Orthodox Jewish grooms come for their brides after being apart from each other for a week.
Other Jewish grooms come for their brides like everyone else.
At Orthodox Jewish weddings, the groom is escorted by both fathers and the bride is escorted by both mothers. At modern Jewish weddings, the bride and groom are escorted by their parents.
By the groom.
The best wedding clothes they can get.
She circles him clockwise.
* The Bride and Groom sit in the middle of the head table and the bride is on the Groom's right; then her Maid (or Matron) of Honor; then the Bridesmaids. To the left of the Groom is his Best Man and the Ushers.
At Hasidic and Orthodox Jewish weddings, the groom is escorted by both fathers and the bride is escorted by both mothers. At other Jewish weddings, the bride and groom are escorted by their parents with the father on the left and the mother on the right.
Yes! White is always appropriate for a Jewish groom, just like the Jewish bride. Orthodox Jewish grooms often wear a white robe called a kittel.
At a Jewish wedding the groom stands next to the bride, on her left; both of them facing Jerusalem.
If the parents are absent, anyone related to the bride or groom does it instead, usually an older sister/brother or uncle/aunt.
the bride and the groom is first, then the bride and her father, and then the groom and his mother. After that the bride dance with her new dad and groom dance with his new mom.
A bride groom is a male. Bride's maids are females.
The opposite gender of groom is bride