Wedding toast
Engagement party toast — start the story, don't spoil it
The engagement party is the first toast of the whole wedding — nobody's tired of speeches yet, and the couple's just said yes. Which means you don't need the big send-off; you need the opening line of the story. An engagement party toast should land one true thing about the two of them, welcome the room into what's coming, and sit down before the drinks get warm. This drafts it from your actual details, not a template.
What helps us write a good one
- ·How they met, or the moment you knew this one was different
- ·The proposal — or the reaction when you heard they were engaged
- ·One specific thing about them as a couple everyone in the room would nod at
- ·Your relationship to them — parent, sibling, oldest friend, the one who introduced them
- ·The tone you want: mostly warm, a little funny, or a clean short welcome
What you might get
“I've known Sarah since we were eleven, when she convinced me that the only way to win at four-square was to wear cargo shorts and look ungovernable…”
How OccasionScribe works
You fill out a structured form (4–6 minutes). The questions are designed to surface specifics — names, stories, tone, what to avoid. Specifics are the whole game; vague answers produce vague drafts.
We use Anthropic's Claude model to produce the first draft, then a programmatic review pass. We say this because you should know. Most buyers don't mind; many find it's the only reason they finally write the thing.
The draft lands in your inbox in 2–10 minutes depending on tier. Priority orders include one free revision. Standard orders: email us if something missed — we'll usually take care of small fixes free.