QR for your line of work

Wedding QR codes

TL;DR — Wedding QR codes simplify RSVP, registry, and photo sharing. Print one QR per function on the invitation; route guests to a hosted landing page with everything they need.
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The 4-QR wedding stationery setup

Modern wedding invitations bundle multiple QRs to keep the printed card minimal:

  • RSVP QR — opens an online RSVP form with menu choices, plus-one questions, dietary restrictions
  • Registry QR — links to your registry page (Amazon, Zola, MyRegistry, etc.)
  • Schedule QR — opens a landing page with the event timeline, venue addresses, accommodation suggestions
  • Photo-album QR — links to a shared photo upload page (Google Photos, Apple Shared Album, Dropbox)

Multi-language considerations

If your guest list spans languages (international families are common), use a QRshop hosted landing page with multi-language support. Guests' phones auto-detect their preferred language from Accept-Language headers; the page renders in their native tongue with no extra effort from you.

Photo-album QR — the single biggest hit

Print one QR on the back of every menu card / table card pointing at a shared photo upload album. Guests scan, take photos, and they auto-upload to the shared album. By the end of the night you have 200-500 photos from the guest perspective — far better than what the official photographer captures alone.

Frequently asked

Will guests need an app to use the QR codes?

No — every modern phone scans QRs natively (iOS Camera and Google Lens both work without any app install). For shared photo albums, the linked service may prompt for an app install (Google Photos, Apple Photos), but most guests already have those.

What if our wedding date or venue changes?

Use dynamic QRs. Update the destination URLs in the QRshop dashboard; printed invitations keep working. Critical for weddings booked far in advance — venues fall through, dates shift.

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