Nowadays, often a bride and groom jointly take responsibility for any wedding expenses that are not gifted by their families.
Traditionally, the groom's parents are responsible for accommodations for the groom's attendants and family. Other expenses they are responsible for include the marriage license fee, officiant's fee, rehearsal dinner, bachelor dinner, part of the flowers, the honeymoon, and the gifts from the groom to his attendants and the bride.
The cost as a second wedding, as well as the first, is the responsibility of the bride and groom. Agreed... the bride and groom must pay.
It should be the groom - if he will cough up the money. Otherwise whoever ordered the stuff must pay. You can always take the groom to court.
It should most definitely be the bride and groom with consideration of the groom's parents' expenses. If the bride and groom don't show up, then there is no rehearsel dinner.
You are either the Godmother of the bride or groom or you are not. If you are then it is not up to you to purchase the wedding rings, but up to the bride and groom.
Usually the groom takes care of the wedding his family covers all expenses.However, it`s not rare when both parties share the expenses.
The groom generally pays for the honeymoon.
A dowery is payment to cover wedding expenses. A dowery is payment to the groom from the bride's family at the marriage
Historically the brides family is responsible for the reception and the brides dress. If the bride called off the wedding most courts would not be willing to entertain a lawsuit for expenses that the brides family incurred as part of planning for a wedding.
No.
A groom on a Jewish wedding day wears what you wear in a English wedding
The groom is the person who is marrying the bride. Also the groom normally gives a speech after the wedding ceremony during the buffet or meal. They also normally have the first dance with the bride.