wedding party

Clever Ways To Tell Guests Your Wedding Dress Code

Want your wedding guests to dress up, you need help figuring out a good way to mention that heels, especially stilettos, aren’t recommended for our outdoor wedding. Where you should include the information… should it go on wedding invitation online, a separate card, or somewhere else entirely?

WEDDING PARTY

So you want to tell your guests what to wear, but you don’t want to be overbearing, and ideally you’d like to be a little bit clever about it. You’re certainly not the first to find ways to artfully explain a dress code to your guests, let’s review five awesome, non-bossy ways you can give your guests some wedding dress code guidance, especially when your dress code is something less traditional than the usual cocktail dress, tuxedo, black-tie optional stuff that’s the norm for formal weddings. Whether you’re having a casual wedding dress code or a full-on costume wedding, the goal is the same: you want to support your guests in a making an outfit choice that feels comfortable AND fabulous at your wedding.

1: Include a brief PS about your wedding dress code on your wedding invitations

If clothing comfort factors are not obvious from your venue or wedding date AND your dress code is relatively straight-forward (which yours is), you can include a simple PS on your wedding invitations. Something as basic as PS: The ceremony & reception will be on the lawn; choose your footwear accordingly! would do the trick. You want straightforward. You also don’t want to be bossy: sure, you could tell them to wear flip flops or wedges, but it’s best to just let them know what the environment will be and let them make their own choices

If it’s clear from your date and venue name that the wedding will be outdoors, you may not need to say anything. For instance, most American guests at a summer wedding located in a garden will assume that they’ll be outdoors and can (probably!) be trusted to dress themselves accordingly.

Including a PS on your invitations works best for dress code guidance that is simple and important… heels on a lawn are one example. The location of the PS totally depends on your invitation design. If it’s a short line, you could include it at the end of your actual invitation. If you’re doing a separate card anyway for directions, you could include your dress code note there.

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2. Address wedding dress codes in your wedding website’s FAQ

FAQs can be a great place, however, to get into the details of creative attire — especially for theme weddings! Like “The ceremony will be outdoors on a ski slope, so bring gloves and don’t wear a sundress or you will freeze to death.”

It reads like this:

Q What will I wear!?

A The event is semi-formal, but anything you want to wear we are sure will be ok. The bride requests you refrain from wearing a wedding dress, but if that’s really all you have to wear, she prefers that to you going naked (a la Betazoid wedding style).
“Our style is going to be Victorian & Tim Burton-esque. Classic Victorian/Steampunk gothic dress is more than welcome (and encouraged!) for the Ceremony. Or if you’d rather keep things simple, semi-formal attire is requested. You know us – we’re not uptight. We only ask that you keep it classy for the Ceremony.”

Keep in mind that not everyone will read your website, so this isn’t a good solution for super urgent wedding.

3. A picture is worth a thousand words

Some visual guidance about attire is the best possible way to get the message across. Creating a Pinterest board may be the easiest way to give guests visual cues about wedding attire, but it’s certainly not the only way!

This kind of visual guidance can be extra helpful if you’re planning a themed wedding, where guests might be seriously confused. This adorable visual guide to convey what might be awesome to wear, distribute the image to guests via email and Facebooked to the guests.

4. Offer guests incentives to dress to code

While you can never demand that anyone wear (or not wear) anything to your wedding, some couples have offered amazing incentives to encourage them to dress to theme. For example, some couples encouraged their guests to “outshine the bride”. The “Outshine the Bride” runway show was easily the high point of the reception!

5. Offer encouragement, NOT enforcement

You can offer encouragement to your guests, it’s just not going to feel very good to enforce. You’ve got enough to do at your wedding without stepping into the role of the fashion police.

Ultimately, your guests will dress themselves. And whether that’s jeans and a dress shirt, a jumpsuit, or a white-tie, button up linen jacket, a tux, dark suit, white vest, midi dress, knee-length little black dress, pantsuits, or a floor-length gown… we’re guessing they’ll be fabulous.

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