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Ready to Wed? You’ve Got Some Homework in Store

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From Baltimore Sun

Getting married? Better start studying.

Planning a wedding takes work, no matter how simple the ceremony and reception. Procrastinating is not an option. Cramming is. Time for a pop quiz. Pick a role or actress whose style best describes the look of today’s wedding dresses:

A) Ally McBeal--short, short.

B) Jennifer Aniston--sophisticated and bare.

C) Elly May Clampett--frills, frills and more frills.

D) None of the above.

The answer is B.

Dresses for the big day not only have gotten simpler over the last few seasons; they’ve gotten skimpier up top, too.

First there were classic sheaths, then spaghetti straps atop tulle ballerina skirts. Now gowns are going strapless.

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It’s shocking at first, but the look grows on you. Consider the satin strapless sheath from Lady Eleanor ($350). Sure, your grandmother would have a fit at the very thought of her baby baring her shoulders on her wedding day. However, the dress is spare, elegant and sophisticated. And if you ever embark on a new career as a lounge singer, you’ve already got something to wear.

Now for some math.

Mom’s wedding dress is a size 6. You’re a 12. Short of calling in a magician, is there any hope of wearing her dress down the aisle?

Yes, according to Robyn Flipse and Jacqueline Shannon, authors of “The Wedding Dress Diet” (Doubleday, 229 pages, $14). The book is no magic bullet--the weight loss plans inside advocate a balanced diet and exercise. But the book also includes helpful tips on managing wedding-related stress, handling potentially disastrous pre-wedding eating events and finding the right wedding dress for your figure.

Wedding mags by the numbers:

* Number of pages in the February/March issue of Bride’s magazine: 1,270.

* Weight of magazine: 4.8 pounds.

* Guinness Record broken (according to Bride’s): “World’s Largest Consumer Magazine.”

* Average cost of a wedding in 2000, according to InStyle Weddings magazine: $25,000 to $27,000.

* Cost of fashion designer Erisa Katsura’s one-of-a-kind “Millennium” gown, with hand-applied platinum leaf: $200,000.

Groom’s New Duties

The old definition: groom (noun), person bride will marry whose only wedding planning duties are to show up at the church on time.

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The new definition, according to “For the Groom” by Colin Cowie (Delacorte Press, 133 pages, $24.95): groom (noun), person bride will marry whose wedding planning duties might include choosing the menu and wine for the reception, selecting a band, arranging transportation for wedding guests, purchasing cigars, writing thank-you notes, making honeymoon travel arrangements and getting a facial, haircut and teeth cleaning two weeks before the wedding.

Bright Ideas

What’s hot for weddings, according to InStyle Weddings:

* Bridal hair: a flurry of jeweled or pearl-scattered pins instead of a veil.

* Bridal shoes: Yves Saint Laurent silver stilettos.

* Bouquet: sunset-colored roses bound with yellow tulle and golden ribbon.

* Rings: anything platinum.

* Invitations: your new monogram.

* Music: two bands, a polka band and a wedding band, or an R&B; band and a swing band.

* Color: silver, as in silver-rimmed dishes, flower containers, tablecloths.

* Must-have accessory: man’s best friend, appropriately attired, of course (yes, we mean a dog).

* Drinks: vodka, coffee.

* Wedding cake: tiny, individual, tiered mini-cakes.

* Favors: personalized conversation hearts.

* Little something extra: a $100,000 fireworks display.

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