Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

As wedding party expenses soar, what’s a bridemaid to do?

- ANNA ORSO THE PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER (TNS)

Courtney Duffy made national news this summer when she begged JetBlue to help her cancel a cross-country flight to be in a friend’s wedding, telling the world the bride had asked her to “relinquish” her bridesmaid duties.

A screenshot of the bride’s passive-aggressive email, in which she indicated “the whirlwind nature of what your travel has become just won’t work with the duties as a party member,” went viral and sparked a conversati­on: In this day and age, what are those duties?

Wedding planners and those who have studied the wedding industrial complex say the duties and expectatio­ns have reached epic proportion­s. Gone are the days where a night out on the town was sufficient for a bacheloret­te party — instead, brides want four-day trips to Nashville, Tenn., and some grooms think hiking in Colombia is a good way to celebrate their impending nuptials.

There are more events leading up to the Big Day, like elaborate proposals, engagement parties, multiple bridal showers, destinatio­n bacheloret­te parties, and dress-shopping outings, and they’re often longer than they were in the past. And businesses are capitalizi­ng, meaning there’s more to pay for, from custom bridal shower Snapchat filters to matching bacheloret­te weekend T-shirts with phrases like “Wife of the Party” and “On Cloud Wine” in sparkly script.

“The pre-wedding stuff has just gotten so spectacula­r and so expensive,” said Laurie Essig, a professor of gender, sexuality, and feminist studies at Middlebury College. “It’s so brilliant, because it’s just more and more stuff to sell, and more and more stuff to buy. That’s the marriage of capitalism and romance.”

While there were always costs associated with being a part of a family member’s or close friend’s wedding, those obligation­s have only increased, particular­ly as Americans are waiting to get married. The median age of a first marriage for women is 27 and for men, 29, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In 1960, it was 20 for women and 22 for men. That means that the betrothed and the attendants have more money — and higher expectatio­ns.

Alyssa Longobucco, an editor at wedding planning website the Knot, said that according to a survey the site conducted in the last year, the average member of a wedding party spent $1,430 on the entire wedding, a figure that includes travel and accommodat­ions for each event, gifts, attire and accessorie­s. When you’ve got three close friends getting married in the same year, you’re well on your way to spending the equivalent of a down payment on a car.

“It’s a pretty steep number, and it is a little jarring,” she said, “(but) the whole millennial outlook is paying for experience­s, and we’re finding a lot of people don’t mind. The thought process is: She will do it for me.”

Or maybe they do mind. More than a dozen people who were recently in extravagan­t weddings declined to be interviewe­d for this story — they didn’t want to publicly shame their close friends.

Plenty of people, though, are willing to call them out on Facebook in what have been dubbed “wedding shaming groups.” The pages gained mainstream traction in August after a story from one of the groups — about a bride who canceled her wedding after her guests refused to fund it — went viral.

Members of wedding parties frequently use the groups to post about their nameless friends’ expectatio­ns.

“Is it me, am I showing my age, or are bridesmaid­s being expected to pay way too much?” one woman posted recently in a private group. “A co-worker, who I know makes way less than I do, had to pay a total of $1,200 as a member of a wedding party … In addition to paying for the dress, required tanning sessions, nails, makeup, the bridal party was told they had to pay for a wine tasting ‘bridal shower,’ which cost $600 per bridesmaid for wines selected by the mother of the bride.”

The post garnered hundreds of comments, including: “I spent $5,000 to be in my best friend wedding … Custom made gowns from India, three nights at a five star luxury hotel, bacheloret­te week in Vegas … Just the beginning.”

Christiane Lehman, owner of Philadelph­ia-based Truly You Events, blamed bachelor and bacheloret­te parties for driving up costs for wedding party members, saying, “Everybody wants that cool picture, hashtag from their bacheloret­te parties.” (There are even online bacheloret­te party hashtag generators.)

Kelly Gallagher, a Philadelph­ia-based event planner, put it more bluntly.

“More and more, what we’re seeing is there’s a lot of demand to do different stuff so that, I hate to say it,” she said, “but so that their Instagram makes people jealous.”

“Different” means personaliz­ed, and going beyond a strip club visit in Atlantic City. For the masses, it’s a three- or four-day trip to popular hot spots like New Orleans, Vegas, Miami, Austin, or Nashville, said Gallagher, director of marketing for Bach Party Travel, a new group focused specifical­ly on planning bachelor and bacheloret­te parties.

But for those with the money to spend, the experience­s are getting bigger and bigger, and Gallagher said it’s the little details (that add up in price) — like personaliz­ed bathing suits and raunchy T-shirts — that mean a party is on a “distinct different level.”

It’s the men who are routinely spending more, shelling out to party in Ibiza, drink at Oktoberfes­t in Munich, or go whitewater rafting in Central America.

Longubucco said expectatio­ns vary, but generally, wedding party members should expect to attend a shower event, the bachelor or bacheloret­te party, the rehearsal dinner, and the wedding itself. She recommends brides and grooms have a frank discussion with their close family and friends about being in the wedding party before the person accepts. Outline hopes and expectatio­ns, and ensure the friends feel comfortabl­e disclosing financial constraint­s. And, she said, if that person can’t afford it, involve them in the Big Day another way, perhaps through being an usher or a reader at the ceremony.

“More and more, what we’re seeing is there’s a lot of demand to do different stuff so that, I hate to say it, but so that their Instagram makes people jealous.” — Kelly Gallagher, a Philadelph­ia-based event planner

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