Another satisfied customer writes: Thank You! I just wanted to thank you again for thewonderful service I received from you. I ordered by phonethe crystal shoe and Sixpence. I was thrilled with yourswiftness to process my order. And your very sweet andcheerful attitude. I have saved your site in my files andwill most certainly use you in the future...and also referyou to all of my friendsI have written once to you of the wonderful service that Ireceived when I placed my order by phone Thursday, June9th. And I just had to write again... Well, it is Saturday, June 11th and my order has arrived!!On opening the package I was thrilled with this beautifulcrystalshoe, Sixpence and poem!! And I am absolutely certain theBride will love this gift as much as I do. Truthfully...? I don't want to give it up. I wish someonewould have thought to give one to me 5 years ago when Iwas a Bride. Hmmmm, maybe if and when we renew our vows.... Many, many thanks again!!! Sincerely, Debbie Arnold
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Something Blue and... a Lucky Sixpence in her Shoe! A lucky sixpence in a bride's shoe is a famous old good luck wedding tradition. The Sixpense should be placed in the brides own shoe or slipper on her wedding day, as a symbol of love, happiness and Good Luck. Make the bride feel like Cinderella on her wedding day. Give her a gift she’ll cherish forever.An authentic English sixpence coin in an elegant, 24% Lead Crystal Slipper and the poem - personalized with the bride and groom's first names and wedding date and suitable for framing. Our elegant, 24% Lead Crystal Slipper is steeped in the romance of a Cinderella story. When you give our collectable slipper with a genuine English sixpence coin and a personalized poem, you are passing on to the Bride and Groom both a tradition and your best wishes for happiness, love and good luck. A Lucky Sixpence for the Bride in a crystal Shoe. This keepsake gift for the bride, is a most appropriate engagement gift or bridal shower gift. The suggested retail price For the Sixpence in a shoe is $29.95. Hurry, Special sale!!You pay only $19.95 Plus Shipping And Handling. The suggested retail price For the Sixpence in a shoe and a hankie or a garter is $34.00. Hurry, Special sale!! You pay only $27.50 Plus Shipping And Handling. The suggested retail price For the Sixpence in a shoe a hankie and a garter is $37.50 Hurry, Special sale!! You pay only $32.50 Plus Shipping And Handling.
A Lucky Sixpence for the Bride in a crystal Shoe.
 Add a hankie with blue
 Add a Tossing Garter with blue
 and the bride will have Something old - the coin Something new - the slipper and the hankie Something Blue - the decoration on the hankie and or garter And a Sixpence for her shoe All she needs to add is Something borrowed. Or you may purchase just the coin
 $6.95USD
Ordering Online at A-wedding Day Is Safe! Your order is generated on our secure engine. Our secure server software encrypts information, ensuring that Internet transactions stay private and protected. If you would prefer to order by phone...Call us at: 951-681-1244 between the hours of 9:00 AM and 5:00 PM, Pacific Standard Time.Please have your credit card ready when calling. To go to our secure shopping cart, click on the "BUY IT NOW" button.The coin is called a Lucky Sixpence because it symbolizes the promise of a lifetime of joy, and good fortune for the bride and a lifetime of good health, happiness, wealth,and wedded bliss the newlywed couple. The sixpence first became known as a lucky coin when introduced by king Edward VI of England in 1551. It later became part of bridal wedding traditions in the Victorian era. A-wedding Day Sixpence Shop offers you a genuine sixpence coin, imported from England, nestled in a 24% lead crystal shoe.
The sixpence coin is neither being minted, nor been in circulation since 1967. This makes it a very special and valuable keepsake that can serve as a good luck piece, something old or even something borrowed. What bride to be would not want to own one of these priceless pieces of history?! For that matter what bride could resist a sixpence in a shoe and a personalized poem too? To complete the gift add something with blue such as a hankie or a tossing garter and offer her something to borrow. Traditionally, the father of the bride placesthe lucky wedding sixpence into her left hand shoe, just before the wedding. Nikki Dettmar, A-wedding Day's Bride, shares the following customs with you. Something Old - Signifies a sense of continuity, tradition and represents the link to the bride's old life and her family.
Something New - Signifies the couple's new beginning, new life together as well as their hope for the future.
Something Borrowed - Borrow something from a happily married friend or family. To wish you that your married life will mirror the happiness in her marriage, Brides can borrow Jewelry or a handkerchief or even part of the wedding attire from a family member or close friend.
Something Blue - Blue represents fidelity, love, and purity.
And a lucky Sixpence in her shoe- Signifies wealth both financial wealth and a wealth of happiness and joy.This is an ancient custom to appease Diana, goddess of chastity and unmarried maidens, so that the bride could lose her virginity and bear children.
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