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Going to a wedding .. they want cash not gifts...

84 replies

robinpud · 01/08/2008 21:31

Hmm.. they have asked, very nicely, that if guests do want to buy anything, ( and they don't need anything as have teeny tiny house with no space) that we give cash.
so do we get them cash as requested.. gift cards for John Lewis or similar, or go with my gut instinct and get them 3 fine bottles of champagne for special moments in the year to come?

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watsthestory · 01/08/2008 21:33

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Ambi · 01/08/2008 21:35

I have done that in the past myself. When gift vouchers were requested I got a personalised bottle of champagne. They'll be inundated with cash etc. And will remember your gift, its not like its something they already have. Though if I don't know the couple too well it is easier getting vouchers.

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QuintessentialShadows · 01/08/2008 21:36

Do they like champagne?

I would maybe give just one bottle, and a/some £ note in an envelope.

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Guadalupe · 01/08/2008 21:39

I am going to a wedding tomorrow and the invite says donations towards a a fun garden for the kids. Do you just put money in with the card then? I've never given cash before. I like the champagne idea.

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robinpud · 01/08/2008 21:41

I think the really awkward thing about the cash is having to decide how much is appropriate.. where do you start with that?

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Guadalupe · 01/08/2008 21:48

it does seem harder doesn't it? Even though you know the couple will be aware of the price of a gift on a list, money is much more, I don't know what word I'm looking for really, something.

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MyDingaling · 01/08/2008 22:03

I think the champagne idea is lovely, really thoughtful

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BlueDragonfly · 01/08/2008 22:05

Do they drink? Do they like chanpagne? If so, then yes its a lovely idea but i don't so would be a bit annoyed that you had ignored me!

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Cappuccino · 01/08/2008 22:06

I do get bored tho at weddings with people going 'oh we are not getting them something off the list that is boring we are not boring'

it is not about you you narcississtic eejit it is about the couple

if you give them cash they can get champagne

unless you know them REALLY REALLY well and know that they would like this then fair enough

I went off list with my best friend and so did she, but only my best friend, cos I knew I could

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DiscoDizzy · 01/08/2008 22:07

Champagne sounds lovely IF you like it, I have lots of bottles stpred up because I don't like it.

If they've asked for money, why not just give it them. It doesn't matter how much you give them - the equivalent of 3 bottles of champagne perhaps.

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Gobbledigook · 01/08/2008 22:09

I'd be ecstatic to receive a bottle of Veuve Cliquot or Bolly, however, if they've asked for money I guess that's the best thing to do.

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Gobbledigook · 01/08/2008 22:09

DiscoDizzy - over here! I LOVE champagne!

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DiscoDizzy · 01/08/2008 22:10
Grin
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Lizzylou · 01/08/2008 22:12

I'm with Capp
Only my BF went "off list"

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somersetmum · 01/08/2008 22:14

I don't see the problem with couples asking for cash. Times have changed and the majority will already be living together so, of course they will already have things.

Traditionally the happy couple provide a gift list. This is still asking for specific items and no-one has ever suggested that this is rude so why not give them cash?

And what about the couples who choose to donate all the cash to charity, because they genuinely do not need it? Do you think the charities will appreciate champagne?

I don't agree with the argument about knowing how much to give either. It is no different between choosing whether to buy a designer vase or a toaster (and there's nothing wrong with buying a toaster, so long as they don't have one ). Decide how much you would have spent on a gift and give that amount.

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littlelapin · 01/08/2008 22:14

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edam · 01/08/2008 22:24

Ooh, gift lists were very controversial not that long ago... I remember agonised debates about whether we should have one and whether to include a note in the invites etc. etc. etc. Was thought by some to be jolly rude to have a list at all, let alone tell people about it. Because you should be jolly grateful for what you are given and not expect presents, IIRC.

These days no-one bats an eyelid at a wedding list. Cash is the new list!

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expatinscotland · 01/08/2008 22:32

I will always find it the height of bad taste to ask for cash in lieu of a gift.

Just bad form.

Get them a voucher.

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littlelapin · 01/08/2008 22:44

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expatinscotland · 01/08/2008 22:46

i just find it awful to a) assume people are beholden to get you a gift b) then say it has to be cash.

tbh, i've revised my original opinion, i'd get them booze, too.

or a book on manners.

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GrinningGorilla · 01/08/2008 22:47

If I ever got married I would ask for cash and when the guests walked in they would be given a safety pin to pin the note of choice to my wedding dress. What a fabulous idea....

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Cappuccino · 01/08/2008 22:49

by saying 'we would rather have this' you are not saying 'get me a gift you oiks'

and it is bad manners to go to a wedding without one anyway surely

I can't see what is wrong with cash personally. The whole idea of building a fecking dinner service out of your wedding day is odd imo

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PeaMcLean · 01/08/2008 22:50

We asked for cash so that we could go out and choose a painting. We'd been living together for long enough so if we didn't have enough towels and a kettle etc there was only us to blame. But the painting is still on our wall and always will be and I know all our friends clubbed together, in effect, to buy it. And we chose it together.

I'd hate to just contribute to a general "cash" pot though, it needs to be for something specific.

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expatinscotland · 01/08/2008 22:50

no one is saying go without a gift, Capp, jsut that it should be of the guests' chosing.

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littlelapin · 01/08/2008 22:51

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