Traditionally, the way to indicate that they can bring a guest is to send the invitation to "Mr. John Smith and Guest".
For couples, you would send the invitation to "Mr. and Mrs. John Smith", or "Mr. John Smith and Ms. Jane Doe". If you want to include their kids, you'd send it to "Mr. John Smith and Family".
All it needs is to have this information on the outer envelope.
2007-07-11 10:07:40
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answer #1
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answered by abfabmom1 7
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If your guests are allowed to bring someone, then you should definitely make that known on the outer envelope. It should read: Mr. (or Ms.) Jake Jones and Guest. However, make sure you get the name of the "and Guest" so that person can have their own place card ... it always looks a little off when even the place card says and Guest.
2007-07-11 10:17:03
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answer #2
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answered by VAWeddingSpecialist 6
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Properly, you send each person his or her own invitation, even infants. The only exception is married couple, who receive a single invitation. (For this purpose, live-together couples of either opposite or same sex are considered married couples.) If you are inviting several people in the same household, you can put each individual invitation into an envelope bearing the name of the intended recipient, but no stamp. Then these several envelopes can be deposited into a larger envelope and sent together, so as to save postage.
If you want to invite Debby's new boyfriend or your cousin's roommate, you must find out these people's names and send them their very own invitation.
I know this sounds terribly stiff and prissy, but consider the trouble you are courting if you give guests a blank check to bring whomever they wish. It devalues this important occasion if you allow people to use your wedding to provide a champagne dinner for someone you've never met and will never see again ... at YOUR expense.
I suggest you refrain from creating a guest list that is half strangers, and lavish your entertainment budget on people you actually KNOW and care about.
People who are too socially insecure to go to a party without a "date" are probably rather dull at parties anyhow. Besides, such people are NEVER going to meet anyone if they drag a date along everywhere they go.
2007-07-11 11:24:01
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answer #3
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answered by kill_yr_television 7
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Ordinarily it would go on the inner envelope' and guest'. But since you haven't an inner envelope put it on the outer one.
2007-07-11 11:22:13
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answer #4
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answered by barthebear 7
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put it on the response post card just as a response card has # of attending. if's it's the whole family,address the outer envelope to the smith family tho, not john smith and family.
2007-07-11 10:20:48
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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The return handle for the invite and the reaction card ought to be a similar. the assumption is that your mothers and dads are information superhighway hosting the occasion, so travelers ought to settle for/decline their invitation to them. in case you're procuring the marriage / information superhighway hosting it, then the return handle for the invite and the reaction card could have your handle. it can be a sprint unusual to have 2 diverse addresses, yet I doubt maximum persons could word. you would be extra suitable off determining a fashion on your mothers and dads to extra suitable manage their incoming mail (i.e. have a folder close to the door the place they are able to place the reaction enjoying cards).
2016-10-01 09:49:50
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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just put it on the outer envelope.. address it to who is invited.. shes dead on up there ^^
2007-07-11 10:12:33
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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