Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Smash cakes, signature drinks and custom favors

Not weddings but kid’s birthday parties cost parents $1,500 or more

- Erin McCarthy

When Stephanie Carlucci’s son was six months old, she started planning his first birthday party.

Carlucci, 34, picked a theme — little Dean would be “Mr. One-derful” — and filled her online Etsy shopping cart with the essentials: matching invitation­s, thank-you cards, banners, a high-chair ribbon, a custom onesie and a hat.

She ordered “fancy catering” of charcuteri­e, pasta salads, and gourmet focaccia sandwiches, she said, and secured a smash cake (that’s a mini-cake the guest of honor eats with their hands to mass applause). For the grownups, she crafted a signature drink, a muddled cranberry spritzer in honor of the January baby.

“It’s so over the top,” Carlucci said with a laugh. You’re “spending all this money for a 1-year-old who hated the cake and cried the whole time.”

Carlucci, who works in higher education, and her husband, who works in informatio­n technology, spent between $600 and $700 on the party, which she held at her home for 40 guests. She said it was less elaborate than other kids’ birthday bashes that she has attended.

“I feel like the bar has been set by those around me,” she said. “I just fell into the pressure of it.”

For a subset of well-to-do parents, lavish children’s birthday parties are not a new concept. But over the past decade or so, a combinatio­n of social media, societal pressure and inflation have made kids’ parties increasing­ly costly and elaborate, with some parents confessing that they’ve spent thousands for a birthday celebratio­n their kids may not remember.

Parents describe the cycle as a modern-day, social-media-fueled “keeping up with the Joneses.” Others said they feel “mom guilt” if, for example, their daughter asks why she isn’t having the same kind of birthday party that her classmates are.

“A lot of people parent from a fear of being judged. There’s a lot of comparison among parents,” said Danielle Looper, 49, a stayat-home mom.

For some parents, the pandemic increased the pressure to pull all the stops for their children’s next in-person celebratio­ns.

Holly Cronk, 35, felt twinges of “mom guilt,” she said, after her daughter Valentina’s first birthday was celebrated with a video-chat singalong in April 2021. While the human resources director wasn’t comfortabl­e having a big in-person party then due to coronaviru­s concerns, she felt bad that many of her relatives and friends hadn’t gotten to spend time with Valentina yet.

So for the second and third birthdays, Cronk went all out. She spent around $1,500 for a 40-person gathering at a creamery, she said, then $2,000 for a 50-person, “party animal”-themed party at a zoo. They also had a small party at their home for friends who didn’t have kids.

But for Cronk, it was money well spent.

“For me, it’s getting everybody together, having memories for Valentina,” Cronk said. Even though she admitted: “She’s not going to remember her second birthday party, let’s be real.”

For her now-3-yearold’s first birthday, which was also during the height of the pandemic, Caroline Villoslada, 28, said she wasn’t satisfied with the outdoor party she held at a pavilion in a local park. As the adult guests kept a close watch on their kids, they couldn’t relax and talk together, said Villoslada.

So she held the next party at Lulu’s Casita, an indoor playground that customers can rent out, and paid more than $1,000. She splurged on a $200 two-tier cake, decoration­s, a balloon arch, and personaliz­ed chocolate lollipops decorated with Sesame Street characters. It was a success, so Villoslada repeated it for her daughter’s third birthday, shelling out another four figures for fun.

For Villoslada, a paralegal, and her husband, an HVAC technician, it’s not just a birthday party, but also an opportunit­y for her to embrace her Brazilian heritage.

“In Brazil, we have this culture to do big parties,” she said. “I feel like we’re doing a great job because every year she gets so excited for her birthday . ... She gets excited to decide the theme and decoration­s.”

Even some parents who don’t opt for a unique

venue said they have spent $1,000 or more per party.

“I don’t think any are really cheap,” said Jeffrey Zheng, 39.

Zheng, a Temple University professor, said he and his wife, a financial analyst, racked up a $1,400 bill at Chuck E. Cheese for a recent joint birthday party for their 7- and 9-yearold sons. Not wanting to exclude any of their sons’ classmates, they had about 40 guests, Zheng said, and bought the entertainm­ent center chain’s “all you can play” party package, along with pizza, drinks and goodie bags.

Zheng enjoyed it himself,

though, he said, particular­ly after not getting to socialize with the parents of his children’s friends during the pandemic.

Meanwhile, Ali Bauder, 44, said she regrets having recently spent $1,600 on a two-hour, 25-person birthday party for her 4-year-old son at an indoor adventure park.

About $200 of that $1,600 price tag was spent on party favor bags, she said, which she also refers to as “stuff that people are going to throw away.”

“I hate them, and I feel like most parents hate them,” she said, “but we still proliferat­e the notion

of ‘you have to walk out with something.’”

As she’s reflected on what else her family could have done with that money, including take an overnight trip, she hopes that her children will opt for experience­s instead of parties in the future.

“I have no pictures, even after all that money. In that environmen­t, the kids are really running around . ... It’s chaos. It was just handing over money after two hours,” said Bauder, a project manager in the pharmaceut­ical industry.

“I don’t know that I would do it again, to be honest,” she said.

 ?? RYAN MCVAY/GETTY ?? Over the past decade or so, a combinatio­n of social media, societal pressure and inflation have made kids’ parties increasing­ly costly and elaborate.
RYAN MCVAY/GETTY Over the past decade or so, a combinatio­n of social media, societal pressure and inflation have made kids’ parties increasing­ly costly and elaborate.

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