San Antonio Express-News

Bridal couple stand up to parental demands

- HELOISE Heloise Send a money- or time-saving hint to Heloise, P.O. Box 795001, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000, or Email: heloise@heloise.com.

Dear Readers: Today’s Sound Off is about the wedding bell blues:

Dear Heloise: My fiance and I wanted a small, intimate wedding with only a few people, a nice luncheon and we would be off on our honeymoon. We had a budget that wouldn’t budge, which meant each family could invite only 25 to 30 people. My in-laws were furious. They had a list of 116 people they wanted to invite, but we stuck to our plan and explained that instead of a huge, fancy wedding, we wanted to put a down payment on a home.

We both had good jobs, had saved up a nice down payment and explained that at this time in our lives (I’m 33, my fiance is 34), buying a house rather than a big wedding was the best choice for us.

Despite my in-laws’ offer to help pay for the wedding, we said, “Thank you but no thank you.” My advice to all brides is to sit down and make a budget plan, then stick to it. No, you can’t make everyone happy, but you can have a nice wedding. Whether it’s a big one or a small affair, your wedding should be what you want. The day we got married no one was stressed out, everyone had a good time and, best of all, we weren’t broke or in debt afterward.

I may not have had an elaborate wedding, but I had the most important thing, which was the man with whom I want to spend the rest of my life.

Katharine M., Charlottes­ville, Va.

Katharine, it sounds to me as though you and your fiance have some very solid values and plans for your future. A wedding is to unite two people in a commitment to love, honor and cherish each other. The size is not important.

Heloise

Dear Readers: Here are additional uses for old newspapers:

⏩ Use under a kitty litter pan.

⏩ Line a bird cage.

⏩ Plant three or four inches under topsoil in fall to prevent frozen plant roots in your garden.

⏩ Crinkle and stuff in the leg part of boots to maintain their shape.

Heloise

Dear Heloise: I received a cashmere sweater for Christmas. Unfortunat­ely, it got mixed in a laundry wash, but not the dryer. It shrank! Is there anything I can do to restore it?

Maryann B., Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif.

Begin by placing the cashmere sweater in a bowl of warm water with about 2 tablespoon­s of hair conditione­r. Let it soak for several hours or overnight. Without rinsing the conditione­r out, press the sweater into a thick towel. After this, lay the sweater on a flat surface and gently, carefully stretch the sleeves, sides and bottom of the sweater. Don’t be overly aggressive to a point where you damage the fibers.

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