News
- Ask Carley: Don't charge guests to attend your wedding - ScrippsNews
Wed, 22 Feb 2012 17:43:32 GMT
Ask Carley: Don't charge guests to attend your weddingScrippsNewsThis will make booking easier for both you and your guests, and it won't seem like you're charging guests to attend your wedding (which is a pretty major etiquette no-no). If you're trying to offset the cost of renting out the venue, ... - Phone etiquette: 55 per cent of Brits use mobiles in bed - Mobile Entertainment
Wed, 22 Feb 2012 14:35:07 GMT
Mobile EntertainmentPhone etiquette: 55 per cent of Brits use mobiles in bedMobile EntertainmentNine per cent have even used their phone during a wedding or christening. However, all isn't lost as 70 per cent still consider it unacceptable to use a phone at the theatre, cinema or concert hall. Worryingly, that figure falls to 51 per cent for ...Do You Use Your Mobile Phone In Bed?Money High Streetall 3 news articles » - Markel American Insurance Company Partners with the Cinderella Project MKE - Bradenton Herald
Wed, 22 Feb 2012 15:38:01 GMT
Markel American Insurance Company Partners with the Cinderella Project MKEBradenton Herald22, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Markel American Insurance Company, a wedding and event insurance provider, will be donating a collection of formal dresses to the Cinderella Project MKE, a Milwaukee based program that collects and donates gently used prom and ...and more » - Invites through the inbox - Dubuque Telegraph Herald
Sun, 19 Feb 2012 06:08:13 GMT
Invites through the inboxDubuque Telegraph HeraldIf you want people to give you nice presents and good amounts of money, the paper invitation falls under that wedding etiquette." For the more casual affair, e-vites are king. The well-known Evite.com allows you to send free invitations to people on ... - Wedding Q&A - New York Times
Fri, 17 Feb 2012 20:19:26 GMT
New York TimesWedding Q&ANew York TimesI'm still close with one of his siblings (the only one I call my uncle), so I know the others will be aware the wedding is still taking place, especially since he lives with one of the siblings I'm not inviting. What should I do? - Surviving wedding season - an etiquette guide for guests - 3News NZ
Tue, 31 Jan 2012 03:58:55 GMT
3News NZSurviving wedding season - an etiquette guide for guests3News NZWeddings are beautiful celebrations of the deep, eternal love between two people who have dedicated their lives to each other. They are also expensive, time-consuming, and absolute etiquette minefields. This article is a brief overview of how not to be ...and more » - Markel American Insurance Company Partners with the Cinderella Project MKE - U.S. Politics Today
Wed, 22 Feb 2012 06:28:19 GMT
Markel American Insurance Company Partners with the Cinderella Project MKEU.S. Politics Today22, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Markel American Insurance Company, a wedding and event insurance provider, will be donating a collection of formal dresses to the Cinderella Project MKE, a Milwaukee based program that collects and donates gently used prom and ... - Queeries: Second Wedding, Second Set of Gifts? - Huffington Post (blog)
Wed, 08 Feb 2012 19:55:41 GMT
Queeries: Second Wedding, Second Set of Gifts?Huffington Post (blog)Question: In a recent column, Miss Manners wrote that "etiquette considers wedding presents to be associated only with first weddings" and that it is "blatant avarice" when couples are "permitted to exploit their friends, relatives and colleagues. - The Honor of Your Postage Is Requested - New York Times
Thu, 16 Feb 2012 23:53:31 GMT
The Honor of Your Postage Is RequestedNew York TimesMs. Post, who also writes the online Well-Mannered Wedding column for The New York Times, said that etiquette does not dictate that invitations must be printed and mailed. “Most couples still prefer sending out printed invitations through the mail ... - The etiquette of divorce - Fortune (blog)
Tue, 14 Feb 2012 14:11:29 GMT
Fortune (blog)The etiquette of divorceFortune (blog)The book's British tone and tilt might make American readers most uncomfortable when it gets down to the hard-core etiquette stuff—like how to word the children's wedding invitations when the parents have remarried. ("Mr. John Robinson and Mrs. Edgar ...


