Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Standard Invite Wording Wedding Invites - Inner Envelope? Honour Vs. Honor?

Wedding invites - inner envelope? honour vs. honor? - standard invite wording

I bought an invitation kit at Target, and comes with invitations, RSVP cards, envelopes, RSVP, and the other for the entire invitation. Whenever I read, I keep hearing promptly at the "inside" and "external" on? Is that something that is standard with most jobs is a professional invitation to come not just with my computer? Is it really something?
So - I will read anything that says the words honor and promote the traditional spelling with the letter "U". Asked my maid of honor in the class, about their use on our invites. How do you write?

6 comments:

ilovewed... said...

Hello. Yes, you are absolutely right.

If you have ordered invitations from a printer, you probably have an outer and inner envelope. But with the advent of the boxes as you
acquired many women from the "inner strength beyond." Just use only the envelope. Make sure, however, [and who] has no inner envelope that calls the person you see on the surface.

Namely Mr. and Mrs. John Smith and Family
, Aa, O., Mr. Kevin Johnson and the user

Also, yes, is the traditional form of writing to honor and to find the "U", but I think if we in the U.S., from the simple form to write .... . Please honor and the most accepted version.

Good luck!

petunia0... said...

"Honor" is the traditional way of writing the invitations, but there's no reason you can not "honor". I have, because I saw no reason why the German spelling for my invitation to come to America in 2007, have my kind of modern invitations anyway. Just make sure that everything we in the invitation stands in line.

Add the invitation to the inner envelope, add the names of guests, then in the lists of the outer, larger, which has the address. It is quite normal. It is assumed that the inner envelope in the list of names of persons involved. For example, if you want to invite a childless marriage, and Bob Smith, Jan Smith, but his five children, you should write: "Bob and Jan," in which the inner envelope. I'm not sure it's a really big deal, but it's pretty normal.

You must provide the port RSVP envelopes, and, if possible. My wine pre-printed envelopes with my addrSS, so you might do in the situation with the team.

Jasmine8... said...

They have an envelope for the invitation and then into a two (the outer shell is). And no, not necessary. In today's world, you should not use the spelling of honor to honor either.

maigen_o... said...

There is a reason that the traditional invitations come with two envelopes. It is a way to limit the guest list. You write the names of the inner envelope in the invitation. If you have only one envelope, 20 people could in a single invitation to kill. Or the spelling of the honor and the pleasure is right. The "U" is an old spelling.

WorldTra... said...

the spelling is correct Invitations honor ... and yes, it is usually an outter and inner envelope, but this one works Evelop as good as these two.

Luv2Answ... said...

I saw the spelling of honor for a formal marriage and honor for more informal.

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