To wear one's uniform for your wedding or not is a personal choice. If the wedding is on-base; a military wedding where the bride and groom come from the church under the crossed swords of their fellow officers is most impressive - if that is what the bride and groom want.
* If the groom is not in the Military then you don't have to wear your uniform unless you so choose, but this must be discussed with the groom before the wedding ceremony.
Yes.
Military WeddingsIn the US, officers and NCO's can request an arch of sabers. If the groom is a member of the military, traditionally the woman will be swatted on her behind after passing under the arch of swords, and told "welcome to the [insert whatever branch here], ma'am". If the bride is the member of the military, this step is omitted. Brides in the military may opt for a wedding dress instead of military formal wear, but the groom will most likely always be in their most formal military uniform. Only the bride and groom may pass under the arch. The rest of the wedding party does not.See the Related Link for "Wedding Details - Military Traditions" to the right. You can also do an Internet search for additional information.
The groom should buy the engagement and wedding ring for his bride to be and the bride to be should buy the groom's wedding band.
Help the groom.
It's possible, but I think the bride and groom should split the total cost for BOTH wedding rings.
Black.
Yes, she should.
Depends on what the bride and groom wants.
the closest friend to the groom. He needs to be trust worthy to the groom too!
yes, to be sure that everything is in order and to tell them you love them!
A groom on a Jewish wedding day wears what you wear in a English wedding
A wedding day can feel like a military D-Day to most parents of the Bride and Groom. It really is not a D-Day.
What colour suit should men wear at a wedding night party?