
Camille & Hugo · Marseille
Welcome drinks, a ceremony, a beach party — and, for once, guests who actually knew the plan.
An illustrative story — representative of how couples plan with bridecard, not a specific customer.
A whole weekend to keep straight
Camille and Hugo weren't planning a day, they were planning a weekend on the coast east of Marseille — drinks on the Friday, the ceremony on the Saturday, a beach party to see it off, with long gaps in between for lunch and the sea. Which is a lot to keep straight when you're a guest. People kept losing the thread: what time were the Friday drinks again, was the beach party formal, did they need to come to all of it or only the parts they'd said yes to. The plan existed. It was just spread across a dozen messages, no two of them quite the same.
"Three events, one page, and nobody lost the plot."
The weekend on one page
So they laid the whole weekend out as a timeline on one page — Friday to Sunday, each event with its time, its place, and a line on what to wear and what to expect. The guessing stopped; the running order was simply there to scroll. The part that quietly saved them was the RSVPs: people replied per event, so Camille and Hugo could see who was in for the drinks, who only for the ceremony, who was staying for the beach — three headcounts, no three spreadsheets. And the photo gallery sat on the same page, open the whole weekend long.
The weekend they got
The drinks started on time, because 'time' was finally something everyone agreed on. Saturday had the right number of chairs and Sunday had the right amount of food, because each event had counted its own people. Nobody turned up to a beach in a suit. And by Sunday night the gallery had filled itself — the Friday toast, the vows, the long golden blur of the beach — three days in one place, shot by everyone who was there, waiting for the two of them once the weekend finally let go.
- A full weekend itinerary guests could scroll
- RSVPs counted per event, not all-or-nothing
- What-to-wear notes for each part of the weekend
- A shared gallery open across all three events
FAQ
Put it on the invitation as a timeline. bridecard lets you lay out each event — welcome drinks, ceremony, party — with times, places and a note on what to expect. Camille and Hugo mapped Friday to Sunday on one page, and guests stopped asking what happened when.
Guests can reply per event, so you see who's coming to each part rather than one all-or-nothing yes. That gave Hugo and Camille three accurate headcounts — drinks, ceremony, beach party — without juggling three separate lists.
A shared gallery on your page that stays open across the whole event. Guests upload from their phones, so every shot lands in one place. Over Camille and Hugo's weekend it filled with all three events — the Friday toast through the Sunday beach — taken by the people who were actually there.
Yes, you can start your card for free and build it out — the invitation, the itinerary, the RSVP setup — before you commit to anything. That let Camille and Hugo get the whole weekend mapped out and see it working before sending a single link.
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