AlliedNews.com - Grove City, Pennsylvania

July 6, 2007

Lucky 7s

Couples line up for 7/7/07 wedding date

Courtney Paquette/CNHI News Service

NORTH ANDOVER, Mass. — Michelle DesSureault, 22, is marrying her high

school sweetheart, Jarid Day, ending a four-year engagement next

month.

She's confident the day will be memorable, not to mention their

anniversary date.

"It'll be easy for him to remember," said DesSureault of Amherst, N.H.

DesSureault snagged a room for her "7/7/07" wedding at Promises to

Keep, a function facility in Derry, N.H. It was the last room available on

that date, and she booked nearly a year and a half in advance.

July 7 brides like DesSureault who booked the date in record numbers

may not need something borrowed and something blue to bring them luck on

their big day. They've got the calendar on their side.

About three times as many brides as typically get married in the whole

month of July booked July 7 for their wedding this year, according to

Melissa Bauer, spokeswoman for TheKnot.com, a wedding Web site with over

1.1 million members.

Bauer said a typical Saturday in July plays host to about 12,000 member

weddings. This year, 38,000 brides registered July 7 as their wedding

date.

Bauer said people are also using the number as a theme for their

weddings | having seven bridesmaids, seven groomsmen, seven people sitting at

each table.

"It's extremely lucky," Bauer said. "It has biblical significance

across multiple religions."

Who can blame brides seeking a little extra luck in numbers? Not only

is the number seven lucky in Las Vegas, it's got a pretty good track

record in the Bible, too.

"The number seven is usually seen as symbolizing perfection, wholeness,

totality ..." said Dennis Sweetland, a professor of theology at Saint

Anselm College in Manchester, N.H.. "Multiples of seven are often seen

to carry similar symbolism."

The Sabbath is the seventh day. Visions of Christ include several

references to the number seven. Pentacost is seven weeks after Passover. And

the Exile lasted for 70 years. All, Sweetland pointed out, are

examples of the significance of the number.

Good feelings surrounding the date also have turned into good business

for local merchants who cater to weddings.

"We actually could have filled it a dozen times," said John Oudheusden,

owner of Promises to Keep. "We had so many people requesting that

date."

Brookstone Park manager Alex van den Broek said the date sold quickly,

and six more brides requested the facility after it was filled.

Ford Flowers in Salem got 15 requests to do weddings and is handling

eight of them, owner Bert Ford said.

Christy Tuttle, owner of the invitation store Invent-tations in Dover,

N.H.,said she did three wedding invitations for couples tying the knot

July 7. Typically, she said she does about three a month.

In fact, Tuttle's going to a wedding that day. And so is Debbie West,

owner of Debbie's Delights bakery in Salem, N.H. She's making the cake

for that bride's lucky day.

While many brides booked specifically for the date, some just lucked

out getting it.

Alicia Holden, 23, of Bridgewater, Mass., also is having her wedding at

Promises to Keep on July 7.

She and her fiance, Christopher Ronayne of Plymouth, Mass., are moving

to Manchester, N.H., this week.

Holden said she started looking for a place for her reception in

January 2006, and didn't really think about the date too much. She just

wanted the summer and July.

Now she's happy seven's on her side.

"Hopefully it won't rain," she said.