Anonymous wrote:I can not read through all 10 pages on this and maybe this has been suggested (got to page 5) - I LOVE late night dessert parties with sweets (in this case birthday cake or differnt flavors of cupcakes or cake and something else like chocolate covered starwberries - easy to make) and champagne & dessert wine & port. The appetizer suggestion is all wrong, appetizers are specifically for BEFORE dinner but you can have a cheese plate at a dessert party to fill the savory need. It is a very fun type of party. People generally go out to dinner before hand then come to your "late night" party for dessert. Its actually perfect for this situation.
I have to agree though that you can not invite people to something if you are not covering all costs - in that case here is no host/ess. Also, while some people may do them, potlucks are NOT for birthday parties or any kind of gift giving/celebration type of party given be a family member- that is one of the worst party ideas I have heard in eons. A group of freinds having a potluck to fete the birthday girl/boy is one thing but a spouse doing this is just in really bad taste.
You do not have to break the bank to give a nice party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Instead of an evite, consider an email that says something like "A bunch of us will be getting together to celebrate Bob's birthday at Wah Mei on Thursday. Let me know if you can join us so I can figure out the reservation."
An evite looks like a party, which as others have said, is your financial responsibility.
OP here. Wow, I honestly had no idea this thread would turn out like this. I guess e-vite was the wrong vehicle to think about inviting people for this celebration. If I got an e-vite with the type of celebration I mentioned, I would automatically assume it's dutch, but I guess others would feel differently. I am 36, by the way, and have never been invited to a get-together such as this, so I have no idea. Good thing I posted this question here first before sending anything out! The only types of group things we've been invited to are either a non-dinner party (i.e. Superbowl party at someone's house) or a potluck dinner.
I thought it was a nice idea--meet up for dinner at a restaurant, and then have a small party back at our house. I don't really want to do a potluck dinner because we don't have enough table space/seating for everyone. People would have to sit on the floor to eat the dinner, so I figured meeting up at a restaurant was better.
Anyhow, I think what the person posted above may be what I go with. And then should I add the part about the house party with cake, drinks, and desserts?
Even more reason not to do this. The reason you've never been invited to a "dutch" birthday party like this is because polite people do not DO this. It's a major breach of social etiquette. MAJOR. Sounds like you have polite friends. Don't offend their sensibilities. Find something inclusive you can afford.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you need to get a grip (imagine you're Prissy and Miss Scarlett is smacking you). This is what you do. Have the party at your house. Got to Trader Joe's or Cosco or wherever and buy some meatballs, tartlets, cheeses, etc. Wrap some asparagus in prosciutto, wrap a small brie wheel in phyllo, buy a reasonably priced cake, lots of wine, beer, champagne, a little liquor, and have a blast.
You're making way too much out of this and pressuring yourself. My guess is that eventually, the stress it's causing you will transfer to your husband, and you'll make him miserable. Really, does your husband care whether or not you all go to a restaurant? I doubt it. If I was a guest, I'd much rather go to a house party where I can laugh, mingle, nibble on small bites, and enjoy the company of my hosts and friends. And then later, I could steal the hostess' Xanax and pass out in her bathroom in my own vomit. Anyway, have a rip-roaring party at home, and enjoy yourself. Flirt with your husband all night and whisper dirty things in his ear, promising something delicious later. Have sex on your guests' coats or sneak off to some dark corner of the house. I'm guessing your husband would prefer that over dinner at the Palm.
I'm pretty sure from OP's posts she has no Xanax in her house for you Ke$ha
Anonymous wrote:OP, you need to get a grip (imagine you're Prissy and Miss Scarlett is smacking you). This is what you do. Have the party at your house. Got to Trader Joe's or Cosco or wherever and buy some meatballs, tartlets, cheeses, etc. Wrap some asparagus in prosciutto, wrap a small brie wheel in phyllo, buy a reasonably priced cake, lots of wine, beer, champagne, a little liquor, and have a blast.
You're making way too much out of this and pressuring yourself. My guess is that eventually, the stress it's causing you will transfer to your husband, and you'll make him miserable. Really, does your husband care whether or not you all go to a restaurant? I doubt it. If I was a guest, I'd much rather go to a house party where I can laugh, mingle, nibble on small bites, and enjoy the company of my hosts and friends. And then later, I could steal the hostess' Xanax and pass out in her bathroom in my own vomit. Anyway, have a rip-roaring party at home, and enjoy yourself. Flirt with your husband all night and whisper dirty things in his ear, promising something delicious later. Have sex on your guests' coats or sneak off to some dark corner of the house. I'm guessing your husband would prefer that over dinner at the Palm.
Anonymous wrote:I'm planning a surprise birthday party for my DH. I want to organize a dinner at a restaurant, and then have everyone come back to our house for cake, drinks, desserts, and hanging out.
Anyhow, I am going to send out an evite, but how do I get it across that the dinner at the restaurant is dutch, and we're not paying for everyone's meals? My sister seems to think that the guests will all think that DH and I are paying for their dinners. Personally, I wouldn't assume that from getting an invitation like that and would assume it would be dutch. Is she right? Will they assume that we're paying for them?
How would you phrase this on an invitation to make it clear that we will all be going dutch?