Posts Tagged ‘Men & Wedding Planning’

New Dates for wedding Genie Bridal Workshops

November 25th, 2011 No Comments
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I am so exited to be able to release new dates for The Wedding Genie Bridal Workshops. What’s more we can do the workshops in The Blue Door Bakery Studio. It’s a lovely airy space where we can really have some fun and serious inspiration.  One mile away from Hagley Hall making it ideal if you want to  look around a venue after your workshop.

If you are a DIY Bride and want to make your own cakes too this is an added bonus!

Getting married in 2011 or 2012 means now is a great time to book the workshop. You can chill out and relax over Christmas knowing you are all organised for the start of the new year.

To kick off the new year I am going to give away a free copy of my Wedding Genie Wizard Planning Tools, worth £15, with each place. In one morning you will go away brimming with ideas, inspiration and all you need to plan your perfect day.  Most of all you be incredibly organised.

The new dates are:

Sunday February 12th 11.00 – 1.30pm

Sunday March 25th 11.00 – 1.30pm

The studio is easy to get to in the heart of the midlands. Great if you want to come by train or drive. Click here to see how to get there, but I will send you a map and directions when you book.

To book just click here!! There are limited places so don’t leave it too late.  I am dying to teach you all my professional hints and tips! I will let you all have a copy too of my tried and trusted supplier list. That will save you oodles of time surfing trying to find the right team to work with. Let me turn you into a planner extraordinaire!

Until next time, happy planning.


 

 

 

 

 

Black Tie Wedding Etiquette

November 11th, 2011 No Comments
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Wedding Planner, Coordinator, Birmingham, Lichfield, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Nottingham, Leicester, Coventry, The MidlandsChristmas is nearly upon us and those party invites start to roll in. I don’t know about you but sometimes the dress code blows my mind. Smart casual has me running for the trees? What is that anyway?

Many weddings are black tie at this time of year and that is another area where sometimes it’s tricky to know what to wear. Is it short black dresses? Do our men need to wear a DJ? Well according to the internet research I did for ladies at least. Black tie etiquette is a little blurred.

It is acceptable to wear short black cocktail dresses. It seems long dresses are largely now left for “White Tie” events? Yes I know very uber glam! I must say I have never been to one, but that is all out glamour. Long gloves, long dresses and men in tails with satin stripes down their trousers!! Wow!

If you choose to have a wedding that denotes “Black Tie”  there should be a little addition to the invite that states “Black Tie Attire”. Then your guests will turn up in the right apparell. The wedding ceremony and reception is generally an evening affair, after 6pm is the definition for black tie.

I must say I do love the idea of dressing up in a lavish dress for a black tie wedding. The thought of this teamed with bright red and black put together beautifully makes my heart race. Think holly berries, mulled wine in lovely glassware, tables cloths or chair covers in black with table runners in gorgeous deep reds.

I love this mood board I found on Black Tie Invitations. The reds are so luxurious and superbly elegant.

What about this idea for chairs too?

Wedding Planner, Coordinator, Birmingham, Lichfield, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Nottingham, Leicester, Coventry, The Midlands

Not sure about you but a man in a fabulous suit, cut to perfection makes me swoon! I asked our Genie Dream Team Supplier Adrian from The Bespoke Tailor to give me some advice on how to dress our guys for Black Tie events and weddings.

Adrian says ” With the “Black Tie” season only just round the corner, are you concerned as to what the right etiquette is? Well worry no more, read on!

Suit

When “black tie” appears on an invitation it is an indication that the guest is expected to wear formal evening dress. This consists of a dinner jacket, with matching trousers, most often in black. The dinner jacket will have satin lapels and trimmings to make it distinct from a lounge  jacket, which is for daytime use. The trousers should have a satin braid down the length of the outer leg seam.

Shirt

The dinner suit should be work with a white dress shirt. The choice of collar style, either wing or standard collar, is optional and down to personal choice.

Bow Tie

A black bow tie should be worn. These can be either pre-tied or self-tied. It’s worth practicing to tie a bow tie for that extra special feel. You can accessorise this by wearing a matching cummerbund too.

Waistcoat

An alternative to cummerbund is a waistcoat. With a double-breasted jacket, neither is necessary.

Cufflinks

Evening shirts will always come with a double cuff, so don’t forget to pack your cufflinks!

Pocket Square

Although not necessary this is a nice finishing touch. If you choose to wear one avoid colour stick to white cotton or linen. There are many ways to fold the pocket square but the “three point fold” is our favourite for 2011.

Shoes

Dress shoes are a very important part of the outfit. Ideally, plain black patent or fine leather shoes should be worn.

Socks

Always wear black fine-gauge knee-length socks – there is nothing more tacky than a flash of flesh when all dressed up.

Hey what do you think of my example of a black tie suit? OMG could not resist showing you this.

Wedding Planner, Coordinator, Birmingham, Lichfield, Staffordshire, Derbyshire, Nottingham, Leicester, Coventry, The Midlands

Adrian really does know what he is talking about. His suits are to die for, designed and handmade by him for you! If you are planning a wedding next year and you want to kit your husband to be out in something fabulous don’t think about going anywhere else. If you are having a black tie wedding this christmas I would love to see it featured on my blog. Call or mail me if you want to send me your photographs after the wedding. I love to show real brides to inspire my brides and me!!

Until next time, happy planning.

Wedding Planning for Men – 5 Things Men Love about Weddings

April 28th, 2011 No Comments
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Just a little break today from the Royal Wedding chat to give our lovely grooms a break. Andrew from I am Staggered has shared with us his pearls of wisdom on what men like about weddings. I do love his sense of humour and just for five minutes it made me smile.

Cynicism, pah! Cynicism went out with Keyboard Cat and saying “lol!” without meaning it. The new internet hotness is rabid enthusiasm about things and general swooning with delight. So, very much in this spirit, and fuelled by cheap caffeine, here’s five things that men absolutely love about weddings! SQUUUUEEAAAAAL!

1) Finger buffets

The finger buffet is a timeless catering roulette. It’s not up everyone’s street, but few aspects of catering are quite as adventurous. Is there egg on that sandwich? Are those crisps mixed? Will the couple have gone the extra mile and have fresh bacon sandwiches brought out at about 9ish?

2) Underage Boozing

Usual booze legalities don’t apply at weddings. Most of us had our first secretive beer at a wedding and there’s nothing quite as heart-warming as seeing an early teenager being sick in a pot plant. A wedding wouldn’t be a wedding without at least a few first time hangovers – welcome to the club kids!

3) Bells Ringing

If you want the sound of England, just fire up a few church bells. There’s genuinely fewer more triumphant, happier sounds than the echo of Church bells. If you’re having a civil wedding get some bell sounds piped in.

4) Blokes Obtaining The Football Scores

The perils of a Saturday afternoon wedding are of course, the inevitable football clash. Brides, be wary of passed around phones, unexpectedly helpful trips to fetch stuff from the car and inappropriate whisperings and mood swings. Just don’t jump up and shout “Yes!” during the vows.

5) Hats

Sadly the hat has recently become a much-maligned accessory limited to teenage Goths, Sunday drivers and that one bloke in the village who wears a trilby. Fortunately, a wedding allows for plenty of hat madness, as approved by Cilla Black.

BONUS: Uncles

Uncles exist in a vague shadowy world where they flit forever in-between weddings and christenings. At these events they will talk traffic with anyone who strays near enough. Usually good for a round at some point, but will go wildly off-list with a wedding present that you really don’t know what it is.

Staggered is the UK’s handsomest men’s Stop by sometime, say hi.

Until next time, happy planning.

Wedding Planning for Men – Why You Can’t Get Married Where You Want

April 7th, 2011 No Comments
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This week those lovely boys at I am Staggered at campaigning for couples to get married where they like. It is a shame when you have a fabulous idea like getting married in an idyllic place that means a great deal to each of you, such as a beach, but legally you are restricted. There are ways around it, like getting married in a registry office first then hiring a wedding celebrant to marry you in your idyllic place. Check out what Staggered say and see if you want to join their campaign.

One of the things that often surprises readers and bloggers over at Staggered (it’s the UK’s leading men’s wedding website don’t you know) is that they can’t get married anywhere they would like. Yes, there’s some great venues and churches but there are strict and stupid restrictions that say where you can’t get married.

When the rules regarding ceremonies were changed in 1995 by The Marriages (Approved Premises) Regulations it meant an explosion in the number of intriguing and exciting places that were allowed to hold weddings. This was brilliant because it meant that couples could get one step closer to finding somewhere that truly reflected them to hold their most important celebration.

Unfortunately, in the UK outmoded and pointless legislation still exists that needlessly restricts where people can get married and badly damages British business.

Want to hear something seriously outdated?

- Weddings must take place between 8am and 6pm

- Wedding venues must have a roof

- Wedding venues must be moored to their foundations

What. The. Heck.

Now all of this might sound like a bit of silliness, but there’s actually a very serious, multi-million point to it all. Currently, 18% of British couples are choosing to marry abroad. Often the dream that is sold to these couples – and the one that they feel reflects them – is to marry on a beach. Maybe some of them would choose to marry in the UK if they could marry on a British beach – but you can’t marry on a beach here because it doesn’t have a fecking roof.

There is something seriously wrong going on here. In an era when the government are supposed to be supporting British business, they are allowing an entire industry to wither on the vine for the sake of not tweaking a few lines of antiquated regulations. We’ve looked at this from every angle and there’s no sensible reason why this shouldn’t be changed immediately. If you live in a coastal area and think your MP would like to bring more business to your constituency, get them to be a hero and raise this in Parliament – we demand to know – why can’t you have a beach wedding?

If you would like to register your views, please consider adding your virtual signature to The Any Campaign . For more information see http://www.theanycampaign.co.uk/ – they’re currently 300 signatures off their target of 1000…

Until next week, happy planning.

Men and Wedding Planning – How To Handle Your Mother-in-Law

March 11th, 2011 No Comments
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The mens blog today is a slightly sensitive one but great advice from the I am Staggered crew. You really do need to tackle these issues early on in your wedding planning. I will hand over to the men for some excellent staggered advice from a mans point of view.

How To Handle Your Mother-In-Law

Did you know that an anagram of mother-in-law is “Woman Hitler”? You can draw your own conclusions on that one. Now, I’m not trying to cause a fuss but recently when we’ve been attending wedding fairs, we’ve had more than a few brushes with the bride’s mother and it’s plain to see that the notion of an interfering mother-in-law is a huge issue for many grooms (and brides). To that end we thought we’d put together a few tips for grooms experiencing their own Woman Hitler moments…

Present A United Front

One of the biggest threats that an interfering mother-in-law presents is that it causes a rift in the relationship between the bride and groom. The groom is getting hacked off because his MIL is actively stopping him from getting involved, but if his bride is close to her mum he might not want to cause a rift by telling her. That’s why it’s important that you discuss the issue with your wife-to-be and tell her exactly why it’s annoying you and reach an agreement on the issue before you act on the situation.

Be Tactful

For many mothers-in-law it seems that her daughter’s wedding is the chance she’s been waiting for to create her dream day. Not to put too fine a point on it, but that’s wayyy wrong. The wedding is about the couple and their relationship. If the MIL wants to help them to create their dream day then that’s great, but she should have absolutely no say in how their relationship is celebrated.

That’s still true even if it’s her husband that’s paying for it (which is increasingly rare). If that’s held over you as a means to let her have her way, then you need to have a serious conversation about whether the cost of the financial support is too great. Again though – it’s all about you and your wife-to-be discussing it and agreeing what you want.

Set Tasks

Weddings are essentially long, long lists of tasks that need to be researched, completed and paid for. That might be stripping away the romance a bit, but you get the point. If you are blessed with a mother-in-law who is desperate to participate then focus her energies. Do not give her carte blanche to meddle.

Be enthusiastic about her help, thank her warmly and then set her a list of tasks. Explain that you are covering tasks A to W and it would be great if she could research (or even do if you trust her) tasks X, Y and Z. This way she knows she’s being helpful (and that you’re grateful) but most importantly of all it tells her exactly where the boundaries are.

Ultimately, in our reader’s experience the majority of people loved their mother-in-law (53% loved, compared to 47% who loathed) but there was enough who had problems to suggest that there’s a reason the groom/mother-in-law relationship is such a staple of sitcoms. Good luck…

If you’re needing help with your mothers-in-law then don’t forget to stop by www.iamstaggered.com where you’ll always find a friendly ear and a funny mother-in-law joke.

Until next time, happy planning.

Wedding Planing for Men – 2011 The Year of The Groom?

December 16th, 2010 No Comments
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I think Staggered have a point with this blog, men do want to be more involved in their wedding planning. The Wedding Genie are going to address that in 2011, watch this space. In the meantime having a little piece of I am Staggered each week is a big help.

2011 – The Year of the Groom?

It turns out the final straw was the shoes. I was talking to a groom who rang quite out of the blue to rant at someone. We don’t get loads of calls at Staggered but if you’re canny you can find the telephone number on the site and we quite often have it on our emails and this one groom called Mark decided to call us.

Mark’s problem was shoes. He’d gone for a fitting for his wedding suit and the guy who was helping him get kitted-up had tutted about lending Mark some shoes. Naturally, this put Mark in a bad mood, “I knew trainers would look stupid with my suit but I just thought I could borrow a pair and when I asked he tutted. It was weird, it made me feel like I was being stupid.”

Now it could just be that Mark was unfortunate enough to come across a guy who was having a bad day. But it serves to illustrate how different the groom and the bride’s experiences of wedding planning can be. For a bride – getting her dress is an empowering, bonding and beautiful experience – for a groom getting the suit that he will wear on the most important day of his life he gets tutted at. Is that fair?

Clearly for legal reasons we couldn’t go with Mark’s initial request which was to write “***************** ARE *****” on the front page of Staggered but we agreed that it was time to do something about the situation facing the modern groom. Especially as this isn’t by any means an isolated incident.

We’re absolutely not saying that we want to cheat the bride of the wedding experience – we fully accept that it’s still the bride’s big day. What we think though is that a wedding is about celebrating the beginning of a partnership – and that begins with respecting both sides of the couple – the bride and the groom. If the wedding isn’t an inclusive and equal celebration then what does that say about the beginning of the important bit: the marriage?

Every month I am genuinely privileged to get to communicate with tens of thousands of men who are excited about their weddings, but many of them are reserved about communicating how they feel because they are made to feel that it’s somehow a bit weird that they’re excited. These men are committed, passionate, excited, emotional and engaged with their weddings and with their wives, they don’t approach weddings in the same way or get excited about the same things but it’s just as important to them as it is to the bride. Don’t take my word for it – go and read Dan’s blog and meet a modern groom for yourself. What they need is for people to accept that they are there and not try and work around them, tolerate them or worst of all dismiss them and their ideas.

On behalf of men like Mark and Dan we are asking the wedding industry as a whole to look at how they interact with grooms and appraise whether they could do more to engage with them. We’ve already had some great discussions with wedding fairs – many of whom are looking to increase their content for grooms in 2011 and that’s brilliant, we’ve also had word about some interesting new wedding-related TV programmes that don’t disgracefully redact the groom like programmes such as Living TV’s Four Weddings does.

Until next time happy planning.

Wedding Planning for Men – Let’s Hear It For The Dads

December 9th, 2010
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We have really missed featuring Staggered, they make us laugh and keep our grooms up to date with everything men need to know to about surviving and planning a wedding This week is a funny one. Enjoy!

Let’s Hear It For The Dads

Dads. They mend plugs with butter knives, keep half-empty tins of paint in the shed and always, always know where the batteries are kept. So when it came to advice about weddings, Staggered, decided that we should go straight to our readers’ dads and see what pearls of wisdom they’d dispensed before their weddings. Turns out our readers’ dads enjoy quotes and cliches.


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“He seems like a nice lad, he always has done, and I’m glad you’re marrying him. But remember, if needs be, I’ll bash his head in.” – Lucy

“Marriage is not always 50/50. Some days you will wake up and may have to give 90% and your spouse will give 10%. Other days you may wake up and give 25% and your husband will have to put in the 75%. I never thought of this before but it is so true.” – Roger

“Remember, she does want something for her birthday.” – Al

“At the height of planning my wedding to, and when my grooms frustration reached its peak, my father took me to one side and said “You know all the times when you’ve imagined scoring an FA Cup winning goal at Wembley or taking 5 wickets at Lords or playing the closing set at Glastonbury, or whatever you imagine when your brain goes in to its screensaver mode… Well for every time you’ve imagined something like that which will never happen, she’s imagined this wedding day and that will – so be patient and cut her some slack – it’ll be worth it in the end”. He’s a genius, my father!” -  Jim

“Don’t cock it up.” – Alan

“The two cornerstones of a wonderful marriage are chocolate and compromise.” – Marie, Staggered Reader

“Live long and prosper.” – Alex (“Yes, he did quote Spock.”)

“You never suited a bachelor life.” – Andy

“Can we hurry this along if possible, the dog’s getting restless back in the car.” – Colin

Let us know if your own dad had something to share prior to your big day. Was it as meaningful as Colin’s Dad’s? If you’re a father of the bride then be sure to have a look at the UK’s leading men’s wedding website Staggered as we’ve got plenty of resources just for you.

Until next time, happy planning.



Wedding Planning for Men – Staggered USA

October 28th, 2010 No Comments
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Well would you believe it, those gorgeous Staggered boys who entertain the grooms on my web site (and me) are expanding! No not their waistline! but how about this? They are crossing the atlantic. USA be warned staggered is coming to you.  Good luck I say and have fun! Hop on over to check them out.

Just in case you are reading this and wondering why there is a wedding web site for men. The fact is that only 14% of weddings are paid for by the brides family, that means couples are footing the bill. I know my husband took much more interest in our wedding when he was the main contributor. Not only that modern men are happy to help. Only yesterday I ran a Bridal Workshop and one of the participants was a groom! He was keen to be involved and take a load of his gorgeous fiance. I will elaborate more during the week, for now it’s back to Andrew.

Andrew, the editor, told me a little more about his plans for world domination.

  • Remind me what Staggered is again It’s the UK’s leading (and only, which is how we know we’re leading) men’s wedding website. Launched in 2009 it aims to help grooms, best men and fathers of the bride with weddings, from proposals to honeymoons.
  • When are you launching and what is it? We’re launching a brother website to Staggered, called Staggered USA, which launches on 25/10/2010 with a party at The Volstead in NYC (if you’re in the US shout at brenda@iamstaggered.com for an invite). It can be found at www.iamstaggered.com/usa and it’s a website whose editorial mission can be summed up in three words: weddings, men, solved. We aim to help American grooms, best men and fathers of the bride to plan and enjoy proposals, bachelor parties, weddings and honeymoons. We also do aftercare with anniversary help and reminders.
  • Who is running it? The very marvellous Brenda Della Casa is our US editor. She’s based in New York, she’s a relationship expert who has written for a trillion companies like Cosmopolitan and Glamour and she’s worked for Staggered from the beginning. She can be hollered at via brenda@iamstaggered.com. Brenda has assembled a team of experts including Peter Otero from Silver Birches who is taking a break from organising parties for Brad Pitt to help Staggered US readers plan amazing parties.
  • Why are you launching in America? Because our outrageous egos demanded that we at least attempt global domination. That and the fact that since we launched approximately 20% of our traffic came from the States. The more we thought about it the less logical it seemed to disappoint 1 in 5 of our readers by not giving them advice and information relevant to their country. The more you look at it the more you see how different the two wedding markets are so it seemed obvious to launch an entirely separate, but linked, site.
  • Will you change the way you go about it? There will be differences in how we run the site and it will be looked after by Americans obviously, but essentially it’s based on the same principle as the UK site – that we want to help men with weddings. There’s nearly 6,000 weddings per day in America (2,077,000 per annum if you want to know precisely) so there’s a lot of grooms, best men and fathers of the bride to help.
  • Where next? We’re looking for Staggered partners in Australia, Canada and India for 2011.

Good luck from The Wedding Genie. I am sure it will be a resounding success, remember us when you control the world!

Until next time, happy planning.


Wedding Planning for Men – Men Crying!

October 7th, 2010
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It’s been a few weeks since we featured our lovely friends from I am Staggered. Andrew has sent us quite a fun blog. I know weddings are very emotional and can turn even the stoney hearted into emotional wrecks – but these grooms really push it! I have to admit though they did make me chuckle. Enjoy!

Men – we’re surprisingly complex beasts you know? You women look at us and just see the oil-stained hands, our knowledge of football trivia and the leering at women we do as we drive past them on the street but you completely overlook the fact that beneath these crunchy, sexist outer layers there lies a chewy, emotional centre. Sometimes us men are just big girls in shiny shoes and nowhere is this more apparent than at a wedding, where we can finally let ourselves go. Like these colossal jessies.

Ok, this bloke might be taking the whole emotion thing a bit too far. From the opening seconds where you think you’re going to witness him upchucking his pre-wedding G&T to the stomping and restraining, you do wonder just how eager he is to get on with the whole first night thing…Glory indeed.

All the women in the congregation are sighing and wishing they had a man who could be as open and emotionally honest as this groom. All the men are counting down the seconds until they can laugh straight in his big teary face. His bride dabbing his tears away with a little silk hankie just makes the whole thing unbearable.

Me. Not so sure about this one. The whole massed audience, the cameras and his pre-prepared speech make us wary that he’s faking it. We’re not going to come right out and say sociopathic tendencies but we’re all thinking it.


If you want more wedding related nonsense then you should stop by the Staggered forum where we spend countless hours scouring the internet for funny wedding stuff, like brides and grooms falling over and best men falling into cakes.

Until next week, happy planning.

Wedding Planning for Men – Father of the Bride Tips

September 2nd, 2010 No Comments
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It’s been a few weeks since we heard from our favourite wedding blog for men. Andrew never disappoints and this week its advice for the Bride’s father. Enjoy!

5 Essential Tips for The Father of The Bride

There seems to be a general feeling that the Father of the Bride is often the forgotten man of the wedding planning process. The feeling is that you’re probably experienced enough to cope with the nerves and tough enough to cope with the emotions. But that’s why we often end up feeling sorry for the FOTB (you’ve even got the worst wedding acronym for crying out loud) and decided to round-up some essential advice for all the dads out there prior to the big day.

Deal With The Nerves Before They Ruin It

It’s perfectly natural and acceptable for you to feel nervous. Nerves about the ceremony and speeches are in the top three subjects that fill the Staggered inbox. Fortunately, both can be cured with some simple preparation. Write and practice your speech at least a month in advance of the big day and do everything you can to make it to the church rehearsal as this will give you an idea of where to stand when.

Speeches Are Easy When You Prepare

You can find way more information on Staggered about wedding speeches but this is it in a nutshell. Between 5 and 8 minutes, less is more, stand straight, don’t mumble and speak from the heart. Always write your speech in full (never “wing it”), because even if you don’t use it you’ve always got it in case you need it. Give a copy to your daughter for the wedding memory box. The Father of the Bride welcomes the guests, sets the tempo, welcomes his new family members and talks about his daughter without embarrassing her!

It Will Be Emotional – Get Ready

Blokes and emotions are never a good mix, for the simple reason that we’re often a bit slower at dealing with them and how they affect us. Take some time before the wedding to talk to your daughter about the wedding and what she means to you. Too many men think they’ll come out with the perfect speech in the car on the way to the church and end up feeling that they never quite explained how they feel – or worse: end up at the church a sobbing mess!

How To Deal With The Money

The good news is that this generation are getting married later, the bad news being that they’re living with their parents longer. As a result more of them are paying for their own wedding. If you’re still footing the bill and you find that the wedding is placing too much of a burden on your finances then make it clear that costs need to be cut. Everyone wants a perfect wedding, but no one wants that to come at the expense of a stressed dad. Also there are thousands of resources out there on how to get a champagne wedding on beer prices, use them!

Plan Your Advice

As with the emotions, this is another topic that should be tackled in advance of the big day. It’s tradition that you pass on some advice – whether that’s in your speech or just in passing. This is a big thing both for the bride and the groom and many people remember for their whole lives what was said to them at this point. So make it wise, make it original and make it something personal. Think about your marriage: what have you learned? What can you say that will improve these young people’s chance of happiness? But remember, no pressure…

www.iamstaggered.com is the UK’s leading men’s wedding website.

Until next time, happy planning