Australian Civil Marriage Celebrant officiating at weddings in Brisbane, Caboolture, Petrie, Redcliffe and Redland Bay.

Wedding and Baby Naming celebrant performs ceremonies any day of the week, and will arrange an appointment location convenient for you, at no extra charge. 

Telephone: (07) 3283 8567, Mobile: 0415 324 982

PO Box 394, Redcliffe. Qld, 4020. 

Email: vlady_celebrant@ yahoo.com.au

  • Member of: Australian Federation of Civil Celebrants (AFCC) 

  • Australian Civil Marriage Celebrants of Queensland (ACMCQ)

  • Justice of the Peace

Authorised Marriage Celebrant, Registration Number A.888, Vlady M Peters

Home

Site Map

About the Celebrant

Legal Marriage

Booking a Wedding

Wedding Ceremony

Wedding Library

Naming Ceremony

Renewal of Vows

Commitment Ceremony

Wedding Books

Wedding Services

Fees

 

 

For better or worse, in people’s minds weddings and wedding gifts go together like a horse and carriage. Social reformers in the guise of religious reverends and ministers might rail against the excesses practiced by bridal couples, but their words fall on unheeding ears. Even governments, from time to time, try to curb the tendency by passing laws against luxury and extravagance. Invariably their influence is as transient as their own existence.

Weddings without gifts is a contradiction in terms.

Go back to the early days of carefree village life and you’ll see wedding guests entering the room, diffidently or bashfully, making their offering to the bride and groom. Perhaps it might be a cup cunningly wrought out of a piece of wood found in the garden patch. Or a brand new pillow, fat with the down of their own flock of geese.

After carefully examining the offering, the bride and groom would nod their approval at the party organiser standing close beside them, and also known as the keeper of beer or ale or mead or whatever the popular drink of the time. A much appreciated gift would result in a giant tankard of liquid refreshment for the giver. Less appreciated one would generate a smaller container. No gift at all – and then, as now, there’s always a few of those sort of guests – and no liquid refreshment at all.

You could always tell apart the liberal giver from the scrooge by the way they left the wedding. The former would reel from side to side, almost missing the door on his way out. The latter might pretend that he was almost as under the weather, but no one was likely to be fooled by the act.

As industrialism and time-keeping came into existence, this hit and miss method of gift-giving was deemed inefficient. Enter the gift register. Now the worry of what to give the couple was taken entirely out of the inexperienced hands of the guest. As long as they could read the couple’s stated preferences, they could stop worrying about the wedding gift entirely.

It seemed so easy. It should have been easy. But some people insist on creating problems where none exist.

There seems to be a human need to express freedom of choice and at least one quarter of all wedding guests simply ignore all efforts to get them to buy what they couple want and instead buy them something that they’ll never use.

Oh, sure, they’ll go to the department store where the couple have registered. But instead of the coffee-maker or water purifier indicated on the list, they will immediately go to that wasteland of wedding presents. That place of luxurious magnificent items whose sight will knock your eyes out, whose price will put you in hock, but whose utility is non-existent.

The bride and groom will spend the rest of their life wondering what to do with that half a ton of crystal. Perhaps they might use it for a salad bowl, if ever 30 guests drop in unexpectedly for lunch. Or a vase, if ever they start their own market flower garden and can afford the couple of hundred dollars of flowers which it needs to fill it.

It seems no matter how hard the bride and groom try to make gift-giving simple and easy, guests insists on going their separate intractable way.

“What would you like as a wedding gift, dear?” they’ll ask sweetly. “We really want you to have what you need.”

“We could do with some money, gran. This wedding is costing us a fortune.”

“I’ll get you a tea-set, then, shall I? I saw a really nice one at David Jones the other day.”

“Weddings are pretty expensive, gran. Money would be nice.”

“Then there’s that hall-runner I saw advertised. Very reasonably priced.”

“Money is what we’d really like!”

“What about a damask table cloth, and eight napkins to go with it.”

“Money, gran!”

“You’re absolutely, right, dear. Way too expensive. The tea-set was half the price.”

The contemporary couple, marrying for the second, or third, or even fourth time, have a real dilemma on their hands. They need another casserole dish like they need another recipe book, but how can you get that through to people?

Of course, where there’s a way, and where there’s so many wedding specialists around, a solution was bound to surface sooner or later.

Here’s the latest gift-register list.

“Tim and I are going to the Antarctic for our honeymoon and have registered with our bank. For your convenience we’ve made arrangements for you to select your choice of gifts by using any of the following options – credit card, cheque, money order or electronic money transfer.

Our most desired item is $50

Desired - $20

Less desired - $10

Least desired - $5"

What will those “doing our own thing” guests do now? Give $100? A $1,000? Bring it on!

Wedding Library

Wedding Traditions and Customs

One Word More or Less
Words you hate to hear at a Wedding
Lucky! Lucky! Lucky! Bride and Groom!
Is She the One?
Staging a Wedding Play
Unaccustomed as I am to Public Speaking
Marriage Reforms
History of the Wedding Ring
Ring on her Finger and one through her Nose
When Alexander Met Roxane - and Barsine
By the Light of the Silvery Moon
Always a Bridesmaid, Never a Bride
For Worse No Matter How Bad
Wedding Attendants
The All Important Colours
A Deeper Meaning
Often a Fiancee, Barely a Wife
Here Comes the Bride
Silence is Golden at Some Weddings
And You Thought You Had Problems
Come One, Come All
L is for Love
For Better or Worse
Please, Please, Please Marry Me
A Lock of Hair
Mother-In-Law
Wedding Speech
The Girl Who Refuses to Marry
I Take You to be My Second Husband
These are Their Stories
The Greater the Dowry, the Greater the Love
The Dress that Dreams are Made Of
Weddings, the Pioneering Ways
I Feel Pretty
Till Death Us Do Part
If You Really Loved Me
When Gifts Simply Won't Do
Wedding Toasts
Wedding with a Difference
A Priceless Pearl
Look, Don't Eat!
Virginia is for Lovers
Robbing the Cradle
Who Needs a Marriage Certificate?
And a Never-Ending Good Fortune to You
Rice or Rice Balls
Padlocks of the Heart
Honeymoon or Honeymead. It's Sweet.
Did Casanova Really Need Those Oysters
Gretna Green Wedding
Best Man at a Wedding
Catch that Bouquet!
Wedding Cake - Is There Anything New Under the Sky?
The Night They Invented Champagne
Courtship in a Cold Country, Coffee Anyone?
Wedding Day - No Greater Love
Bride's Wedding Dress
We're On Our Honeymoon, But We're Not Alone
Wedding Engagement - And How to Prepare for It
Wedding Extravaganza
Wedding Flowers
Throw a Garter or Two
Wedding Gifts
Wedding Gifts - Wanted and Unwanted
Wedding Guests
Wedding Hospitality
Love on the Internet
What's A Goldfish Doing at a Wedding?