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AIBU

wedding present dilemma

(56 Posts)
Ziggy62 Wed 16-May-18 11:42:55

Going to a family wedding on Saturday . Not THE wedding lol. Invitation included info of wedding present lists in 2 shops , both of which are at least a 40minute drive away. So we had long good look at lists. Chose one item from each shop. One we were able to pay for online, the other was paid for via phone call. Both items are to be gift wrapped by shop and bride & groom will collect.

Thought this was excellent idea. Couple get exactly what they want. Their house isn't ready yet but should be by the time they return from honeymoon, so all seemed well

UNTIL phone call from mother in law Monday evening. Wanting to know why we aren't calling to Bride's Mother's house with gifts. Now AIBU? Isnt the whole idea of having lists in stores so couples get what they have chosen, gift wrapped and paid for ???????

Plus both shops are in opposite directions so it would be quite a journey to collect both and wrap, plus 1 is a hoover!!!!

Rant over, sorry

SparklyGrandma Tue 22-May-18 12:38:43

Bad manners indeed eazybee pollyperkins

Ziggy62 Tue 22-May-18 12:37:10

wedding was lovely. Perfect weather and her dress was stunning

pollyperkins Tue 22-May-18 09:24:06

How did the wedding go Ziggy?

pollyperkins Tue 22-May-18 09:23:45

I have been asked for money and received no thanks once or twice by nephews and neices. Very bad manners I think.

eazybee Tue 22-May-18 09:19:01

Yes, you should be seething. Apparently it is the thing for young people not to bother to acknowledge gifts, wedding presents, baby gifts. My daughter was very surprised, and pleased, to receive thank-you letters from some of her friends recently; no-one had bothered before.
I too, was pleased to receive thank you cards with pictures of the newborn for very small gifts to children of daughter's friends and girls I used to work with.

SparklyGrandma Mon 21-May-18 22:27:35

muffinthemoo yes shock

muffinthemoo Mon 21-May-18 21:44:06

Pretty bad to ask for gifts and then not send thank you notes for them confused

notanan2 Mon 21-May-18 14:14:02

Off the point but I bought a present off a shop list for a friends son and new wife.....haven’t heard a thing, no thanks nothing, and they were married 7 months ago....AIBU I am still seething?

Yes, you cant be very good friends if in 7 months you havent had the opportunity to ask if its been delivered?

SparklyGrandma Mon 21-May-18 10:48:35

Ziggy62 yes, I checked with my friend, a parent of one of them....

HootyMcOwlface Mon 21-May-18 10:46:53

What about all these couples asking for money instead of gifts? Do they display the cheques and wads of cash on their mantelpiece or something then? Haha!

Ziggy62 Mon 21-May-18 10:37:33

I would also be seething, did you check they received present?

annep Mon 21-May-18 08:53:46

People usually deliver presents but it's no big deal. just ignore. and have a large glass AT the wedding, not after ?

SparklyGrandma Sun 20-May-18 23:41:05

The shop will surely deliver them to whoever they are told to?

Off the point but I bought a present off a shop list for a friends son and new wife.....haven’t heard a thing, no thanks nothing, and they were married 7 months ago....AIBU I am still seething?

Ziggy62 Fri 18-May-18 16:41:04

thanks for replies. Sorry to cause confusion. The lady complaining is my mother in law and the grandmother of the bride. Seems my husband & I cant do anything right where family are concerned. Wedding is tomorrow, so gonna go along, enjoy the day and have large glass of wine when I get home.
Families!!!!

notanan2 Fri 18-May-18 13:03:26

Well a whole side of DHs family are Scottish and none of them delivered our wedding gifts in advance so its not a universal thing in Scotland even if some do it.

When we travelled to scotland gor his cousins wedding they wanted money not gifts & there was a decorated post box at the venue on the day

pollyperkins Fri 18-May-18 11:26:13

Even back in the day 50 or so years ago the presents were usually taken to the wedding and then displayed afterwards. Not heard of them going directly to brides mum!

pollyperkins Fri 18-May-18 11:23:52

Not heard of it for the last 25-30 years! I repeat - they should have told you beforehand!

grannybuy Thu 17-May-18 23:47:02

Here in the NE of Scotland, the 'showing of the presents' was a big thing for many years. There would be a few evenings set aside for this. The bride's mother had to be prepared for anyone coming during that period, bearing their gifts. Often the gifts would be handed in previously, so that they could be displayed.The gifts were all laid out, and the visitors were taken into the room to view. There was a fairly lavish tea available! This practice isn't quite so common now, but has by no means completely died out. On occasion, the bridesmaids' dresses were also on display.

JanaNana Thu 17-May-18 22:39:37

I can remember in the 1980s when my youngest sister in law was married, her mother had a show of presents in the few days before the wedding. She came from the Scottish Borders and I just thought it must be a tradition up there as I had never been to one before or even heard of it.

Marianne1953 Thu 17-May-18 19:08:00

How rude, why would anyone do this.

FarNorth Thu 17-May-18 18:47:49

Ooh, I didn't know about the wedding china thing. Must get on to my chief bridesmaid.

annodomini Thu 17-May-18 18:13:16

I remember helping out at shows of presents (in Scotland) when relatives and friends got married. My parents didn't have one for either of my sisters and, as I got married in Kenya, I didn't have one either. I also remember the multiple toasters, towels, alarm clocks and sets of fish knives and forks, which doesn't happen much now that lists are issued by bride and groom. Then there was the tradition of the 'wedding china', usually expected to be given by the chief bridesmaid.

123kitty Thu 17-May-18 17:31:36

We definitely did this (in England not Scotland) 48 years ago

GrammaH Thu 17-May-18 17:02:27

I assumed that sort of thing went out with the ark! It was on the wain when I got married 37 years ago & certainly wasn't done or even thought of when our 2 children were married 6 and 7 years ago. A lot of their gifts were money or from a store wedding gift list - what era is MiL existing in??

inishowen Thu 17-May-18 13:41:05

In Ireland it was the norm to leave gifts at the bride's mother's house. Invitations were sent out for people to come and view the gifts. I'm sure this practice is out of date now. The last time I went to something like this was back in the eighties.