Bridal shower etiquette
One of the vet techs at the clinic where I work is getting married soon, and I'm invited to her bridal shower.
I have no idea what gift, if any, to bring. If she is registered on any wedding gift list thingy, I don't know about it. She has mentioned, once, that rather than any material gift she'd rather have help setting up / cleaning up for the party -- but I think she meant the one after the wedding, not the shower. I can't attend the wedding; I'm working (at the clinic!) that day.
I also have no idea what to wear. Keep in mind that there are no pants in the world that fit me except one specific brand of jeans, so that's what I own, and if I'm to wear a dress or skirt, it is going to go with unshaved legs, white ankle socks, and these shoes.
Ideas? Thoughts? Is either of these the kind of question one asks the maid of honor?
I have no idea what gift, if any, to bring. If she is registered on any wedding gift list thingy, I don't know about it. She has mentioned, once, that rather than any material gift she'd rather have help setting up / cleaning up for the party -- but I think she meant the one after the wedding, not the shower. I can't attend the wedding; I'm working (at the clinic!) that day.
I also have no idea what to wear. Keep in mind that there are no pants in the world that fit me except one specific brand of jeans, so that's what I own, and if I'm to wear a dress or skirt, it is going to go with unshaved legs, white ankle socks, and these shoes.
Ideas? Thoughts? Is either of these the kind of question one asks the maid of honor?
no subject
I'd ask the maid of honor about being registered or what she might need.
no subject
Thanks for the bit about asking the maid of honor about gifts! I had thought maybe that would be the right person to ask.
no subject
There is some massive idiocy that it's "unbearably tacky" to mention your registry in any way that's convenient to the wedding guests, and people are absolutely supposed to individually ask the bride, the mother of the bride, or the maid of honor to get the SEEKRIT SPESHUL INFO.
I thought that sounded like a massively stupid pain in the ass for no reason, so I just included a URL in my wedding invites that led to a site that had info on the registry, the venues, driving directions, dress code, and hotel discount blocks we had booked for out of state guests. :)
But that may be the reason she hasn't said anything, if she's doing the Emily Post routine. I broke so many "rules" at our wedding (and had so much family drama as a result) I'm probably not the best person to ask. ;)
no subject
all the bridal showers i've been too are pretty low key. i'd say your jeans and a "nice" shirt should be fine as long as it isn't at some super-posh and fancy restaurant which you said it isn't.
no subject
What to wear can vary really widely depending on the type of party, so that's hard to say...so again, ask.
Some showers have gift themes...like cooking implements, or lingerie, or something. If this is the case, it would have probably been listed on the invitation.
If there is a registry, that should really only be a suggestion, anyway. At the time of my bridal shower last Spring, I had a wedding registry, but not a shower registry, and a few people gave me things off of the wedding registry, but I think most didn't. Everything that people gave me was really great, and it was a huge range of things, with (I'm quite sure) a huge range of price tags...garden stuff, a bathrobe, a massage gift certificate, a funny-looking bright orange monkey vegetable peeler. Just give your friend something that you think she'll like, and more importantly, show up and make it a great party by adding one more cool person to the event.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it. :-)
no subject
::cocks head::
no subject
It doesn't really matter what you buy, as long as you include a gift receipt. During weddings/showers, there are invariably duplicate gifts no matter how detailed the registry. It was beyond awesome for those people who were organized enough to tape the gift receipt to the gift, as I then had a choice about whether or not to keep, it, and it also sends the message that if it's not the right gift, then it's ok to exchange it for something they want. With people who don't include a gift receipt, you never know if they expect you to cherish their lovely laundry basket forever, or if they spent 5 hours picking out that ugly table cloth and cloth napkins and expect you to die with appreciation over it, or if they just didn't spend any time at all, picked up the first thing they saw, and don't care if you exchange it.
Outfit-wise, I would think as long as you wear a nice shirt, you'll be ok in jeans... provided they're a nice dark-wash jean, and not all faded/distressed and looking like they're 20 years old and old paint clothes.
no subject
no subject
Does any of the other vet staff have any ideas?
Any other ideas I had have all ready been said: asking about a registry, gift receipt, etc.
no subject