So there were only afternoon receptions? Or the churches allowed evening ceremonies? |
| I would agree its annoy, but it's traditional I guess. |
This is the way it was back in the day. A noon wedding was considered *the* time for a Catholic wedding Mass, with an afternoon luncheon reception. Jack and Jackie Kennedy, for example, were married at a noon Mass with an afternoon reception. I had a lot of cousins growing up, and all their weddings and receptions were in the afternoon, both Catholic and Protestant. It wasn’t until I was in college in the 80s that the idea of a “candlelight service” with an evening reception became a thing. |
So because it wasn't your experience, you don't think it's a thing? I'm telling you it's a thing. https://thecatholicbridalcollective.com/the-catholic-wedding-gap-explained/ |
Saturday evening mass "counts" as the Sunday service, so most Catholic churches want all the Saturday weddings done by around 4-4:40 PM. First bride to book gets first choice of time slot, so if you're lucky, you have a 2:30/3 PM wedding with only an hour gap until cocktail hour at your reception venue. If that afternoon slot is taken, you're look at at noon ceremony and a larger gap. I used to work for a wedding planner and am Catholic myself. |