A bride's name should be listed first in the invitation and then the groom's name. This is customary. Her parents names may or may not be used depending on what they prefer.
The Guests
Bride
* I assume the married couple are redoing their vows because they may have had been married at the courthouse or, they were married in another country. It would be: Mr. & Mrs. John Doe on the wedding invitation. Or if you want an more informal Wedding Invitation you could put: Celebrating the marriage of John and Jane Doe.
1.) Parents 2.)Relatives (Sisters, Cousins ect.) 3.)Other (Friends)
Normally the name of the couple, the name of the parents, and the time and place of the wedding. There are many examples of this online as to how to word wedding invitations. Feel free to check on the sources listed below.
The bride's name goes first. If you put a monogram on a napkin then her initial goes first, groom's last name initial and then his first name initial. You can flip the initials if it spells something you don't like.
The volturi do not get an invite to their wedding however one of Edwards cousins goes to the volturi and tells them they have had a baby and the volturi want this baby -hope this helped
The brides name usually goes first before the wedding, like on the invitations it would be the brides name followed by the grooms. However, after you are married, the husbands name is usually first, such as Mr. & Mrs.
Usually it is the Groom which leads, however, I have seen many cases where the Bride leads too. It depends on community to community and the places.
Ring finger on the left hand. Wedding band goes on first, Engagment ring goes on second.
The wedding invitation is not intended to give credit based in order of dollar value or even family name. It should say (in this order) WHO is hosting, WHOM they are inviting, to WHAT, WHEN, and WHERE (and HOW to respond, if necessary). The order of the names is not important. What is important is that the wedding invitation reflects and reminds the guests of the beginning of two lifes in common and give others an insight into what the wedding will be. You can check sample wedding invitations at Maddy's Invitations to give you a better idea. http://maddysinvitations.blogspot.com/
Wedding invitation envelopes that are inserted inside the mailing envelope are usually left blank. The outer envelope for the wedding invitation usually has the addressee and the return address of the person that will be contacted for all RSVP's.