Weddings
The favor table that guests line up for.
Sugared almonds get left on the table. A denim jacket with your wedding date stitched inside the collar does not. The bar rolls into your venue, stitches through cocktail hour and the reception, and every guest leaves holding something with their own name on it.
Two moments, two ways to run it
The morning suite. Robes are the classic: we stitch names or titles — Maid of Honor, Mother of the Bride — at our shop beforehand and deliver them pressed, or we set a single quiet machine near the suite for morning-of stitching while photos happen. Machine hum is conversation-level, closer to a sewing room than a shop floor.
The reception. The full bar opens with cocktail hour. Guests pick a tote, beanie, or denim piece, choose initials and thread from a card menu, and watch the stitch-out between dances. Monograms finish in 3–6 minutes, so a two-machine bar comfortably serves a 150-guest wedding across a four-hour reception.
Venue notes planners ask about
Historic estates and barns are welcome territory — the bar needs two standard outlets and level floor, nothing more. We coordinate directly with your coordinator on placement: near the bar or the dance floor edge draws a steady line without clogging dinner service. For outdoor receptions we bring the canopy and ask only for a spot out of direct sprinkler and DJ-speaker range.
Popular garments: plush robes, Richardson 112 caps for a “hat bar moment,” canvas totes for the morning after, and Independent fleece for coastal evenings. You can also hand us garments you have sourced — we confirm hooping compatibility in advance.
Next stop: your venue
Holding a date this season?
Send the venue and guest count. We will confirm availability and suggest a robe-plus-reception plan that fits the timeline.