Wedding newsletter wording guide
The exact phrases for the parts couples get stuck on — subject lines, greetings, RSVP nudges, and the awkward topics like adults-only receptions and honeymoon funds.
Most of a wedding newsletter writes itself: dates, addresses, schedules. The sentences below are for everything else — the lines you type, delete, and retype. Use them as-is inside our fill-in-the-blank templates, or as a starting point you rewrite in your own voice.
Subject lines guests open
These follow the same pattern: a specific detail plus a reason to open now.
- We set a date — September 19, 2026, in Sonoma
- Maya & Daniel's wedding: where to stay, and when to book
- Hotel block closes June 19 — book your Sonoma room
- RSVP by Friday, August 21 — two minutes, we promise
- Three things to do before our wedding (one takes a minute)
- Saturday! Times, address, parking & who to call
- The Harvest Herald, issue 2: flights, shuttles, and a dance floor update
- You asked, we answered: kids, dress code, and parking
- 72 days to go — the schedule for the whole weekend
- One last thing before we see you Saturday
What makes them work is specificity: a date, a deadline, or a count beats "Wedding update #3" every time. Your names — or your newsletter's name, if you've picked one from the names and taglines guide — tell guests instantly who it's from and why it matters.
Greetings and sign-offs
Match these to how formal the wedding — and your family — actually is, then use the same pair in every issue so the newsletter feels consistent.
- Casual: "Hi everyone," · "Hello, hello!" · "Friends and family," — signed "Love, Maya & Daniel" or "See you soon, M & D."
- Middle of the road: "Dear friends and family," · "Hello from Maya and Daniel," — signed "With love," or "Counting the days, Maya & Daniel."
- Formal: "Dear family and friends," · "To our beloved guests," — signed "With love and gratitude," or "Warmly, Maya & Daniel."
The awkward topics, phrased kindly
Every one of these gets easier with the same trick: state the decision plainly, give the practical reason if there is one, and skip the apology spiral. One or two sentences is enough.
Adults-only reception
While we love your little ones, our celebration will be adults-only. We hope the advance notice makes sitter plans easier — and that you'll enjoy a night off!
Dress code
Dress code is cocktail attire: suits or sport coats, dresses or dressy separates. A practical note — the whole evening is outdoors on grass and gravel, so choose shoes accordingly and bring a layer for after sunset.
No boxed gifts / honeymoon fund
Your presence is truly the gift — please don't feel any obligation beyond that. If you'd like to contribute something, we've set up a small registry and a honeymoon fund at mayaanddaniel.com/registry; since we're traveling, we'd be grateful to skip boxed gifts on the day.
Plus-one limits
Because our venue holds a firm 140 guests, we're only able to include the people named on your invitation. If you're unsure who yours covers, just reply and ask — we'd rather clear it up than have anyone guess.
Unplugged ceremony
We're having an unplugged ceremony — phones and cameras away until the last kiss, please. Our photographer will catch everything, and we'll share the photos with all of you.
Asking for RSVPs without nagging
The secret is escalation across issues, not intensity within one. Mention the deadline casually long before it matters, ask directly as it approaches, then send one final note that states the consequence without drama:
- Months out, one line in a regular issue: "Invitations arrive this spring — RSVPs will be due August 21, and we'll remind you."
- Five weeks out, a dedicated issue: "RSVPs are due Friday, August 21 — it takes about two minutes: mayaanddaniel.com/rsvp. Already replied? You're done; thank you!"
- A few days after the deadline, personally: "We're finalizing numbers with the caterer this week and realized we don't have your RSVP — can you reply by Wednesday? We'd hate to get this wrong."
Two rules hold at every stage: always thank the people who already answered, and always give the deadline a reason (the caterer, the shuttle count). The RSVP reminder wording guide has full copy-paste messages for each stage, including the last-resort text message.
Tone rules
Whatever phrases you borrow, three rules keep the whole newsletter sounding like you:
- Write like you talk. If you'd never say "we cordially request the pleasure" out loud, don't type it. "We'd love to see you Friday too" carries the same meaning and sounds human.
- One voice, even with two authors. Pick who drafts and who edits, write as "we," and flag any solo asides by name ("Daniel here — the playlist form is open"). Alternating writers mid-issue reads as chaos.
- Read it aloud before sending. Anywhere you stumble, a guest will too. Anywhere you cringe, cut. This one test catches stiff phrasing, accidental sternness, and jokes that only work in your head.
To hear these rules in action, read the four finished issues on the examples page — and skim the common mistakes guide for the tone traps couples fall into most, from guilt-trip RSVP nudges to inside jokes half the guest list can't follow.