Yes if that is what the bride wants.
her father
The tradition is a man walks the daughter down the aisle. It can be a grandfather; brother; uncle or a good friend of the family. Your mother should be sitting in the first pew to the left waiting for you to come down the aisle with whomever you choose to walk you down that aisle.
The procession should start at 6:30, with the bride walking out at the end of the procession.
The wedding march notes for walking down the aisle are typically in the key of C major and follow a simple melody consisting of the notes C, D, E, F, G, A, and B.
The walkway between pews in a church is called an aisle. The wedding party and bride walk down the aisle to the front of the church. (The groom can enter from any door. He does not walk down the aisle in a formal procession, but waits at the altar for his bride.) However, other weddings not in church do not use a structural "aisle". They might place a "runner", often made of satin, across a lawn to create an "aisle" between chairs for seating.
Yes they do walk done to the Same song as the Wedding Party.
Ave Maria, she walked down the aisle at her wedding to that song.
It depends how the wedding is organized and if the bride wants them to travel with them they will but they definitely follow the bride down the aisle.
Yes. He would be honored
The bride walks down the aisle to meet the groom at the alter in a church wedding.
No but you could stick one one it.
The moment that everyone remembers from a wedding is the bride's walk down the aisle. Make sure yours is perfect by hiring an experienced wedding pianist to play the waltz.