Wedding writeup [entries|reading|network|archive]
simont

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Sun 2006-05-07 10:27
Wedding writeup
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[identity profile] j4.livejournal.comMon 2006-05-08 15:02
a T-shirt underneath the shirt

Or a vest?

Or you could sew some kind of panel over the back of the strip with the buttons on?

(I can't think what it is that makes you itch, though -- I'm trying to see what's behind the buttons on the shirt I'm wearing today, and there's nothing there except a bit of thread. I wonder if it's just a psychological thing, that you know you're wearing Something Hideously Uncomfortable so you keep scratching at it, which makes it feel uncomfortable... Just a theory, anyway.)

To be honest, though, if you really hate wearing any tops other than t-shirts, then why not just get married in a t-shirt (if/when the occasion arises)? I've never understood why people feel the need to wear things they hate, invite people they hate, eat things they hate, listen to music they hate, and generally try to be somebody completely different on the day when they're supposed to be celebrating spending the rest of their life with somebody who (you'd hope) wants to stay with them because of who they are.

Besides, a nice crisp white (or bright-coloured) t-shirt under a dark suit would look great. Give it a try!
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[personal profile] simontMon 2006-05-08 15:15
Itching: I've always assumed it was to do with the bits of thread poking out behind the buttons, not because they're made of anything inherently itchy but simply because they brush against the skin more often and more focusedly than the surrounding smooth fabric, and thus have a constant low-grade tickling effect. It could be purely or partly psychological as you suggest, but either way it's still bloody annoying :-)

try to be somebody completely different

I hear you, but ... well ... I entirely agree that your wedding day should be a celebration of you rather than of wedding-day stereotypes if you can possibly arrange it, but at the same time it is also a unique and special and different day in your life and it would therefore seem inappropriate to make it too similar to everything else you do. It has to be personal, but special. If you're going to be the centre of attention for an entire day (well, nearly; of course from the groom's perspective the bride's dress would undoubtedly upstage anything I might come up with, and rightly so) I think it's not unreasonable to make some kind of an effort to be interesting to look at, nice to look at, and/or in some way special. Preferably, though, as you say, without sacrificing the essential you-ness.

(Mind you, given my usual style of dress, a white T-shirt would arguably be quite different enough! :-)

if/when the occasion arises

Er, yes. This is probably more than enough effort spent on planning a wedding which (a) might perfectly well never happen and (b) it wouldn't be entirely fair to have planned so much of in advance that the bride didn't get to have her say!
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[identity profile] j4.livejournal.comMon 2006-05-08 15:55
it would therefore seem inappropriate to make it too similar to everything else you do

I think that's totally an individual judgement call. Depends on why you're getting married, what it means to you, and of course what you think makes something "special". For some people, putting the effort into having a special meal, or going to an interesting location, would be more interesting and appropriate than fancy-dress. And so on. People are different.

of course from the groom's perspective the bride's dress would undoubtedly upstage anything I might come up with, and rightly so

Er? Why is the bride supposed to upstage the groom? If that's what works for you then fair enough, but I certainly don't want it to be taken as read that I'm supposed to look better than my husband(-to-be). I'd like to think it was possible for us both to look equally good, and for us both to wear something we were happy with.

I think it's not unreasonable to make some kind of an effort

Of course not. But I also don't think there should be an obligation for that effort to be focused on dressing-up, if that's not what makes you happy. There are plenty of ways to show effort!

it wouldn't be entirely fair to have planned so much of in advance that the bride didn't get to have her say!

Indeed. :-) I've been in the position of seriously-thinking-about-wedding-plans more than once, and they've been very different plans each time -- partly because I've changed between those times, and partly because different aspects of me have been foregrounded in different relationships. Sure, most people have ideas about what they would/wouldn't want from a wedding, but there's no sense in really planning it until you're planning it with somebody.

On the other hand, you might want to make the effort to look extra-specially-smart on occasions other than weddings (your own or others'), so there's certainly no harm in thinking about that!

I look forward to seeing how you look in a suit and white tshirt. ;)
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[personal profile] simontMon 2006-05-08 16:06
Sorry, quite right, that was badly worded. What I meant to say was that even the simplest of wedding dresses would upstage anything I can imagine myself coming up with, and that attempting to outdo it would be foolhardy and certainly involve wearing many more bells and whistles than I'd be comfortable with. By "rightly so" I didn't intend to suggest a general principle or requirement for all weddings. I'm sure a particularly flamboyant groom and a particularly simply dressed bride might see things differently.

Of course, given that the bride is currently a completely unknown quantity, she might turn out to detest wedding dresses just as much as I loathe shirts and ties, and all bets might be off. Wouldn't put money on it though.
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[identity profile] j4.livejournal.comMon 2006-05-08 16:11
I see where you're coming from now. Sorry, didn't mean to rant at you!

she might turn out to detest wedding dresses just as much as I loathe shirts and ties

When I got engaged for the first time I asked my sister if she'd be a bridesmaid. She gave me a Look. "Bridesmaids wear jeans and tshirts, right?"

Interestingly, she's single at the moment, too. ;-D
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