanced. It depends where you’re getting ready, where the other half of the wedding party is getting ready, how far away you are from your ceremony venue, et cetera, et cetera. The guy’s schedule is way easier. They don’t have hair and makeup, but they also need to eat something. Everyone needs to make sure they’re not drunk before the ceremony. And then the guys just need to be dressed and ready, which still takes a surprising amount of time, like girls think about getting dressed as more. We usually schedule 30 minutes for bridesmaids to go get dressed and guys usually don’t expect that. They also need to budget that amount of time to get into everything in their outfit. But.

Scroll to top

Ready to answer our couple’s burning questions?

Here are some tips and tricks to film a great video that stops the scroll:

1

Start with a hook.

You’ve got 3-5 seconds to stop the viewer’s scroll. Be creative… start with a phrase like:

  • Oh hell no, just no…
  • Absolutely not…
  • Yes, yes, yes! You should do this…
  • It depends on one very important thing…

2

Give a super quick intro.

We’ll put your name and bio in the title and links, so you can say something more general like:

“I’m Robin, a photographer in Chicago and after shooting 500 weddings…”
Or
“I’m not only a wedding planner in Chicago, but a newlywed myself…”

3

Answer away!

Give them your hot take, and don’t hold anything back.

Examples of what we are looking for:

check out how Sal nailed it in this video and so did Megan in this one and Nichole told it straight (from her car).

Tips for filming

Filming vertically on your phone.

TikTok is vertical for good reason - Gen Z have spoken!

Good audio is more important than good video.

Find a quiet room (that isn’t an echoey bathroom!).

Make sure your face is bright enough.

Standing near a large window or lamp is helpful - You want to be brighter than your background.

Nothing works better than a good story.

If you have any experiences you can share to help answer the question, go for it!

Bring
the energy!

Down an espresso, pump yourself up, and let the answers pour out! Our couples want as much honesty as they can get.

Featured Question

Q: Is there really a wedding mark up?

Do you feel like the industry charges more “because it’s a wedding” and they know it’s an emotional purchase?

Do companies think that they can charge more for weddings since the bride and groom may be willing to spend more on their dream wedding?

Hey wedding pros – is this higher price tag justified? Why? Do you charge more for your service if it is a wedding?

This is a taboo topic, whispered but not discussed… until now.

Welcome to The Uncorked Project!

Join the conversation!

Welcome back to

Log in to continue