Thanks for the comments and suggestions! I greatly appreciate any little tips and tricks, even though I doubt I will attempt another wedding. This was a freebie for my cousin (the bride) and my grandad (a long retired portrait photographer) did the posing for the formals, looking back, I should've done it myself; however I'm still not sure how I could've removed the cross from someone's head.
First hurdle... The groom's family were not smiling for anything... They were some of the least smiling people I have ever seen. HUGE comment coming from a guy who NEVER smiles.
Next hurdle... The guy in the background of #8 was ALWAYS in the way, he was apparently "VERY into photography" with his Sony a100 & kit lens shooting every shot with pop-up flash. He actually shoved me at one point, because I was where he wanted to be during the cake cutting. (He was a friend of a friend, not hired, not even asked to take extra photos)
Technically challenging hurdle... The back wall and the steps weren't parallel! I'm not sure how this happened, pretty sure the stage was an add-on that wasn't very well done. When the back wall was straight, the steps were cock-eyed and vice versa. This made straightening in post a living nightmare. I had to choose one or the other. I cropped out the front step when I could to avoid working with this all-together, but other times I had to pick one or the other. I usually chose to straighten the step. To me, the step being closer to the edge of the frame was more much obviously crooked and distracting (IMO).
Lastly... My nerves got the best of me. I know when my stuff isn't up to snuff. I know that I am not a professional wedding photographer and knew my work would show it. This is one of my biggest issues with shooting things like this... I love shooting kids/animals/cars, but really let my nerves get the best of me when shooting formal shots.
Yeah... there were a few shots that got left out of the noise treatment... Will be treating those this evening and re-uploading.