My parents got married in 1959. In a hall with a band. And a photographer. And flowers. And they weren't out of the ordinary. Your grandmother's family were (probably) poor immigrants.
This hall is in general more than Bais Faiga too.
You sure? Have heard is cheaper. And justifiably so. Curious if the bigger halls are considering splitting hall in half or thirds and have weddings start an hour apart so can all use the chuppa and disinfect the chuppa in between (if necessary).
Quotes in a signature is annoying, as it comes across as an independent post.
Maybe just me, but having a backyard wedding for immediate family sounds better than having 10 people in a massive empty hall.Depends on the backyard I suppose.
Good idea. Let’s see how this plays out. Then, I hope they continue long term. Cheaper weddings and less waiting months for availabilities.
Only concern with backyard is it becomes weather dependent. Though i suppose you can have a rain date if guess list is limited.
That has halacha issues
even if it is off by a day?
Tahara related or something else?
Chimud
Total cost is 4,750 all inclusive.
I know a backyard wedding that costed a few hundred bucks. That's it. $4750 is a lot of money for something so small
AP dead or Obi dead?
Did they have - photographer flowerslive music?
?I'm talking about if it's legal.
I assume @aygart is on tapatalk so he didn't notice the bold quote. Cousin Lemel is a Shmuel Kunda character on When Zaidy Was Young.
Kinda hard to get that (especially in writing) for the general public when the published guidelines are too strict to allow weddings at all.What this hall did is get an exception arranged (probably had to have political pull to make it happen), and it’s an exception that you can’t quickly (and legally) replicate in your own backyard.
Oh, never listened to it