Wedding of William and Catherine: Suggestions and Musings


If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
Status
Not open for further replies.
the wedding

Read in one of the Hello mags that P.Harry plans to embarrass P.William in his speech.
Frankly just the presence of their uncle "champagne charlie" with his latest but undoubtedly not last paramour should be embarrassment enough.
If he were a woman he would called by a very unflattering word in the English dictionary.:whistling:
 
Read in one of the Hello mags that P.Harry plans to embarrass P.William in his speech.
Frankly just the presence of their uncle "champagne charlie" with his latest but undoubtedly not last paramour should be embarrassment enough.
If he were a woman he would called by a very unflattering word in the English dictionary.:whistling:


:lol::lol::lol::lol: good one! and oh so true...........
 
In all the British Royal weddings that I have watched in my lifetime, I don't recall the couple kissing during the service. They might do it when they go back to sign the license (where no cameras are) but never in the church. That includes Charles/Diana, Sarah/Andrew, Sophie/Edward. We didnt see anything of the civil ceremony for Charles and Camilla and certainly not during the blessing service.

They usually do a quick kiss on the balcony.


I can help on this; no Church of England Wedding ceremony includes the words ' You may now kiss the bride'. You do often see films though that implies [wrongly] that this is the case.

After the couple has been pronounced man and wife, the wedding party move off [usually to an area of the church known as 'The Vestry',although not all Church of England Churches, especially the very ancient ones include a large enough Vestry] where the Bride and Groom sign the Register [not the Licence] and those acting as witnesses to the wedding sign the Register there and then. At a Royal Wedding, there may well be time for a very quick kiss, but I assume that it is more likely to be in the nature of a very quick kiss on the cheek - there cannot be the risk of smudging make-up etc [TV cameras will be focused on the couple as they then walk down the aisle again etc]. Time in the Vestry is at a premium - in the case of The Duchess of York, her flower headband had to be removed quickly and her veil rearranged to reveal the tiara. With all that going on, there would not have been much time for more than a 'quick peck of a kiss'.

Once out of the Vestry, the first really important gesture that takes place is the First Curtesy, where the new Royal Bride makes her curtesy to the Queen.

As Zonk says, the first kiss the public see is On the Balcony. IIRC, Prince Charles seemed to hesitate for a brief moment, which I think was purely because he was not sure of the protocol of doing so; by the time the Yorks married, the balcony kiss of Sarah and Andrew seemed much more joyous and natural.

Alex
 
Last edited:
Diarist said:
I can help on this; no Church of England Wedding ceremony includes the words ' You may now kiss the bride'. You do often see films though that implies [wrongly] that this is the case.

After the couple has been pronounced man and wife, the wedding party move off [usually to an area of the church known as 'The Vestry',although not all Church of England Churches, especially the very ancient ones include a large enough Vestry] where the Bride and Groom sign the Register [not the Licence] and those acting as witnesses to the wedding sign the Register there and then. At a Royal Wedding, there may well be time for a very quick kiss, but I assume that it is more likely to be in the nature of a very quick kiss on the cheek - there cannot be the risk of smudging make-up etc [TV cameras will be focused on the couple as they then walk down the aisle again etc]. Time in the Vestry is at a premium - in the case of The Duchess of York, her flower headband had to be removed quickly and her veil rearranged to reveal the tiara. With all that going on, there would not have been much time for more than a 'quick peck of a kiss'.

Once out of the Vestry, the first really important gesture that takes place is the First Curtesy, where the new Royal Bride makes her curtesy to the Queen.

As Zonk says, the first kiss the public see is On the Balcony. IIRC, Prince Charles seemed to hesitate for a brief moment, which I think was purely because he was not sure of the protocol of doing so; by the time the Yorks married, the balcony kiss of Sarah and Andrew seemed much more joyous and natural.

Alex

I am curious the see the name William will sign- it will prob be Mouttabean(sp?)-Windsor like his Dad, yes?
 
William could technically just sign the Register as 'William' - In England, anyone can choose how they sign their signature. His full name and title will already be set out in Register that he and Catherine sign [as will her full name]

Hope this helps,

Alex
 
Diarist said:
William could technically just sign the Register as 'William' - In England, anyone can choose how they sign their signature. His full name and title will already be set out in Register that he and Catherine sign [as will her full name]

Hope this helps,

Alex

Ok- so will his name be set out as William M-W? Or Prince William of Wales? Or...something else? :)
 
Regarding the kiss...

I would expect that any husband who wants to kiss his (new) wife, in church or not, doesn't need anyone's permission! What's the A of C going to do- say, "I now unpronounce you husband and wife" ? I go on the record predicting that W will kiss K.
 
MRSJ said:
Ok- so will his name be set out as William M-W? Or Prince William of Wales? Or...something else? :)

Prince William Arthur Phillip Louis of Wales presumably. They may tag a title on if it's been given. Catherine Elizabeth Middleton will be above where Catherine signs I imagine.
 
I never said it was part of the ceremony, I said they kissed in the church. Which they did.
And I was just making clear that it isn´t a part of the ceremony, at least not in Denmark. I don´t know if it´s a part of the ceremony in the UK.
 
Ok- so will his name be set out as William M-W? Or Prince William of Wales? Or...something else? :)


Prince William's surname is Windsor [not Mountbatten-Windsor]

My authority for this is the Queen, shortly after her accession, declared that the issue of her marriage and their descedants IN THE MALE LINE should bear the name of Windsor.

Hope this helps [it's my work, so I should know it!!:)]

Alex
 
I would expect that any husband who wants to kiss his (new) wife, in church or not, doesn't need anyone's permission! What's the A of C going to do- say, "I now unpronounce you husband and wife" ? I go on the record predicting that W will kiss K.


Of course a bridegroom can kiss his bride; the question to which I responded is 'will W kiss C (immediately) after the Archbishop of Canterbury has declared them to be man and wife, to which my answer is: there will be No Public Kiss in the Church. I can't answer what will happen in the Vestry; all I can reiterate is that it is not part of the CofE ceremony to say ' You may now kiss the bride'.

I go along with Zonk that the first public kiss we will see is on the balcony.

Alex
 
Last edited:
That will be a very differnt royal wedding. :ohmy:


Just testing!!!

Seriously, thanks for that; it's getting late and I am a bit tired, but there is so much to read here. [And I am trying to get my Royal Ascot outfits sorted...there is just so much to do]

Alex
 
He might use Mountbatten-Windsor

Technically, as he is titled, it would be Windsor, but the Queen's children used the hyphenated name on their registries.
 
Nice Nofret said:
Knit your own Royal Wedding - Telegraph

I find that hilarious - has it allready been posted?

I'll sort through my woolen basket tonight ;) Just love it. What do you think?

Bought the book. I'm using Caron Simply Soft Peach. It's weight 4 yarn rather than the weight 3 recommended. (I couldn't find lightweight yarn where i looked.) It seems to work... I have to pick up some more. I'm waiting for the wedding so I know what color I can make Prince William's uniform.

If I had the right colored yarn, I'd be done with William. They are easy to make and pretty quick.
 
:previous:
An animator from Telscombe created a truly bizarre video of the royal family partying at Kate and Will’s wedding - using knitted figures.
Alan Baker was asked to produce the video for Ivy Press in Lewes to promote its own royal wedding offering.
The company has published Knit Your Own Royal Wedding by Fiona Goble which tells you how to create the close knit family.
Alan tried to imagine what it would be like to watch the royals at a normal wedding, where the party does the conga led by the Queen and a corgi takes part in the ceremony.
The results are a darkly comic Postman Pat crossed with Eastenders - no doubt given time it’s going to be a hit on Youtube. - Full article

YouTube - Royal wedding
 
:previous:
An animator from Telscombe created a truly bizarre video of the royal family partying at Kate and Will’s wedding - using knitted figures.
Alan Baker was asked to produce the video for Ivy Press in Lewes to promote its own royal wedding offering.
The company has published Knit Your Own Royal Wedding by Fiona Goble which tells you how to create the close knit family.
Alan tried to imagine what it would be like to watch the royals at a normal wedding, where the party does the conga led by the Queen and a corgi takes part in the ceremony.
The results are a darkly comic Postman Pat crossed with Eastenders - no doubt given time it’s going to be a hit on Youtube. - Full article

YouTube - Royal wedding

I really enjoyed watching that one. Thanks for posting it!
 
I would expect that any husband who wants to kiss his (new) wife, in church or not, doesn't need anyone's permission! What's the A of C going to do- say, "I now unpronounce you husband and wife" ? I go on the record predicting that W will kiss K.

I agree, no permission is required to kiss at any point during the wedding ceremony. Quite often after the pronouncement that the couple "be man and wife together" the vicar or priest may say to the groom: "you may now kiss the bride" or words to that effect. However, this is not part of the actual Solemnisation of Matrimony.

For British royal weddings, the Archbishop of Canterbury does not invite the couple to kiss after the pronouncement. As far as I am aware if William and Kate do kiss after the pronouncement that will be a first for a British royal wedding. Of-course it would be lovely if they did kiss after the pronouncement or during the moments after they have bowed and curtseyed to the Queen (like Frederik and mary did).
 
I think there will be a kiss on the balcony if they make a balcony appearance. Who knows there may be a kiss on the hand in the Abbey.
 
Technically, as he is titled, it would be Windsor, but the Queen's children used the hyphenated name on their registries.

Not all of them did; Prince Andrew and Princess Anne were the only ones to use it.
 
Big Thank you Kasumi, I think you are right, it's going to be a hit on you tube. I love it!!!
 
WOW!!! I wonder how long it took.
 
The video of the wedding with the knitted puppets is great - they even had a second dress of Catherine... Hope the real wedding will be as much fun for them as they have here! :flowers:
 
Diarist, as a forum, member's opinions will differ and that should make it too a more interesting setting, so don't fell discourage to post here :) .

But one thing though is that, this is a thread about the couples' wedding so the majority will have a higher appreciation for them. Since you did make the effort to join in we can assume you have an interest in their relationship, I myself wouldn't spend time on a thread that doesn't interest me, although some others seem to do just that..... Anyways, at the end we must agree to disagree. ;)


Wow!!!!! I'm impressed :)

http://orderofsplendor.blogspot.com/2011/04/wedding-wednesday-grooms-in-uniform.html

What could the groom wear?
Personally I like the Navy uniform best but think it'll be RAF....


It was announced that Prince William will have a Captain's escort to the Abbey. Since he is a Captain in the Blues and Royals, would it follow that he will wear the Army uniform, as well? I, for one, hope so!

I guess we do prefer the black over the blue one, ha , ladies?!

me too, but he is currently serving the RAF so the answer seems to be very obvious :(. Maybe they could recreate the uniform worn by the groom great-grandfather, such a pity they retired it. King George VI looked rather dashing on his wedding day.
 
Last edited:
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top Bottom