So..DS's 1st birthday party is next Sunday...I can't believe the stinker will be one on Tuesday! Anyways, what is the etiquette these days on present opening. It will be a restaurant with about 50 people. Since he is my first I have no clue..will gladly open but does it get boring, does it bother people if you don't? Fill me in please:)
Re: Birthday present opening etiquette (spl?)
I think it really depends on your family. My family would be really offended if DD didn't open any of her presents while they were there to watch. It might be different because you will be at a restaurant though.
Sorry that wasn't very helpful!
Like PP we told people not to bring presents, but of course everyone did. We however did open the presents (we were worried about offending those who brought presents and figured we knew those who didn't well enough that they wouldn't be offended).
I sort of wish we hadn't because it's super awkward to sit there and coax the baby into opening the gift, playing with the toy, etc. It took forever! If I had it to do over again, I would open gifts afterward and write an extra detailed thank you note. I don't know if that's the etiquette, but I definitely feel like it's less painful for everyone.
A kiss he will never forget- Disney World 2014
My LO's party was a first-birthday-college-football-rivalry-party, so we had guests across the spectrum.
Some of our friends had kids that needed to stick to a schedule, some of our friends were single, some in a rush, some saw the whole game and stayed many hours.
We opened the gifts of the peeps that said stuff like "Little Julia wants to see B open his present" and the other guests made it clear they didn't care.
He's only a year old, YKWIM? We also had about ~30 people total, there's no way a one year old can fathom all of that.
To answer your question:
Opened some, saved some. Sorry for the long azz post.
It depends on your fam.
I didn't want to open gifts at her first bday, but I know my fam would freak if I didn't... so we did.
Don't worry, you will offend someone :-) I have heard people complaining about having to sit through a party of a 1 year old opening gifts. It may have been me complaining. In my defense, though, one gift opening marathon pushed into 3 hours. On the other hand, my MIL was just complaining about someone not opening gifts. It is a no win situation.
At my DS's first birthday, we opened gifts. However, we sped up the process by having other kids at the party help us. If a family with a child gave DS a gift, their child helped open the gift. For some other guests that were not really "in" to the first birthday thing, but were attending because we are important to them, we opened their gifts privately with them. That way they were kind of free to go whenever the party thing was a bit too much.
at ds's 1st b-day i only had him "open" presents where people specifically came up and said "can i watch him open my present?". it wasn't even him really opening it b/c i basically had to do it and he didn't care about it. it was more of a hassle to wrangle him and make him look at the item that he wasn't interested in at the time. he's much more interested in hanging out w/people who are at our house.
i did open the other presents later that night and sent people thank you cards thanking them for what they specifically gave him so they'd know that we knew what they had given him.
We didn't open presents at Grant's party. We had around 50 people and I didn't want to make people sit there and watch us, plus Grant was much more interested in playing with the other kids. My niece (6 years old) and next door neighbor (4 years old) really wanted Grant to open their gifts, so we opened their presents but that was it. If people get offended by that stuff, that's their problem.
The main reason we chose not to was because I went to a friend's child's party a few months before that and it just seemed miserable for him to open all his presents, and honestly I got bored watching. Plus, none of the other kids there seemed to enjoy it either, so I just figured we wouldn't do that. At a small party, it would be no big deal, but with a lot of people I wouldn't.
We never open presents, nor do my friends. It is so boring for kids to sit and watch another child open gifts, they want to help or play with the gifts, kids who are older have no filter and may say 'I don't like this' or 'I already have this'. If you don't open it then you don't have to worry about this.
I never understand people who say they are offended if their gift isn't opened in front of them. Really? Do you only buy a gift so you can watch it being opened? I really don't care, I buy a gift for the child, not for the acknowledgement.