aphisiglovessae
Brilliant_Rock
- Joined
- Apr 15, 2005
- Messages
- 1,140
Well, then we''re back to the debate of why having a cash bar is acceptable to some and not others, and what its real purpose is. This is a never-ending debate with no right or wrong answer. Wonder if it''ll be the next big lecture at the University? ha ha.Date: 2/24/2006 1:50:50 PM
Author: ellewoods
Just to clarify, I''m against having cash bars at weddings period. I don''t think it makes it better by offering free beer and wine. I''m not saying you absolutely must offer a full bar to your guests, but I think you should offer what you can afford, and not have a cash bar to supplement the extras. If you want to offer sodas, wine and beer only, I think that''s perfectly appropriate. Or offer whatever combination of drinks you want. But if you don''t have the money for additional alcohol (or don''t want to spend the money on it), then I don''t think you should offer it at all.
APhi: The thought of a cash bar makes me cringe as well. Having ''cash bar'' written on my invitations, preserved for years in a frame or album, also makes me cringe. But if you''re already going down that road, I think its only proper to inform your guests of it somehow.
Word of mouth can be good, but its hard to get the word out everyone if you''re having a large wedding. An easier way would be to indicate something on the invitation, or better yet, on the directions insert most people seem to include. Something like ''Directions to Reception, 7pm, New York County Club'' and then underneath have ''cash bar,'' and then the directions and map.
Amanda: I agree with feeling that the tip jar is tacky. At a wedding I expect to tip and I am prepared to tip the bartender. But putting out a actual tip jar is tacky to me. The bride and groom are already paying a lot of money to the reception venue, so to see the bartender put out a tip jar is disrespectful to them, I feel. A wedding isn''t the same thing as a bar, and most bartenders are paid a flat fee by the venue to serve at the event. The tips are theirs of course and I do tip, but for them to blatently ask for it via the tip jar is rude. Has anyone ever seen a tip jar in a bar even? I wouldn''t think so.