I saw in another post that someone said, that if someone is helping to pay for the wedding, then they can invite whomever they wish. I agree with this to a certain extent. I think that if, say your parents, are helping pay for the venue or food/drink, then they can invite whoever they want (barring ex's or other inappropriate people). On the other hand, if your parents helped pay for your favors, invitations, or guestbook (smaller things), then they don't really get a say. I'm sorry but just because someone gives you $100 - $200 to go toward your wedding, then they don't get a say on who comes or who they want there.
I was just wondering what you ladies think about this. Do you think that if, say your parents, help pay for something smaller that doesn't cost that much, that they should be able to invite whomever they want? Or do you think that no matter how much or how little they might contribute, they get to invite an infinite amount of guests?
Re: Something I saw...
For example - my parents paid for my dress and flowers. My mom wanted to invite her boss and his wife and her office mananger and her husband, she works In a very small dr. Office. Even though I was trying to cut down my guest list I let her invite them bc it was important to her and she put $$ and time into my wedding. Now if she handed me a list of 50 people I've never met then we probably would have had a different conversation.
Even if someone is paying for the entire wedding, they don't get to invite "whoever they want". Any invitations should be discussed with the bride and groom, and if the person paying is inviting a truly inappropriate number or selection of people then B&G have every right to ask them to reconsider.
On the other hand, the person paying has some right to exercise control over what they are paying for. Imagine for a moment that you've offered your child $15,000 to use toward their wedding. They then spent $10,000 on a dress, use the rest for a venue, and don't buy food for any of their guests.
Respect has to go both ways: respect for the bride and groom, allowing them to conduct the type of wedding that they would like to have, but also respect for the giver in appreciating their gift and using it with wisdom and discretion.
My parents were very generous with us and paid for our entire reception. They also asked for some people to be invited who weren't on my initial list. I absolutely gave them those invites because (a) I should have thought of them initially and just didn't and (b) it mattered a lot to my parents that they be there and since they were paying for the reception, it wasn't a budget issue.
I know several of the MOBs on the board (@kmmssg, @mobkaz, @CMGragain) all gave their daughters money with no strings attached.
Other posters have had trouble with their parents or in laws offering money and then demanding a lot of control or changes.
It's absolutely about perspective and context -- $100 for favours gets you a say in the favours, not in anything else.
But $10K for a reception might come with strings attached, such as the giver demanding certain people be invited.
If they are giving a wedding as a gift, then that means they would be paying for the whole thing. I'm talking about parents or grandparents who GIVE you money for a part, not all of your wedding and they want these to be your wedding colors, and I don't like this cake, so get this one....things like that, to me, are up to the b&g. Now if they want to invite A COUPLE of people, then that's fine.
There is a difference between a gift and a contribution. I think that's the key. A diamond necklace is a gift. A card with cash it in at your reception is a gift. A large sum of money to pay for a wedding is not necessarily a gift. It COULD be a gift but that isn't always the case.
The key is keeping the lines of communication open about what is being contributed, what expectations both parties have and what is reasonable and what is not.
My sister just turned down having half of her wedding paid for bc her fiancés parents wanted to have a 200 plus person wedding with people my sister has never met. That money was not a gift. And had my sister accepted the money she would have had no leverage to argue about the guest list.
I went to my dad's to see if I left anyone out of the guest list and to see if there was anyone he would like to be there, he said no, then offered to pay for my dress. He just said "is there anything you need me to cover" I said not really, we have it all under control, then he offered the dress. He was asking me about flowers, and I told him I was planning on using very little real flowers and that most of them would be fake. He said "no, you need to have real flowers at your wedding, I'll help out with that too". He would never in a million years TELL me that I HAVE to get this certain flower or centerpiece, and I would never be so disrespectful to go overboard with the flowers and dress just because he is paying and i'm not. Sorry, didn't mean for that to be so long...
I agree with this 100 percent. However it doesn't always work out like this. My parents paid for specific things for my wedding, such as flowers and my dress. But Hs parents gave is X amout of money to use how we wishes as long as it was wedding related. So they had requests relating to multiple aspects of the wedding.
Sure it would be important to them, what you said makes it sound like they don't trust you to plan a wedding without offending someone. The way I see it, a gift is a gift and there should never be any strings. For people who don't even ask their parents if they would like to invite someone, even if they are not "contributing", I consider rude and inconsiderate to them, just as I consider parents who want to have things their way on their child wedding day, rude and inconsiderate.
You are correct! Lots of people are rude and unfortunately we live in a world where not everyone comes to the knot before planning their wedding!
No, that's when I explain that I don't like those colors, or not enough room for those people. If they decide to not "give" the money any longer then so be it...
And THIS is what causes arguments and family feuds. Then brides come here to vent about how mommy and daddy are no longer contributing.
Agreed.