Idea 1: design around the first visible moment
A wedding seating sign has to solve orientation before it tries to impress visually, because guests usually read it under social pressure and limited time. When the plan starts from how people will read, move, or decide, the rest of the design becomes easier to defend.
Idea 2: make one logic instantly readable
Design, seating data, and final print dimensions have to move together so that the beautiful version is also the correct version. That removes the usual drift between the planning file, the printed artifact, and the last instructions given to staff.
Idea 3: simplify what the floor team receives
The finished asset should specify board size, reading order, and installation notes so the venue does not reinterpret the plan on setup day. The right sign calms the entrance, cuts down on helper questions, and lets the room feel more intentional before anyone sits down.