Join Us Over At Ning!
Hey brides and brides-to-be! Come and join us over at our brand new Ning.com page at http://littlethingsfavors.ning.com . It’s full of great wedding favor ideas and a forum so you can share your favorite wedding favor ideas, and feel free to start a new discussion about all those wedding thoughts in your head!
We created it with you in mind - so start posting and interacting with each other!
Recycled Wedding Rings!
The Wall Street Journal article, “Wedding Rings: ‘Something Old’ Becomes Something New” reports that brides are fulfilling the “Something old” bridal adage by transforming old jewelry from family and friends and sending it to eco-friendly jewelor greenKarat to turn into brand new wedding rings.

Matthew White, greenKarat Presidents, feels “Recycling those pieces for a betrothed couple is romantic, eco-friendly, and financially savvy.”
Eco-friendly weddings are all the rage right now, and greenKarat’s services provide couples with not only a great story about their wedding rings, but an environmentally friendly alternative. Make your wedding even more green with Personalized Eco-Friendly Wedding Favors.
5 Tips To Trim Your Wedding Guest List

Shown Above, Vintage Bouquet Damask Guest Book
We all know weddings can be costly - and the biggest expense is not your DJ, limos or your wedding favors! And with the economy in a struggle and rising gas costs, you may wonder just how to save on some of your expenses. The largest expense is your catering at about a whopping 50% of your budget. If your per-plate catering cost is 100.00 per plate, and you cut 10 people off your list (which isn’t alot!) you would have saved $1,000 dollars!
So just how do you cut down your guest list? It’s easy!
1) Take the total number of guests you plan on inviting and divide by 4. The bride, the groom, and each set of parents gets a 1/4th of the total number of invitees. Stick to that number.
2) Next divide your guest list into groups, - close family - close friends - aunts and uncles - cousins - co-workers - etc. Who can you eliminate? Perhaps you can knock-off (not literally!) those cousins and the co-workers. If you eliminate a group - elimiante all of them, you don’t want any hurt feelings.
3) Unless you have a budget the size of Trump’s bank account, you shouldn’t invite co-workers. Weddings should be reserved for close friends and family. Your co-workers will understand! If you are especially close to one or two of them, invite them - but not the whole office or department.
4) Inform your parents before hand, now is not the time, and your wedding is not the place to play “payback”. They don’t need to invite people who they gave gifts to for other weddings. This is a time for close family and friends. This is your day, and ultimately you have the final say on attendees.
5) Cut out the long distance invitees. With soaring airline tickets, gas costs and other expenses, they may not be able to afford to come. Invite only those whom you are close to and send wedding announcements to the rest. Their pocketbooks will thank you.





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