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Thoughtfully Wild Studio
Our Thoughts & Stories


Details Cards: When You Need Them (And How to Use Them Wisely)
Do you need a details card with your wedding invitations? Learn when they're useful, what information belongs on them, and when you can skip them.
Jan 285 min read


Wedding Invitations: What They Actually Need to Include (And What You Can Leave Out)
What do wedding invitations actually need to include? Learn the essential information, what you can leave out, and how to keep your suite simple.
Jan 225 min read


Save the Dates: Do You Actually Need Them?
Do you actually need save the dates for your wedding? Honest advice on when they're useful, when you can skip them, and what information to include.
Jan 144 min read


The Real Wedding Stationery Timeline: When You Actually Need to Order
Just engaged? Here's when you actually need to order wedding stationery (spoiler: it's not immediately). Honest timeline advice from a stationery designer.
Jan 113 min read
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![Traditional wedding invitation wording was written for one type of family, but that’s not everyone’s reality 💁🏻♀️
Inclusive wording options now exist for every family structure, every gender combination, and every couple who wants their invitations to feel authentic. Your invitation wording can also reflect the feeling of your celebration - whether that’s joyful, intimate, relaxed, or formal.
Here are some different examples to get you started:
📌 Same-sex couples:
“Together with their families, [Name] and [Name] invite you to celebrate their marriage”
📌 Different surnames:
“[First name] [Surname] and [First name] [Surname] request the pleasure of your company at the marriage of their daughter/son/child [Name] to [Name]”
📌 Divorced or unmarried parents (hosting separately but both included):
“[Parent name]
[Parent name]
invite you to celebrate the wedding of [Name] and [Name]”
📌 Blended families:
“[Parent] & [Parent]
[Parent] & [Parent]
joyfully invite you to the wedding of [Name] & [Name]”
📌 The couple hosting themselves:
“[Name] and [Name] request the pleasure of your company at their wedding”
OR
“Together with their families, [Name] & [Name] invite you to celebrate their marriage”
📌 Deceased parents:
“[Name], child of [Parent] and the late [Parent], and [Name], child of [Parent] and [Parent], request the pleasure of your company”
📌 Gender-neutral options:
Replace “bride and groom” with “couple” or both names, replace “daughter/son” with “child” or just the name, use first names instead of titles (Mr/Mrs/Ms)
The goal isn’t to completely abandon tradition - it’s to make sure your invitations feel authentic to YOU.
What wording are you planning to use? Leave me a comment if you have questions about adapting these for your situation 🫶
Save this for reference when you’re writing your invitations 💾
#stationerydesign #weddingstationery #2026wedding #2027wedding #inclusiveweddings](https://scontent-den2-1.cdninstagram.com/v/t51.82787-15/642533164_17870237616560985_3339911290512971187_n.jpg?stp=dst-jpg_e35_tt6&_nc_cat=107&ccb=7-5&_nc_sid=18de74&efg=eyJlZmdfdGFnIjoiQ0xJUFMuYmVzdF9pbWFnZV91cmxnZW4uQzMifQ%3D%3D&_nc_ohc=iK5PKdLKqKcQ7kNvwFT7MmU&_nc_oc=AdqB7sVeuhUO-jyWnGLpHLdmB9cXSfoi2I-ZXBeAUb8hjhCQC4xQTWdAtLWBx40D_2U&_nc_zt=23&_nc_ht=scontent-den2-1.cdninstagram.com&edm=ANo9K5cEAAAA&_nc_gid=sV6_zYLIOFS47PmxZumn_Q&_nc_tpa=Q5bMBQHxQdLNiakCzbPbaRIHwNB7KspSF-4D98iUra-3IUsyD2QeKPAY1_gqdCaF-TrYK1XncB-do32k&oh=00_Af0ZxR5B05xZOZ8vKg2ICu8_mQnldQEwNtJ5rI1EDOvA6w&oe=69D44887)







































