musicdude said:
I personally think $150 is a lovely gift. The point is, this is a family that wants you to share in their celebration of love. IMHO I don't think as they open their gifts they are going sit there and say so an so is a cheapskate they only gave us $50, and if they do shame on them they didn't deserve anything all. When you plan a wedding your budget shouldn't be decided on what you think your return will be cash gifts. Every family is in a different financial situation and if you can't afford and expensive gift does that mean the family that invited you no longer wants you share in their love and happiness? I think not. Sorry to flame, but I am sick and tired of how materialistic people can be.
ITA! I'm a bit appalled to see things like "such and such an amount really isn't appropriate". You know what? If all my husband and I can afford is $75, then that's "appropriate."
When I was married about 7 years ago, I had gifts that ranged from approximately $35 in value to $1000+. We were given a mixture of cash and gifts. And my husband and I were thankful for every one of them.
The $35 gift? That came from my best friend from college. The gift was thoughtful, took both my husband and my interests into account, and was from the heart. My best friend wasn't making a ton of money, had just bought a home and was paying a mortgage for the first time. Quite frankly I was just happy that she was able to join in our celebration, I didn't care if she gave me a gift or not!
My husband is from the NE, I'm from the South. We live in the mid-Atlantic and have a bunch of relatives from this area as well. I didn't notice any regional differences in what people gave, but quite frankly I wasn't keepinig tally.
IMO, $150 is more than generous. Personally, I'd buy something off of their registry that I felt I could afford. But if you'd like to give cash, and if $150 is
what you can afford, then give that. If you feel as thought that amount is stretching your budget thin, then give what you can.
Maybe I'm just getting old. Or maybe I read to much Emily Post as a child (she always stressed that good manners were about making people feel
comfortable, not about expecting someone to use the right fork because "that's how it's done".) If it were me and I felt as though the couple expected a certain amount from me, I'd skip the wedding and send them a card sans money. I don't like greed. And I don't like the feeling that I should only go to the wedding if I can fork over a certain amount of cash...I wouldn't want to associate with people who think like that.
The whole discussion reminds me of the "flair" in the movie Office Space. Like the character said, "if you want me to wear more than 15 pieces of flair, tell me HOW MUCH you want me to wear!" If the couple is the kind to think "anything less than such an amount isn't appropriate", then they should charge admission or have a registry divided into "appropriate gifts from couples", etc. I've had some invitations to weddings/parties that were pretty blatant about what acceptable gifts should be ("We'd love for you to come to MD's birthday party! We're asking guests to add to his amazing wine collection! Here's a list of horribly expensive wines that he likes, please choose one and let the hostess know which one you'll be bringing. No, we won't be seving wine at the party! Well, wine in a box, but not the good stuff!") I'm always shocked when I get things like that, but I appreciate the honest nature of them.