Wedding Seating Plan Layouts by Guest Count
I redrew our table layout four times on the back of a takeout menu before I figured out where to put my uncle who hates everyone.
I redrew our table layout four times on the back of a takeout menu before I figured out where to put my uncle who hates everyone.
I planned my friend Dani’s last rodeo weekend with a stack of printables, a glue gun, and one denim jacket I ironed badly.
I edited our invites at a kitchen table covered in someone else’s casserole dish, and they still came out better than the ones a friend paid a designer for.
I filled eighty little jars with honey for my wedding and then realized I had nothing to stick on them, so let me save you that 9pm panic.
My sister cried over a printed card and a bag of the gummy worms she stole from me in 2009, so I have opinions about MOH boxes now.
Escort cards are the one tiny thing that decides whether your guests wander around looking lost or just sit down, and I have done both versions.
I made our rustic save the dates at my friend’s kitchen table because mine was buried under wine corks, and they came out better than the ones I almost paid sixty bucks for.
I wrote our unplugged sign three times before it stopped sounding like a teacher confiscating phones, and here are the templates and exact lines I would actually print.
I have edited a seating chart at a kitchen table with two glasses of wine and a guest who kept switching tables, so here are the ones that survived me.
I planned a lake-cabin bachelorette around stuff I could print at home and shove in a tote, and these are the files that survived the drive.