Focus on the value on the item, not the price you paid for it! The whole point of finding bargains is to keep more of your money in your wallet! Set aside the savings you've earned through savvy gift shopping and use it to start next year's Christmas gift fund!
You also have to think about the precedent you're setting as well. You might have budgeted $30 for one child's gift, but discover that with sales, you might be able to buy $300 worth of merchandise for $30. If you go ahead and give a gift worth $300 this year, you're setting up that expectation for subsequent years, an expectation that could come back to bite you in the rear!
A few years ago, DH and I made an innocent price vs. value mistake with our own children that caused some bad feelings! We gave DD a pair of designer sunglasses that I got for less than a third of the normal price - at the normal price, I would not have been able to buy them for her. DSD (same age as DD) wanted and received expensive perfumes and other items that weren't available on sale. We spent more on DSD's gift that DD's but the perceived value of DD's gift was higher, so it looked as though we were splurging on one child and short-changing the other. It took a lot of explaining to convince DSD that the witch-stepmother wasn't trying to play favorites. I also had to explain to DD that she got the sunglasses only because I got a fantastic deal, and that it's not the kind of gift I would have been prepared to buy at full price.
They were both teenagers at the time - I can't imagine trying to explain that scenario to younger children.
You also have to think about the precedent you're setting as well. You might have budgeted $30 for one child's gift, but discover that with sales, you might be able to buy $300 worth of merchandise for $30. If you go ahead and give a gift worth $300 this year, you're setting up that expectation for subsequent years, an expectation that could come back to bite you in the rear!
A few years ago, DH and I made an innocent price vs. value mistake with our own children that caused some bad feelings! We gave DD a pair of designer sunglasses that I got for less than a third of the normal price - at the normal price, I would not have been able to buy them for her. DSD (same age as DD) wanted and received expensive perfumes and other items that weren't available on sale. We spent more on DSD's gift that DD's but the perceived value of DD's gift was higher, so it looked as though we were splurging on one child and short-changing the other. It took a lot of explaining to convince DSD that the witch-stepmother wasn't trying to play favorites. I also had to explain to DD that she got the sunglasses only because I got a fantastic deal, and that it's not the kind of gift I would have been prepared to buy at full price.
They were both teenagers at the time - I can't imagine trying to explain that scenario to younger children.