I'm sure it's a very cultural/regional/personal thing, but I'd never think a preference for monetary gifts is tacky, and I've very rarely seen anyone suggest that on here. It's the unsolicited suggestion or insinuation that a guest is "supposed to" give any type of gift that is "tacky." I've most often seen dissent against monetary gifts in threads saying "We want cash, can we say so in our invitations?" So, that extends to registry cards as well.Date: 9/29/2008 2:01:37 PM
Author: Lill_The_Thrill
This is all cultural differences I guess, and maybe saying it was tacky was wrong of me, but then again, I've read many times on here people stating that it's tacky to wish for monetary gifts (I'm not saying it justifies what I said, cause I said it aswell). My point is that no one raises an eyebrow eventhough it's insulting to those who do wish for monetary gifts for their wedding, probably because itäs not the norm in the US, so it's more ok to call it tacky, rather than saying that a wishlist/registry is tacky.![]()
Generally speaking (not my opinion, just what I've observed/been told on here and elsewhere):
Tacky
Putting any mention in a wedding invitation of gifts (including "the couple prefers monetary gifts", "the couple is registered at __________" AND, somewhat surprisingly, "no gifts, please.") It's the volunteering of this information, unsolicited, that makes it "rude."
Not Tacky
Telling people when asked "The couple is registered at X, Y and Z" or "The couple is saving for X, Y and Z so monetary gifts are preferred" (though this is borderline, it has to be worded and delivered carefully--and again, only when asked).