Planning a 2024 wedding? Strap yourself in to see what the seasons ahead are serving. Weâve pulled the crystal ball out to make some predictions⊠except theyâre less predictions, more data and gut instinct, based on our weekly exposure to hundreds of nuptials.
If youâre hoping to see a continuation in couples carefully considering whatâs important to them, you wonât be disappointed.
Weddings have been on a trajectory of change over the last decade, but the pandemic put a rocket up the movement, with couples increasingly ditching traditions that donât feel relevant to them.
Instead, theyâre putting their energy and their budget into stuff that feels like a direct reflection of their interests and lifestyle. Amen and âI doâ. Here are the 12 best 2024 wedding trends you can expect to see over the coming year.
Expect to see more couples who have opted not to have a wedding party (i.e. bridesmaids, groomsmen or any combo there-within). Or, expect to see less of a presence as âthe partyâ â by this we mean more wedding parties just blending in with the rest of the guests (sitting down during the wedding ceremony, not walking down an aisle, wearing whatever they want to wear).
For couples that do opt to have a wedding party, youâll be relieved to know that itâs entirely okay (and in fact, on-trend) to have odd-numbered wedding parties.
Itâs evolved off the back of a new train of rational thought and post-pandemic perspective that questions why you would include someone just to balance out the numbers, or discount someone because theyâre the opposite sex to who youâd traditionally include in your wedding party. Now, itâs about choosing those friends or relatives that first come to mind and sticking with them.
Most modern couples live together prior to their wedding and as such, they donât need another toaster. What they do need? Money. The catch here is that asking for cash as a gift can feel awkward and impersonal, which is why digital registries or âdigital wishing wellsâ are fast on the rise. Plus, theyâre a better experience for guests (who are otherwise doing a last-minute dash to an ATM⊠or transferring to you after the event #beenthere).
Our pick is Hitchd, which transforms traditional gifting into something stylish and meaningful. Itâs beautifully designed, easy to use, and allows guests to contribute to honeymoon experiences, travel, or cash funds in a personalised way.
Make way for more puff-sleeve dresses, leggy gown slits, alternative colours, statement bows and structured bodices. Also, expect to see plenty of hot little numbers being slipped on after dinner for solid dancefloor sessions.
Tiny, trendy and very much in demand, more couples are making a deliberate decision to host small, intimate gatherings where the focus is very much on each other and the act of getting married, rather than the wedding itself. In response to this, many wedding venues and vendors are offering bespoke packages for miniature nuptials.
Goddamn, we wish we could preserve many of the floral installations we see at weddings, because they truly deserve immortalisation (luckily, thatâs what your photographer is there for).
A hot tip from us: if youâre planning on having statement flowers at your ceremony, try to make sure theyâre able to be moved to your reception later (if itâs at a separate venue) so you can get the most bang for your buck.
In contrast to the last prediction, weâre expecting to see more considered bouquets being held by brides. Think posies of cottage-style flowers, elegant single long-stem roses or small, unstructured bouquets in a monotone.
Beyond being held during the ceremony and in some photos, the bouquet doesnât really get a whole lot of air-time during the day, so it makes sense for many brides to scale these down in favour of putting the budget somewhere more impactful.
Clearly, weâre all feeling the pinch (good morning to everyone except my âbasicsâ grocery bill today), and no one is more acutely aware of financial pressures than a couple planning a wedding.
Weâre expecting â and hoping â to see more weddings that have clearly put a budget in the places that are important to the couple and left off the stuff thatâs just ânice to haveâ. For me, for example, this looks like spending money on a band and good food and wine but forgetting about fancy transport, wedding favours and even a cake.
As a way of showing respect for our First Nations culture and heritage, more couples are incorporating an Acknowledgement of Country into their wedding ceremony. Itâs a practice weâre 100 per cent behind; so much so hereâs a guide on how to Incorporate an Acknowledgement of Country.
Given half the population is in Europe right now, itâs clear weâre all hankering for any excuse to flee the daily grind. Itâs why weâre seeing so many couples plan full-weekend getaways for their family and friends in regional parts of Australia.
Itâs a win-win for all involved: the couple gets more quality time with their guests, their guests get a good excuse for a holiday, and the local businesses get a boost of tourism dollars (goodness knows they need all the love they can get).
Evening weddings continue to dominate but weâve noticed a flourishing of midday ceremonies followed by long-lunch receptions in recent times.
For couples keen to maximise the good times, this approach is smart as it means you donât need to worry about a curfew curtailing the celebrations â you can continue the fun with an afterparty (and still fall into bed before midnight).
In an age where social media reigns supreme (and where people are preferring to have 'unplugged wedding ceremonies) it makes sense that wedding content creators are on the rise.
These tech-savvy wedding folk are hired to capture raw, behind-the-scenes iPhone footage of your wedding day. It provides couples with otherwise unseen snippets of their day that can be shared on social media well before any (offical) wedding video.
Heart shapes, extravagant piping, sweet (or not) messages of love. Cherries, berries and tiers. Itâs an â80s comeback, in cake form. Theyâre cute, theyâre nostalgic and so long as theyâre tasty, letâs go.
Main image credits: Cake by @hellolittlecrumb, photo by @beckrocchiphotography.
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