The Wedding Shopper

By: Maria Teresa Burwell (View Profile)

As Barry White sings, “Love is in the air, everywhere you look around.” And so are weddings. As a wedding guest for four weddings this year, I can tell you two things that strike fear into the heart of the invitee. The first is: what to wear? (What the heck is “Backyard Formal,” I ask you?) The other is: what to give? While wearing the wrong thing says you had a closet crisis, giving the wrong thing says something about your relationship with the bride and groom. 

Wandering around Crate and Barrel, clutching a sweaty 9-page registry list in my hand last Sunday, I was knee-deep in the task of buying gifts for my childhood friend and everything took on additional significance. Was I a toaster-oven guest? Did we have a fondue friendship, or an ironing-board acquaintance? Will buying something off-registry say “Hey, look how well I know you” or “Hey, here’s something you didn’t want?” Looking around at my fellow shoppers with similar lists and looks of terror, I knew we shared the same fears: how can we give a gift that is meaningful, no matter what we can afford or what the registry says? Right there and then I came up with a game plan to get me through every gift-giving scenario this wedding season.

 

Wedding Woe #1.

You want to give them something from the registry, but it feels so impersonal. How can you make registry items memorable?

 

Solution.

Give them something on the registry, but add a small, inexpensive “present topper” that gives a personal nod. Giving the bride’s favorite childhood book, like Shel Silverstein’s The Missing Piece, or including some Salt Water Taffy from the groom’s Cape Cod upbringing will show that while you give them things they need, you’ll also acknowledge how well you know them. 

 

Wedding Woe #2.

You’ve asked their moms and the couple hasn’t registered anywhere. What do you get them?

 

Solution.

Often when a couple doesn’t register anywhere, it’s a hint that they’d like cash as a gift. Ask someone in the wedding party whether that’s the case. If you feel uncomfortable giving stone cold cash, give a gift card to one of their favorite stores. If the answer truly is that each guest has carte blanc to give freely, chances are the couple wants to see some creative gift giving. Aim for something memorable. Give them each a bottle of wine from their birth year with the instructions that they open it on their first anniversary. Wine.com will locate some worthy bottles in any price range.

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posted: 07.07.2008
Jennifer
Maria, I love your suggestions! I couldn’t convince my husband that doing a wedding registry was the opposite of rude--and so we didn’t register for anything! (I am always thankful when a couple is registered--it saves me time and I know they want what I buy through the registry. Now I will use Maria's idea of adding a personal item, like a recipe.) Our poor guests were left to fend for themselves--not surprisingly we wound up with decorative things that were NOT our taste at all. We would have been totally happy if no one had given us a presents or if they had interpreted our lack of a registry as an invitation to donate money to charity. I want to add in another gift suggestion for couples who didn't register: have a nice bottle of wine, dessert, or a gift basket delivered to their hotel room for the wedding night or honeymoon trip.
posted: 06.04.2008
Here Comes The Guide
This article should be read by brides planning their registries ( or not as the case may be ) so they can understand their wedding from their guests' perspectives. Since weddings are all about personalization these days, absoltuely love your idea of personalizing off the registry--Brilliant, we say.
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