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The Venmo is astonishingly tacky.
A lot of people do electronic invites now though so I’ll give that a pass. |
| Tacky. And some of my extended family did a "traditional" money dance at their weddings - I refused. I grew up in NY -- gifts for showers and cash for weddings is what I am used to. |
Unbelievably tacky. But you knew that, didn't you? |
Yes. It is normal for young people nowadays. Gen X and boomer generation are nowadays giving checks as gifts, whereas millenials and gen-z friends sent zelle gifts. The zelle/venmo link are on the website. I am seeing a lot of weddings with no gift registry because people already have every household stuff. They need money for wedding expenses, seed money or honeymoon fund. Not tacky at all. |
Maybe the money was given to the parents who were undoubtedly footing the bill. In my own South Asian DC's wedding, we paid for everything (and I mean every.single.thing) - and also gave the checks written out to us by our friends to the newlyweds. Our friends told us that if the newlyweds had not even spent a single cent - then we should have kept the money to offset the cost of the wedding. We did not do that because we did not need the money. But, traditionally, family gives the money to the parents to offset the cost of money or they pay for something. |
| What is tacky is being bothered and wondering if it is tacky |
| I’m confused by all of these ‘tacky’ responses. Jewish tradition is cash. Why is this different or worse? |
| Tacky |
Yup! Asian tradition is also cash. I find wedding gift registry very tacky. |
It's tacky in the asking. |
How so? |
I find the fact that we allow children to starve tacky. An email wedding invite doesn’t even register on the list of what’s tacky or even worth a second thought. |
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I have no problem with an email invitation and website for all info including RSVP's.
I don't like Venmoing the gift, especially if they think the little heart button is their thank you note. |
It’s fine. |
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