J52 they sound ideal for DBH, I don't suppose you have a link to them do you?
DBH is the one in this household who insists on extravagant presents. It drives me mad, because he also wants a stocking. So I have to find half a dozen presents and another half a dozen small items. This year so far he has a muscle relaxant bath stuff, handkerchieves, butterfly cufflinks, a daft book that is a Sherlock Holmes spoof, a red ski jacket, some very posh underpants, a new expensive shirt, socks, he will have a big box of Hotel Chocolat chocolates and probably a bottle of English Whisky. I will get him some silly game or other for his stocking as well. Or a puzzle. Or something to make.
He says that the rule of Xmas presents is something to wear, something to eat, something to read, something to drink and something to do.
He's reliving the Christmasses he never had. He was a chorister at Canterbury Cathedral when he was a schoolboy. From the age of 7 to 13 he couldn't go home for Christmas day, and his parents were stationed abroad during that time so he quite often didn't even get to see them.
With DS in Winchester, we just used to take him home when he had finished evensong and have our Xmas Day on Boxing Day. This year he asked for a decent pair of winter boots, a new wheelie travel bag and some new clothes that cannot be afforded on student income. He gets things like small lego kit, joke book, socks and jelly babies in his stocking. I suppose I had better find him a book. I do find it quite hard, their presents are actually really practical things that they need anyway usually.