Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that this stuff bothers you old biddies.
1) It was a thank you card
2) It DID have handwriting on it
3) The specific gift WAS acknowledged.
4) It was just a bit untraditional.
Stay mad, crones.
Crone, agreeing.
I think it’s nice tbh. I love the idea of having a photo of the couple too.
I think this would be cute if it was a pic from the honeymoon. I’d be fine with a generic note, a brief acknowledgement, or, no card at all. Who cares?

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love that this stuff bothers you old biddies.
1) It was a thank you card
2) It DID have handwriting on it
3) The specific gift WAS acknowledged.
4) It was just a bit untraditional.
Stay mad, crones.
Crone, agreeing.
I think it’s nice tbh. I love the idea of having a photo of the couple too.
Anonymous wrote:I love that this stuff bothers you old biddies.
1) It was a thank you card
2) It DID have handwriting on it
3) The specific gift WAS acknowledged.
4) It was just a bit untraditional.
Stay mad, crones.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not sure it's a trend, but I would be offended. I hope you didn't give an expensive gift. I guess it's better than no thank you note at all though.
Why?
Anonymous wrote:Well, my grandmother got married in the late 1940s and sent a cardstock with a photo of the couple and pre-printed lines thanking them for their attendance and gift (not specified). It was put inside an envelope and mailed, though, so not technically a postcard.
Anonymous wrote:When you give your gift, request the thank you that you want.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I attended a wedding recently and just received a postcard thank-you for the wedding gift. I had no idea this was a thing! On one side, it had a photo of the couple. On the other side, there were a few pre-printed lines about how lucky the couple is, and then just two short handwritten lines thanking me specifically for my gift, and in the most generic way possible (basically: thank you for the X, we really appreciate it). There were exactly sixteen handwritten words in the whole thing.
Honestly, my middle schooler could have written a more personalized and appreciative thank you: We plan to use your generous gift to do X, we hope to see you at X so we can catch up and tell you about the honeymoon, etc.
Has anyone else felt annoyed by this apparent wedding trend, or am I just being grumpy?
Stop attending weddings . Win-win.