frndshpcptn
<font color=blue>Disney's Ultimate Fan, and our ve
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2002
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I'm still amazed that in some areas of the country you can get away with giving only one gift.
If you get it passed on to you then why do you need to ask for more?![]()
Expecting large gifts (money or china etc.) is greedy.
A pp said she had her grandmother's china, her mother's china and her own china. She has one daughter and she said she can have all of these and her own pattern if she wants. Eventually after enough generations one would have enough different patterns to host a party each week with different china.
Me either! How horribly inconvenient for the bride and groom. You would have to haul all those gifts somewhere on your wedding night - I can just see it - beautiful bride arms full of gifts making 12 trips to the limo. Or imposing on your guests to help. Just doesn't seem like a nice thing for a hostess to do.
Hey I was a wedding planner for a few years and still do it from time to time. The proper way is send cash but sent it to the home of the bride. And maybe send a plant not flowers but a plant and put on the note that say something like for your new home. I hope that helps.
That's so interesting! I have never seen a gift table in NYC - area. I only see the box for envelopes (usually decorated in white satin and pearls) and it's on the couple's sweetheart table or dais.
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Are you including Manhattan in that area? DD and her DH attended a very, very "swanky" wedding down there (the cousin of DD's DH) and there was in fact a gift table - with gifts on it.. There was one gift that my DD said the bride later absolutely raved over.. It had something to do with a "grandmother" and some fairly heirloom or something.. Whatever it was, it meant far more to her than a gift of cash would have (although there's nothing wrong with that either)..I think a lot depends on the expectations of the "receiver"..
OKWAnneMarie - thanks for the memories! I still have my "boosta-bag" too. DN got married last summer and my s-i-l and I tried to talk her into using one of our boosta-bags. Buy she opted for a mail box instead.
Hey I was a wedding planner for a few years and still do it from time to time. The proper way is send cash but sent it to the home of the bride. And maybe send a plant not flowers but a plant and put on the note that say something like for your new home. I hope that helps.
Hope none of you actually start dying or were gonna see a "how much do I bring to the funeral" thread based on earlier discussions in this one!!![]()
Now I have a question. Speaking of bridesmaids... is there a regional/cultural amount of bridesmaids in the bridal party? My wedding was small, I had 2 bridesmaids. But, I've been in bridal parties where there were as many as 10 bridesmaids (there might have been 9?) plus the flowergirl. I was also in a wedding with 7 attendants, which seems like a lot, too. But, most of the weddings I've been to or been in seem to have at least 5 or 6 bridesmaids.
Whereas, we're amazed that people would give two gifts to celebate one marriage!I'm still amazed that in some areas of the country you can get away with giving only one gift.
Exactly!-------------------
LOL..I have never seen a bride and groom "hauling" their gifts anywhere.. Normally the bride's parents take the gifts home until the happy couple returns from home from their honeymoon and they have the time to savor opening each gift.. Once they have done that, they can sit down and write thank you notes for all of the gifts received (including the envelopes
).. It's really a "fun" thing for the couple to look forward to..
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That's true! At NYC weddings, out of about 200 people there are usually one or two people who give gifts. They are usually friends who are originally from another state and everyone totally understands that is their custom.
I had about 230 guests at my wedding and received 2 gifts from relatives from Pennsylvania.
I don't mean this as an insult to you, BUT, I don't believe there is a "proper" type of gift for weddings. As we can see from this thread, it completely depends on your culture/heritage and where you live.
I don't know why it is so hard for some people to accept that people do things in different ways.
Interesting. Southerners tend to look at all the wedding festivities -- showers, bridal luncheon, the wedding itself -- all as a way to help the new couple start their life together, but I've never heard the term "boost".
Whereas, we're amazed that people would give two gifts to celebate one marriage!
I also wish people would stop calling other people's traditions and customs crass and tacky.
To each it's own.