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Mrs. Cupcake, Philadelphia Age and Occupation: 27, Graphic Designer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Construction Project Manager Engagement Date: February 10, 2007 Wedding Date: September, 2008 Blogging Since: December 7, 2007 Venue: The Desmond Hotel in Malvern, PA About Me: Mr. Cupcake and I hit it off at a Halloween party and immediately began a long-distance relationship. After two years, he moved to my neck of the woods, and a year and a half after that, he proposed at the “place we fell in love.” I am a true perfectionist who enjoys designing and creating more work for myself, so wedding planning is my perfect outlet. Mr. Cupcake and I are both old souls, and we hope to weave that aspect of our personalities into our wedding day.
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The Dreaded Seating Arrangements

October 9th, 2008 @ 12:45 pm by Mrs. Cupcake

Like most brides, I had heard my share of horror stories about figuring out the seating arrangement. The “so-and-so can’t sit anywhere near so-and-so”/too many people and not enough tables/”why do they get to sit near the bride and groom but we have to sit in the corner with the photographers?” type of drama.

Luckily, our families and friends are mostly drama-free, and our parents entrusted us with the seating arrangement duties, so we didn’t have too many opinions overwhelming things. Although mostly all of our wedding details were somehow aided by the use of a computer, this was one thing that we decided to do sans computer, by the recommendation of my Matron of Honor. She said that for her wedding, the easiest way to figure out seating had been to simply write each guest’s name on a piece of paper, lay everything out on a big table, and move things around until we got it right. Well, most of the surfaces of our apartment were covered with wedding paraphernalia at that point, so the floor was our next best option.



Mr. Cupcake spent about 10 minutes writing each guest’s name on a small piece of paper, and then we started making our groups. Our tables could fit 8 to 12 guests, with 10 being ideal, but this range allowed us a good amount of flexibility. After only about 20 minutes of grouping everyone together, we were happy with our arrangements. (I was especially impressed by how quickly this came together considering that a lot of my friends don’t know each other—I tend to have lots of little social circles instead of one big one.) Once the groups were in place, we simply paper clipped each group together, figured out where each group should sit in relation to our head table and the dance floor, and voila—done!

Okay, so this process wasn’t totally void of technology…. I laid the seating chart out in Adobe Illustrator so I could email it to the catering manager. The grayed out tables are showing the tables that would have fit on each side of the dance floor had we needed them (per the instructions that the people at The Desmond had given to me). The different colored type just made it easier to differentiate between the table number and the number of guests at each table.


I already had an Excel spreadsheet set up with each guest’s name and meal choice, so once the arranging was done I simply added a column for table number on my spreadsheet to fill in the appropriate numbers. This spreadsheet then served as my guide for setting up our place cards, and also as a reference for the catering manager of the who/where/what.

Instead of sitting with our bridal party at a traditional long head table with everyone facing the dance floor, we decided it would be nice to seat the bridal party with their significant others and friends, especially since we would need to be visiting with each table and wouldn’t be spending all of our time sitting with them. Mr. Cupcake and I chose to sit at a round table with our parents and siblings, which was really nice and much cozier than a long table, and they understood that we had to run around a bit to chat with our guests. I think this also made figuring out the rest of the seating easier because we weren’t splitting the bridal party up from their significant others.

As much as I would have been lost without my computer for most wedding details, working out the seating was one detail that was much easier without the complication of technology in the beginning.

Have you depended on technology for most of your details, or have you found that some things are just easier done the old fashioned way?

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7 Responses to “The Dreaded Seating Arrangements”

1.
Guest Icon
Guest
MexicanGirl

Well in this case, our families aren’t very used to have seating arrangements. We’re being simple with that, because we’re only gonna have 100 guests and only 2 tables for 10 people will be saying ‘Reserved’ -for our families and a few close friends, and they know about it- and the rest of our guests will be free to sit wherever they want.

 
2.
Guest Icon
Guest
l3r0wnEyedGurL

I think If i didn’t have a computer to manage my planning I would go insane!

As an added bit of Seating arrangement advice:

You can always take your guest list and merge it into a label template and print out labels with all the names on it.

This is especially helpful if you have a large guest count. Saves the writing hand and makes sure no one has been missed!

 
3.
HistoryBride
Member
HistoryBride (message)  411 posts, Helper bee

I really like Weddinwire.com ’s seating tool. If you upload your guest list onto the site, you can just drag and drop people into seats at tables. The initial set up takes just a little bit of time, but it makes it really really easy to see everyone and switch things around.

 
4.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Lemonade (message)  239 posts, Helper bee

I am soooo dreading this part of the planning…maybe going old school would help…:)

 
5.
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Guest
Lauren

HistoryBride: Weddingwire (and Martha Stewart’s seating chart tool) require me to save my guestlist as a CSV file. Did you use excel (like me), and if so, how did you convert your excel guestlist into CSV format so that it could be uploaded into the Seating chart tool?

 
6.
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Member
missm (message)  811 posts, Busy bee

we used small post-its for sorting the seating and it worked fabulously. we arranged everyone, then came back to it a few days later and tweaked it - probably the easiest wedding task we completed!

 
7.
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Bee
Mrs. Avocado (message)  1,400 posts, Bumble bee

I made a preliminary chart and then my parents moved everything around to their liking. It worked out well for me :)

 


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Mrs. Cupcake
Mrs. Cupcake Mrs. Cupcake, Philadelphia Age and Occupation: 27, Graphic Designer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 29, Construction Project Manager Engagement Date: February 10, 2007 Wedding Date: September, 2008 Blogging Since: December 7, 2007 Venue: The Desmond Hotel in Malvern, PA About Me: Mr. Cupcake and I hit it off at a Halloween party and immediately began a long-distance relationship. After two years, he moved to my neck of the woods, and a year and a half after that, he proposed at the “place we fell in love.” I am a true perfectionist who enjoys designing and creating more work for myself, so wedding planning is my perfect outlet. Mr. Cupcake and I are both old souls, and we hope to weave that aspect of our personalities into our wedding day.
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