Newport Manners & Etiquette: Modern Wedding & Funeral Etiquette
Didi Lorillard, GoLocalProv Manners + Etiquette Expert
Newport Manners & Etiquette: Modern Wedding & Funeral Etiquette

Wedding shower for two women
Q. This is my first time being invited to a wedding shower for two women friends who are getting married in June and I would like to know the etiquette. Do I bring them both a present? What should I bring them? -Charlotte, Portland, Oregon
GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLASTA. You would respond just as you would when attending a wedding shower for a man and a woman who were being honored — by bringing one present to the celebration. If you were going to a Jack and Jill wedding shower, you would only bring one gift for them both. Find out where your friends, the wedding couple, are registered and choose something you know they want and need. ~Didi
Children's attendance at funerals

A. Attending a classmate’s funeral helps his friends and classmates to cope with their loss. Children’s attendance at funerals educates them to recognize the importance of being part of a community.
Children should be included in all aspects of family rituals and their school is an extension of their family. It is not necessary for you to thank your son’s schoolmates, but you can certainly do so in several ways.
The family of John Wilson
deeply appreciates your
sympathy and is grateful
for your thoughtfulness
You definitely could have an acknowledgement posted on the school bulletin board using the wording shown above, but inserting your son’s name.
Additionally, you could raise funds to provide the school with something it needs, such as a bicycle rack, the replacement of a tree on the property, a new basket ball hoop, books for the library in which you could place a bookplate (see bookplateink.com) in each of the books that would say: In memory of John Wilson (inserting your son’s name).
Having children’s attendance at funerals teaches them that a funeral plays an important role in their mourning and helps them see death as a fact of life. ~Didi
Mothers' expectations of daughters

A. Before sending the book why not ask each daughter if she would like to read it? Then ask what they would read it on? For instance, digitally (on a Nook, Kindle, or tablet) or would they be more apt to read a hardcover (or paperback) book?
If they read only digital books and you send a hardcover book, you may be disappointed if your daughters don’t read it. People can be fussy about how they read a book — digitally or the old-fashioned way. We should communicate with our daughters on their wave length for more effective results.
Sending your daughters — out of the blue — a book with a particular message could come off as tedious preaching. Asking first may lower your expectations, but at least you’ll be less disappointed when you find out they didn’t read it.
Mothers' expectations of daughters should be realistic and you certainly do not want to make this a competition.
Most mothers have the best intentions, so why not take a random-reach-out approach in the form of a call to make a lunch date first to pave the way.
Over lunch or a walk in the park, ask your daughter if she would like to read the Civil War book about interesting women. Engage her in some of the stories by telling her about characters you discovered and why you admire them.
At a later date -- say, while preparing the Thanksgiving turkey -- she may bring up some of the characters and their stories. ~Didi
What do you do when there aren't enough seats in the chapel

How do we invite half of the guests to both the ceremony and the reception and the other half of the guests only to the reception?
-Mother of the Bride, Shelter Island, NY
A. Here are Newport Manners & Etiquette samples of a wedding reception invitation, which is sent to everybody on the wedding guest list, along with the accompanying reply card and self-addressed return envelope. As well as a ceremony card to be presented at the church or synagogue, that is included for guests who are also being invited to the ceremony:
The Ceremony Card – These lines are centered on a small card, with your own information, and enclosed with the larger wedding reception invitation, but is sent only to a guest who is being invited to the ceremony:
Ceremony
Saturday, the first of August
at half after five o’clock
St. Mary’s Episcopal Church
324 East Main Road
Newport
The wedding reception invitation:
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Douglas Wilson
request the honor of your presence
at the marriage reception of their daughter
Charlotte Elizabeth
and
Mr. George Henry Sherman
Saturday the first of August
at seven o’clock
Clambake Club
375 Ocean Drive
Newport
Reply card enclosed
The Reply card is worded to be mailed back two weeks to ten days before the wedding date:
Kindly reply by the sixteenth of July
M __________________________
Accept ________ Regret_________
~Didi
Didi Lorillard researches all matters on manners and etiquette at NewportManners where you can Ask Didi your question about love, relationships and everyday dilemmas and receive a personal response.
