Showing posts with label save money on gifts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label save money on gifts. Show all posts

17 January 2012

Update: Free Christmas

Well, I did manage to find presents for each of my family members with whom I spent Christmas. I gave books and DVDs that I wasn't reading/watching, necklaces I never wear, mixed CDs I made with the recipients' music tastes in mind, bottles of wine I'd actually bought for myself but decided I could part with, and coupons for shoulder rubs. It also helped greatly that a friend of mine makes fabulous scented soaps and gave me several bars, with permission to re-gift them.

What's more, I didn't spend any money this year on the wrapping.


To wrap this year's presents I used:
-recycled wrapping paper & bows
-pages from the free alternative weekly newspaper
-recycled greeting cards
-new wrapping paper I'd bought last year
-various gift bags and boxes I'd kept from presents I received in past years
-an empty stationary box

The trick to most of this, of course, is to keep empty boxes, Christmas cards, used bows, etc., which comes with its own price: space. A couple plastic tubs and various boxes are full of this stuff, and it does take up room in my closet.

If I didn't have the space (or hadn't kept this stuff), I would have resorted this year, as I have in past years, to wrapping everything in pages from the free newspaper and labeling presents with plain pieces of paper.
I like to look for large color ads or articles that the recipient might find interesting; it gives it a more thoughtful touch. (An example of this in the photo above is the present with the wine bottle on it, for my uncle who is something of a wine connoisseur.)

I'm curious about how other people saved money this Christmas. What were your tricks or strategies, from the actual gifts to the wrapping?

11 December 2011

Free Christmas

With Christmas approaching I once again turned to my budget spreadsheet. In past years I’ve been able to scrape up a couple hundred dollars for Christmas presents, which has been sufficient. (Last year all of my adult family members received a bottle of inexpensive but delicious wine, which cost about $100).
Being on a tighter budget than ever this year, I find myself with no money to buy Christmas presents, not even cheap wine. My options, therefore are: (1) To take money out of savings to cover the cost of Christmas presents & replace it after Christmas with whatever money I receive at Christmas; or (2) Come up with zero-cost present ideas.
Option two makes the most sense to me. I’ve looked around at what I already have on hand, and here are the zero-cost present ideas I’ve come up with so far:
-Mixed CDs compiled from my music collection (accompanied by guitar chords printed off the Internet for my guitar-playing relatives)
-Books off my shelf that I think a particular relative or friend would enjoy

-Homemade cards (I have a box full of craft supplies that I almost never use)

-Certificates promising future service (e.g. Dog-sitting, baby-sitting, cleaning, cooking a meal, etc.)

-Re-gifting household items that I either don’t use anymore or have never used, such as clothing, picture frames, or decorative knick-knacks
-Coupons from this year’s Chinook Book that I don’t expect I would use, but that I strongly suspect another of my friends would use

My survey of friends and co-workers for ideas to steal has also resulted in other low-cost ideas that, while not practical for me, may appeal to readers of this blog:
-Home-canned goods from the summer’s canning
-Jars of pop corn kernels
-Homemade baked goods, chocolates or candies

-Travel-size bottles of shampoo, conditioner & lotion; bars of soap; shower caps…in short, whatever could be claimed from the bathroom of a hotel room on your travels
-The blog Beg, Borrow, Barter chronicles a woman’s year-long experiment in not buying anything new and also has some ideas about cheap/free gifts
There are two criteria that I’m trying to follow in this gift-giving business:
1. Don’t give away anything I’ll need to replace at a later date. Otherwise it defeats the purpose. For example, I don’t want to give away my only copy of my favorite book because I’d just have to replace it later and while the expense is deferred it is not avoided. What I want to give away is a book I’ve either never read though it’s been on my shelf for years or which I’ve read once and think it highly unlikely I will ever read again. Probably I should also include in this criteria that I shouldn’t give anything irreplaceable: what if I decide later that I do want to replace it, but in order to do so I have to go back to Spain to find another one? Not good.
2. Don’t give just to give. I value thoughtful presents. An expensive gift that shows no awareness of my personality or lifestyle means far less to me than a cheap gift that takes into account my personality and lifestyle. I’d much rather receive the homemade chocolates than an expensive sweater I’ll never wear. So the book (or whatever) I choose to give has to be one that I not only don’t care about replacing but which would appeal to the recipient. Tricky. Very tricky.