My husband & I had a charity registry for our wedding. We are in our mid-thirties and just did not need the kind of things that would have been listed on a regular registry. I know The Knot is full of etiquette-minded folks who do not approve of charity registries - so this post is not for them

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I had heard a couple horror stories of people with charity registries where folks just didn't use the registry. Instead the couple received lots of photo frames & other items that were basically junk, and no donations. I am very happy to report that such was not the case for us! Here are the things that may have helped our charity registry be successful:
--we listed the registry as one page on our website. This gave us lots of room to explain why we chose the charity registry & why those charities, specifically.
--We emphasized that we're older than dirt & already had most everything we needed. We tried to be humorous about it (we have 3 bottles of olive oil! Good gracious!

so it didn't come across as arrogant.
--We picked 3 charities: Heifer International, Parma Animal Shelter, and the Sierra Club Foundation. On the web page we explained why they were important to us. (We'd both donated to Heifer, Jeremiah had volunteered at the shelter & all my pets were from shelters, we both love the great outdoors.) I think giving a choice of charities was very important. Heifer received the most donations & Sierra Club, the least.
--We used the I Do Foundation for the charity registry, and just linked it from our website.
--We had a frequently asked questions page on the website, and answered two questions (among others): Does the I Do Foundation show how much someone has donated? (yes, we wish it didn't tell us that, but it did), and I want to give you a gift, not a donation to charity. What can I do? Answer: That is very kind of you to want to give us a gift. Ultimately the gift is the choice of the giver, not the recipient. We appreciate your generosity however it is expressed.
In the end, $850 was donated to charity. We received about an equal amount in cash or checks, a few gift cards, and also received a few items (a picnic basket with locally made foods/ingredients, a photo frame, a Christmas 2012 ornament, some artwork). I was worried we would get a lot of things we didn't want,or no donations to charity at all, but that didn't happen. I was very pleased with how it turned out.
Be prepared that some folks will be adamantly against giving to the charity instead of buying a gift, and that's okay. Other folks won't even bring a card! Ultimately the wedding is only about getting married - but it was a nice bonus to help others on our big day

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