Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please don't do it afterwards. DH and I married at 25 and couldn't afford much. His parents gave us money after the wedding (like 1k) but it would have been so amazing before since we had to pay all our vendors 30 days in advance. It's cool, we were just a bit broke that month.
Probably they knew you would spend more if they gave it earlier. If you didn't have money, why there were vendors? Why not a simple exchange of wows and dinner in backyard or a restaurant?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had an expensive small wedding - we spent basically the whole budget on the food and drink, venue, band. We had around 70 people but it was an actual outstanding meal with a competent chef and good wine. We didn’t have to do any of it but we wanted to have a really fun party with our closest friends. I hope no one attended with all the negative Nelly “weddings are such a big waste of money” stuff.
Getting together with your friends all in one place isn’t a waste of money. I’d do that before buying a nicer car or spending more on a kitchen upgrade.
We only have a certain amount of time on earth and having the sort of experience we had is worth every penny.
We paid for it ourselves, but could have asked for parental help. I’d gladly help pay for my kids to have a similar sized event. I’d be less thrilled about a 300 person cattle call.
Oh, the irony!
Anonymous wrote:Please don't do it afterwards. DH and I married at 25 and couldn't afford much. His parents gave us money after the wedding (like 1k) but it would have been so amazing before since we had to pay all our vendors 30 days in advance. It's cool, we were just a bit broke that month.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the brides parents are paying at least $30K, anything above that is on the couple. $30K is a average wedding budget.
Some wedding dresses are $10K, that's not much.
LOL. Only fools pay that much coin on a dress. In todays day and age, no couple should expect anyone to pay for their wedding except themselves. Have the wedding you can afford. Cut the cord, kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say each pay 1/3. Who started this BS that the brides family pays for the entire thing anyway?
1/3 would translate to 50K per party. A typical Indian wedding costs $150K.
Anonymous wrote:Gender roles are so antiquated. Each side pays equally.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I say each pay 1/3. Who started this BS that the brides family pays for the entire thing anyway?
1/3 would translate to 50K per party. A typical Indian wedding costs $150K.
Anonymous wrote:Who started this BS that the brides family pays for the entire thing anyway?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We happily paid for three weddings for our three daughters, which ranged in cost from around $40k to $100k depending on what they wanted. We didn’t ask or expect the grooms’ families to pay for anything, but accepted whatever they offered to contribute. While none actually contribute to the wedding costs themselves, they did things like hood very, very nice rehearsal dinners - one probably cost as much as many weddings! - gave the newlyweds large cash gifts, etc.
All of the brides were in their mid to late 20s on their wedding days.
How many of the divorces are you willing to pay for?
Anonymous wrote:I say each pay 1/3. Who started this BS that the brides family pays for the entire thing anyway?