Good to hear. I was wondering how people would percieve an online registry. I figured it would be so much easier than going to the store to buy gifts.
Good to hear. I was wondering how people would percieve an online registry. I figured it would be so much easier than going to the store to buy gifts.
We live in Germany and it is expensive teh ship things back to teh US, so most gifts we buy end up being bought online (many, many from Amazon) and shipped directly to the recipients. So, it has the benefit of being WORLDwide
So long as the registry information wasn't included in the invitation, I'd be happy to use it.![]()
I am old school. I don't like using wedding registries of any kind when buying wedding gifts. They are now common, but it still feels tacky to me. Yeah, I have heard all of the arguments in support of them and can't argue with them, but they still feel tacky.
We decide what we want to buy the couple, then check the wedding registry. If they have what we were going to buy them listed and not yet bought, we buy the item on the registry (as long as it is in the same price range). If it isn't listed, we usually buy it anyway.
We just check the registry to eliminate duplicate gifts, not to buy them what they want.

Actually, wedding registries ARE old school. People have been registering for china and such long before you were born. Haven't you heard relatives say "well, they will be picking out China patterns soon"![]()
Not in most places. This really didn't become common across America until the 90s (china aside).

Just curious why this bothers some people. The whole point of a shower is to give gifts so whats wrong with putting a registry card in the invitation?
Since you asked, it's because you invite people to an event, not gifts. To me it's the difference between: "I would love to have you at my party!" and "Come to my party, get me a gift, and I want THIS!" which comes off as little more then a spoiled child demanding presents.
I personally feel that it is not the job of the recipient to choose their own gift. Their job is to graciously accept and to say thank you. So while there are arguments to be made about getting someone what they want, I feel it reduces the gift to little more than a transaction where the guest pays a demanded fee. Plus, it irritates me that people spend so much time thinking about their own gifts. There is no way to not come off as selfish when you spend all your time pondering how to get only what you want out of your loved ones.
That said, I have no issues with a registry. But the information should be provided when asked for, not before. And if, heaven forbid, someone get a gift they didn't really want, maybe they should consider the intention of love behind the gift, rather than bemoan the fact that it wasn't what they wanted - had the money been theirs to spend. Which, of course, it wasn't.
It actually does sound like you have issues with the concept of a registry, but thanks for answering.It actually does sound like you have issues with teh concept of a registry, but thanks for answering.
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No, I have issues with how registries are used. They should not be used to hit people over the head with the recipients material demands for gifts. But rather to offer suggestions when asked for. Providing registry information should only be done at the givers request. It's really no different than verbally inviting someone to your home and then saying, "By the way, you'll be bringing the dessert, and we want that strawberry cheesecake from the bakery on 5th Ave. So just pick that up on your way."