▲ 1 r/etiquette+1 crossposts

💍 Wedding Etiquette Question: Is Showing Up Enough? Or Is a Gift Expected?

Wedding question:

If you attend a wedding, is your presence the gift… or should every guest bring a gift (or cash) too?

A recent article discussed couples who were surprised, and in some cases hurt, when guests attended their wedding but never gave a gift. Some guests argued that the cost of travel, hotels, time off work, and attending the event was contribution enough.

I’m curious where people stand on this.

Is a wedding gift still expected?

Does the answer change if you’re flying across the country to attend?

And if you’re the couple getting married, do you notice who didn’t bring a gift?

No right or wrong answers. Just interested in hearing different perspectives.

#weddingfail

reddit.com
u/One_Description_8603 — 12 days ago

What's the Biggest Mistake Sellers Make Before Listing Their Home?

After more than 35 years in real estate, I've seen sellers make the same expensive mistakes over and over.

Overpricing is the obvious answer, but I'm curious what buyers, sellers, agents, and homeowners have experienced firsthand.

What's the biggest mistake you've seen someone make before putting a home on the market?

It could be pricing, renovations, staging, photography, timing, choosing an agent, or something completely unexpected.

Interested to hear the real-world stories.

https://preview.redd.it/4j3b6k9bjh8h1.jpg?width=2048&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=fbfe53e524c25b30c5933c9fe42bc2c12989a2fa

Before/After, to stage or not/

reddit.com
u/One_Description_8603 — 16 days ago

Beverly Hills Real Estate

A smart, honest look at Beverly Hills real estate, architecture, design, and luxury living in Los Angeles.

Market trends, new listings, pricing shifts, neighborhood insight, off market activity, and real world conversations from an active Los Angeles realtor.

Respectful discussion and questions welcome.

u/One_Description_8603 — 2 months ago