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My best friend is getting married in Febuary and she has asked me to find out!
Any website addresses would be very helpful!

Thank you in advance for all your help!

2007-09-05 22:01:06 · 15 answers · asked by Anonymous in Family & Relationships Weddings

That is what she has asked me to find out about and is what she wants to do! I am just helping her to arrange everything for her big day, her way!

2007-09-05 22:12:21 · update #1

15 answers

HI BABE R U TRYING TIO TELL ME SOMTHING IF ANSWER YES THE ANSWER WOULD BE HELL YEAH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

2007-09-06 07:44:19 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Can you do it? Well, sure you can. But, should you do it? That's an entirely different question. If you really don't care if the person attends or not (an old boyfriend, the paperboy, the counter clerk at Walmart), it would probably be a nice gesture. If it is someone that you really care about, by all means, spend the money for the invitation and the stamp. I dislike talking about wedding gifts, but don't think for a second that anyone that gets an e-invitation is going to send an e-gift certificate in return.

2016-05-21 23:22:33 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I've never heard of this. Maybe you can find something through hallmark.com or bluemountain.com. They have lots of different online e-cards so I guess you could find wedding-type cards as well.

That said... please try to discourage her from doing this! It's tacky and inappropriate. What about guests who don't have email or internet access? Also, things get lost in cyber-world ALL the time. People may not get their invites OR they may just delete them thinking their spam. (Or they could go straight to their spam accounts.) There are e-card spams going out right now - I get at least two a day and just delete them right away. If someone sent me a REAL online card/invite, I would probably delete it not realizing what it was.

That said, a few of my friends have done email RSVPs. So instead of paying for the stamps for people to send their RSVP card back, they can email them instead. Maybe she could consider doing that. Also, she can buy the stuff to make her own (inexpensive) invites at Michaels. It's a lot less expensive than ordering them through a company.

2007-09-06 00:56:31 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

I'm getting married next August and have registered with the Wedding channel on line. They have a facility where you can create your own (free) Web page where you can put an on line invitation and also list what you would like as gifts, how you met, your future plans etc. There is an American and UK site. It's good all you do is tell your friends/family your web page and password and they can enter your site.

2007-09-05 22:31:24 · answer #4 · answered by claire a 2 · 2 0

Bad Idea, Really tacky. Guests especially older guests will really not understand, why you just sent them an Email to invite them to your wedding. Hello, this is a big deal! Even if your wedding is REALLY informal you should atleast send invitations even if they are hand written

2007-09-06 06:43:29 · answer #5 · answered by Hardcore Hon 2 · 1 0

Online wedding invitations??? Cheap, inappropriate and not even worthy of a show or a gift.

If you can't afford to get the goods, get out of the game.

2007-09-05 22:08:16 · answer #6 · answered by Yulik MahBaht 4 · 2 1

Try Moonpig
http://www.moonpig.com/CardGallery/Promotion/510/gallery.aspx

2007-09-05 23:19:37 · answer #7 · answered by Chianti Man 4 · 1 0

find out by going on to goolge or yahoo to find out about it

2007-09-05 22:22:26 · answer #8 · answered by Mike 3 · 1 0

Try www.evite.com

2007-09-06 02:03:24 · answer #9 · answered by kateqd30 6 · 0 0

http://www.evite.com

2007-09-06 01:30:22 · answer #10 · answered by Terri 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers