Happy St. Patrick’s Day from our team at Southern Bride! In honor of the holiday that celebrates Irish heritage and culture, we’re spotlighting some of our favorite Irish wedding traditions that have been passed down through generations and have influenced some of our own modern wedding customs. Whether you’re invited to an Irish wedding or are planning on integrating elements of Celtic ceremonies into your big day, these symbolic notes of love and commitment will enchant both the happy couple and guests alike.
Claddagh Ring

Wearing the Claddagh ring with the bottom of the heart facing away from you indicates your openness to find love, while wearing it with the bottom of the heart facing towards your own reveals that you’ve given your heart to someone else in marriage. Brides can choose modern renderings of the traditional Claddagh ring for their wedding band or feature the ring in their ceremony and wear it as a necklace or everyday ring long after the ceremony is over.
Handfasting

Today, couples include handfasting during the wedding ceremony itself and invite a special family member or friend to tie their hands together as they say their vows. Brides can choose ribbons for the handfasting that have sentimental value or coordinate with the ceremony’s color palette to put a modern twist on this tradition.
Wedding Handkerchief

A modern bride can embroider her wedding handkerchief with her initials, both her and her partner’s name, or the date of her ceremony. Even if your handkerchief never becomes a baby bonnet, it will always be a beautiful and lasting keepsake of one of the most important days of your life.
Something Blue

Incorporating something blue, part of the Old English rhyme something old, something new, something borrowed, something blue, into your ceremony can add a little good luck to your big day. Though the Irish flag sports bright green, blue is the country’s lucky color that also symbolizes bridal purity. Traditional Irish brides would don a blue garter under their dress, but there are countless modern and trendy ways you can invite the color blue into your ceremony and reception.
Irish Spirits

We also have the Irish to thank for the word honeymoon. A tribute to the sweet “honey wine” brewed from honey, yeast, and water, honeymoon references mead consumed by newlyweds who were married during the lucky new moon. For those who aren’t a fan of the alcoholic beverage, serve up some modern Irish favorites like whiskey, Irish coffee, or Guiness at your reception and you’ll be toasting and dancing all night.
Whether you’re staying true to tradition or looking to bring a modern flair to your ceremony, these Irish wedding traditions show how every detail of your wedding has possibility to represent something generational and meaningful.
By Olivia DuCharme
Image Credits (in order of appearance): iStock Photo, A LadiesShop (Etsy), Modern Weddings, Andie Freeman Photography, Gentlemen’s Journal
These are some great traditions to keep in mind for any wedding ceremony.