I was a maid of honor just last Saturday at a Scottish Renaissance
wedding. The bride wore her tartan over her shoulder, and after the
minister said the final prayers over the couple, and before she
introduced them as Mr & Mrs, the new mother-in-law came up, and replaced
the bride's tartan with the groom's, and the groom's father welcomed her
into their family.
The recessional was led by piper, through an arch of swords.
It was really quite nice!
Babs
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
brru...@ucdavis.edu |Brightness makes us blind
| to the truth we seek --
* * |The light. It hurts my eyes.
O --la! |You will find me in the shadows...
| --A. Gage
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Bite me. It's fun. -- Crow T. Robot
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
My wife will be able to think of many more traditions if you are
intrested.
Ian Crane
Douglas Clan
icr...@bicronne.tcom.co.uk
Well, here's one - music on the Scottish Harp (Clarsach). This
instrument has an older and deeper association with the Scots than the
pipes do, and it's beautiful, mellow tones fit the ceremony in every
way.
Sonas,
Scott Jorgensen Clan Mitchell
Hi Christopher & Cindy Baird, just a brief word..
Tuesday, 30 April 1996 22:12:51, Christopher & Cindy Baird wrote to All
Subject: scottish wedding ideas
C&CB> We are getting married in October and are hoping to
C&CB> incorporate Scottish wedding traditions into our ceremony.
C&CB> Besides the kilt and piper, are there any Scottish wedding
C&CB> customs?
Can recommend "Bundling" :-)
Best wishes, Roger McDowall
-<ro...@shbbs.demon.co.uk>-
--
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