🇰🇷 South Korea · wedding
Pyebaek — the Korean wedding ceremony where families bow, throw dates, and trade photos
The post-ceremony family ritual is brief, intimate, and produces the photos couples keep on their living-room wall for fifty years.
In Korea, the wedding most guests attend is the brisk modern hall ceremony — a thirty-minute Western-style affair with a white gown and a tuxedo. The **pyebaek** (폐백) is what happens right after, in a private room, with only family. It's older than the modern ceremony by several centuries, and it's where most of the photos that get framed actually happen.
The setup
The couple changes into traditional *hanbok* (한복) — usually a *hwarot* (활옷) or *wonsam* (원삼) for the bride and a deep blue or burgundy court robe for the groom. They sit on cushions in front of a low table set with chestnuts, jujube dates, dried persimmons, and rice cakes. The groom's parents sit opposite. Then the bride's parents, then grandparents, then uncles and aunts — but only the groom's side participates in the traditional version, a holdover from the older patrilocal practice. Many modern couples invite both sides; etiquette adjusts.
The bows + the dates
The couple performs a deep *kun jeol* (큰절) to each elder pair — a full, prostrate bow that's slow enough to photograph well. The elders offer a blessing and then **throw chestnuts and dates** (밤과 대추) into the bride's outstretched hanbok skirt or apron. Tradition: chestnuts represent sons, dates represent daughters; the count of each is taken as a playful prediction of how many children the couple will have. (Nobody takes the count seriously anymore; everybody takes the photo seriously.)
What guests photograph
- The bow itself — long enough that a guest can settle on focus - The mid-throw shot of chestnuts in the air - The elders' faces when their grandchild bows to them (usually the day's most photographed moment) - The hanbok detail close-ups before the change-back into Western clothes
After the pyebaek
The couple returns to the main reception, often hosted at the same venue's banquet hall. A multi-course Korean meal, lots of soju toasts table by table, and a long send-off. The reception itself is photographed casually — most of the formal photos are from the morning ceremony and the pyebaek. Guests upload casual photos throughout, which is why dual-collection apps work well for Korean weddings: formal shots from the morning + crowd shots from the evening, one gallery.
Citations & further reading
- Wikipedia: [Korean wedding](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Korean_wedding), [Pyebaek](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyebaek) - National Folk Museum of Korea: *Traditional Korean wedding ceremony*
Frequently asked
What is pyebaek?
The traditional Korean post-wedding family ritual where the couple, in hanbok, bows deeply to each set of elders and receives blessings — and chestnuts and dates thrown into the bride's skirt.
What do the chestnuts and dates symbolise?
Chestnuts represent sons, dates represent daughters. The thrown count is taken (playfully) as a prediction of future children.
Do both families participate in pyebaek?
Traditionally only the groom's side — a holdover from older patrilocal practice. Most modern couples invite both sides; etiquette adjusts accordingly.
What does the bride wear for pyebaek?
A traditional Korean hanbok, usually a hwarot (a coloured ceremonial robe) or wonsam for the bride and a deep blue or burgundy court robe for the groom.
Other cultures in the series
- 🇹🇭 ThailandRod nam sang — the Thai water-pouring blessing that turns a wedding into a shared photo album
- 🇮🇩 IndonesiaSiraman, akad, resepsi — three Indonesian wedding moments that produce three photo collections
- 🇬🇷 GreeceStefana — the Greek Orthodox wedding crowning that everyone photographs from below
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