+1 There are people who hate weddings, and it is very obvious. They really should just stay home with their miserable selves. |
To add, same people generally can't be happy for anyone else, so who needs that in their lives. |
Here's the thing. Its not about YOU! A good gift is the gift the recipient wants to receive not something the giver wants to pick out or give. You seem like the same person who thinks that gift cards are somehow classier than cash. |
| OP, you are the ugly one by thinking it's a money grab |
| Indian person here and we don’t usually do registries either; everyone knows to write a check or give cash |
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We didn't do a registry and we got one check and a lot of beautiful, thoughtful gifts that we treasure.
Way better than some crap from Crate & Barrel. |
Curious what you got that wasn’t “crap”? I’d think most gifts people would choose without having a registry to go by would be random crap. |
What if guests don't know that? Is it horrible to give, I dunno, a platter? |
+1 How many vases do you need? |
| I think the opposite. Gift registries are tacky. It's not polite to ask for a present. |
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In this day and age, when so many people marry later in life after already buying a home and often already living together in that home, wedding registries are kind of pointless. You already have the house filled with everything you need. I suppose, you can upgrade into nicer things, but that just seems so greedy.
Registries served their purpose back when people got married right out of high school or college and had very little of anything to fill ah ome. |
Desis (Indian/Pakistani/Bangladeshi/Srilankan/Nepalese),know to bring cash/cheque in an envelope for a desi wedding (it is a cultural norm in these countries). If you are non desi attending a desi wedding, maybe you should read up on the customs, what to wear, what to bring before you attend. And if guests bring something other than cash/cheques, no one really cares. I wouldn't give a platter for any wedding though. It is more of a house warming gift. But if you did give it, no one would care. I received a melamine dinnerware set and I didn't care. I was glad they could make it to the wedding. There were very few boxed gifts so I did have fun opening them even if I didn't like them. |
Mostly artistic things, actually. Not functional -- beautiful. |
Yes, ideally that would be great. Guests getting you something unique and handmade from an art fair or etsy or something. Maybe a handmade chess set or something with your family name monogramed on it. I would treasure that. But honestly, most regular people are not going to do that. They'll pick up some kitchen appliance at Target and call it a day. |
Which is... fine? I invited friends and my family to my wedding to help us celebrate a big occasion, not because I expected them to stock our home. Did we get some things we didn't need? Sure. Exchange or donate to A Wider Circle and it's all good.... |