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Thread: Re-gifting

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  1. #1
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    Question Re-gifting

    Okay....so the cake is in the oven now for tomorrow's holiday party at work.
    We're having a "Yankee swap" - known by various names, but it's basically, bring a $10 wrapped gift, get a number, select a gift, next person takes yours, or selects another...and so on until it's done.
    Chatting with a co-worker today, I mentioned that I didn't get anything for the swap (not willing to part with something I bought yesterday with TE-DC, so that will go to DH). I do have a few wedding presents that have never seen the light of day since we got married 5 years ago. One is a brand new T-Fal 10" nonstick saute pan. I joked that I should wrap it up and include it in the swap. Co-worker thought it would be a WONDERFUL idea, and was amazed that I had no use for it (how many frying pans does a person need???). These things go for $20, so it would be a generous re-gift.
    Should I do it, or should I turn the house over looking for a boxed picture frame we've never used, or what???
    Thoughts?
    2007 Seven ID8 - Bontrager InForm
    2003 Klein Palomino - Terry Firefly (?)
    2010 Seven Cafe Racer - Bontrager InForm
    2008 Cervelo P2C - Adamo Prologue Saddle

  2. #2
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    do it! great idea. I've regifted many times. I've gone from one place where i got a gift and handed it off to the next place I visited, and everyone was happy!
    I like Bikes - Mimi
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  3. #3
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    I regift all the time! Saves me the trouble of buying gifts, and chances are that gift will get regifted, too! lol.

  4. #4
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    Thumbs up

    Frying pans do wear out after a while. Or, they work out lovely for beating DHs with when the honeymoon is over. Oh... should I mention I've been married way longer than 5 years? Umm, nevermind...

    YES! Re-gift it. One person's trash can be another's treasure.

    I just re-gifted part of my last year xmas gifts. Just waiting for the basement to re-load from this year's holiday.

  5. #5
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    There's not a thing wrong with regifting. You might want to think, though, about the $20 part, only because I have heard other people in work gift exchanges, and family ones too, come to think of it, about what they called "the gift value arms race", where people go over the $10 limit, and then other people feel badly, so next time THEY go over the $10 limit...etc.
    "My predominant feeling is one of gratitude. I have loved and been loved;I have been given much and I have given something in return...Above all, I have been a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself has been an enormous privilege and an adventure." O. Sacks

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by salsabike View Post
    There's not a thing wrong with regifting. You might want to think, though, about the $20 part, only because I have heard other people in work gift exchanges, and family ones too, come to think of it, about what they called "the gift value arms race", where people go over the $10 limit, and then other people feel badly, so next time THEY go over the $10 limit...etc.
    That's part of my dilemma. But honestly, it's of no value to me (maybe I could get $10 for it on Craigslist). And, although we're doing a similar exchange with my family with $20 gifts, I can't give it there...well, because my brother gave it to me (does that make the re-gifting worse??).
    2007 Seven ID8 - Bontrager InForm
    2003 Klein Palomino - Terry Firefly (?)
    2010 Seven Cafe Racer - Bontrager InForm
    2008 Cervelo P2C - Adamo Prologue Saddle

  7. #7
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    snort...nah. If you can't use it, you can't use it.

    Side funny story: My husband's middle brother, who is pretty distant from the family (metaphorically speaking), emailed us four or five years ago and said, gee whiz, you guys are hard to buy a Christmas present for--what do you like to do, etc.? We said, bikes, rock hunting, gardening, hiking, camping, etc.


    What did we get that year from them? A George Foreman grill. We don't cook much and didn't list it as an interest. It was very funny. We've never been able to decide what to do with it. But it made us laugh, anyway.

    At Chris' office, they do this gift exchange/trade thing, but it's intentionally a "white elephant" gift thing, so it usually involves stuff like duck decoys that quack loudly when you walk by. The last year they did this, we brought a faux leopard-skin toilet seat cover from Archie McPhee's that was the hit of the night--it got "taken" five times.
    "My predominant feeling is one of gratitude. I have loved and been loved;I have been given much and I have given something in return...Above all, I have been a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself has been an enormous privilege and an adventure." O. Sacks

  8. #8
    Join Date
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    All the "Yankee swaps" I've been to always allowed for a gift from home that wasn't necessarily bought in this decade. In fact, some of the best ones I've been to have been when someone unloaded all their old cookbooks or the felted hat they made 5 years ago and never wore or the primitive Sculpy angels they cooked up right before the party (I just put those up with the other xmas decorations, and I remember that dear friend every time I pull them out). People FOUGHT over the felted hat!

    I wouldn't know how much a T-fal skillet is worth, if I ended up with it.

    Karen (we call it "Dirty Santa")
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    insidious ungovernable cardboard

 

 

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