It is really unusual for my wife not to know the answer to questions regarding proper etiquette about almost anything. She is a retired law professor from a major university here in the East and has attended many functions. But anyway, here is the question; We are invited to a friend's 70th birthday party that his wife is having for him next Saturday. We know that they both enjoy eating out, so we have decided to buy him or them a gift card to a pretty nice restaurant. We have asked other invitees this same question and they too did not know the answer.
Do we buy the gift card with enough cash on it to cover the cost of both meals or just his meal since it is his present? I mean, if I were to buy him a watch for his present, I wouldn't buy two; one for each, right? We are not cheap by no means, but we just don't want to show up our friends who may only buy a gift card that covers only one meal. The restaurant will probably require a $100.00 card to cover the two meals and my wife and I are leaning on doing just that, but like I said, if our other friends only buy a card that covers the cost of one meal, it may look to them, or at least some of them, like we are trying to show them up. You know how it is, some people can look at things different from what the intention is or was.
We couldn't even find the answer in my wife's etiquette book.
Do we buy the gift card with enough cash on it to cover the cost of both meals or just his meal since it is his present? I mean, if I were to buy him a watch for his present, I wouldn't buy two; one for each, right? We are not cheap by no means, but we just don't want to show up our friends who may only buy a gift card that covers only one meal. The restaurant will probably require a $100.00 card to cover the two meals and my wife and I are leaning on doing just that, but like I said, if our other friends only buy a card that covers the cost of one meal, it may look to them, or at least some of them, like we are trying to show them up. You know how it is, some people can look at things different from what the intention is or was.
We couldn't even find the answer in my wife's etiquette book.