Do you have a large group of people you need to get gifts for? Employees, neighbors, teachers, co-workers, friends. How do you keep it fair? How do you do it without breaking the bank? How do you make it personal? I may have told you that I am the director of our church’s mother’s day out. I have 27 employees that I buy gifts for. This is quite overwhelming for me. So, how do I do it?
My first tip would be set a budget, an overall max budget and a per person budget. This makes it easy to narrow the gift down, and keeps you from breaking the bank.
My second tip – taken from directors past – is to buy everyone the same thing. This eliminates a lot of stress of trying to find 27 individual gift that fit the person and that stay within your budget.
Third – find a way to make it personal.
Fourth – pay attention to the presentation.
The first two are pretty self-explanatory, but the last two take a little more thought. Here is what I came up with this year {and yes, we had our Christmas party a couple of days ago so they have all already received their gifts}.
I started with a stack of CD’s {check out the title *JOY*!!}
And some silver ornaments + some sparkle
The ornaments are the unbreakable kind for crafting, and the sparkle came from the scrapbooking section – stickers.
So, the first step was to apply the stickers – lovely, blingy, initials. This was my way of making the gift personal this year.
Second, I tied some bows. I have used this sheer ribbon for years – no wire but it looks pretty no matter what you do with it and it’s inexpensive. I then hot glued the bows to the neck of the ornament. I used more of the sheer ribbon to make a loop to hang the ornament with.
Next came the packaging. Because of the colors on the CD {and a little bit of my laziness} I opted not to wrap them. I found more sheer ribbon in the gift wrap section of HL, this time red. Sticking with the red and white/silver color scheme, I added some candy canes.
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