Your wedding vs. the royal wedding
What's the difference between this week's wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton and everyone else's? Logistics and money.
The affair -- no, make that spectacle -- is rumored to cost as much as  80 million pounds, according to reports in the U.K. press which couldn't  be verified. Security alone it is slated at 20 million pounds.
No matter how you measure it, the total costs are likely to dwarf the 4  million to 30 million pounds it reportedly American weddings typically  cost about $27,000, according to the  latest survey from TheKnot.com and  WeddingChannel.com. That includes  flowers, photography, music and  party favors, and on these particular  details there is little  information available about the royal wedding.  In all likelihood, the  royal family will spend at least 10 times what  the average American  pays for such items.
However, there are many items the family won't have to pay for at all --  such as renting a reception venue, or hiring a caterer. As A-list  celebrities, the  royals also may get some nice discounts from wedding  vendors.
  A once-in-a-generation eventJust  as with the wedding of Charles and Diana, the nuptials of William  and  Kate will be the wedding against which all other weddings for the  next  two decades will be judged. There is intense media interest in  every  detail, from the wedding dress to the cakes  to the brand of  hosiery that Middleton will wear. A spokeswoman for Buckingham Palace  declined to comment for this article. There is, however, an official  wedding site with lots of details and plenty of video and photos to  allow the public to share in the preparations.
Of  course, the wedding reception will be a monumental undertaking.  There  are two parties -- a breakfast reception for 600 hosted by the  queen and  a dinner reception for about 300 hosted by Prince Charles at  Buckingham  Palace. Many celebrities are expected to be in attendance,  as well as  some heads of state -- although not President Barack Obama,  who wasn't  invited because the wedding is not technically a state  occasion. Not  even the tiniest detail will be left to chance.
"Everything has to  work like cogs in a wheel," says Linnyette  Richardson-Hall, a high-end  wedding planner who is a spokeswoman for  the National Association of  Catering Executives and a panelist on the  Style Network's "Whose Wedding  Is This Anyway?" "This is a time when  perfection is needed."
The  couple's families are footing the bill, a smart public relations  move in  cash-strapped Britain. Though Middleton's family is wealthy,  the event  seems to be mostly bankrolled by the royals. Getting the best  of  everything will not come cheap, but it is likely that some of the   vendors associated with the wedding are rendering their services for   discounted rates or for free because of the enormous publicity they will   receive. That's common practice in the U.S. for celebrity weddings and   high-profile events like the Oscars.
 
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