Quick answer: the engravings dads actually keep are short and specific: his initials with a date ("J.M. · 14.06.1985"), the coordinates of the family home, a line from the kids ("Dad. Legend. Est. 1990"), or simply the children's names in their own order. Aim for under 30 characters — private meaning beats long speeches. Updated 3 July 2026.
We laser-engrave gifts every day in our family workshop, and "what should I put on it?" is the question we get more often than any other. Here is what twenty-plus years of watching people unwrap these things has taught us — with ready-to-steal examples.
The three rules of a good engraving
- Short wins. A wallet corner, a belt strap or a keyring fob holds one line comfortably. The message he re-reads is the one he can read at a glance.
- Specific beats generic. "Best Dad Ever" is fine; "Est. 2016 — Anna & Piotr" is his. Dates, names and places do the emotional work.
- Private is powerful. Engraving hidden inside (a wallet's note pocket, the underside of a belt strap) turns a daily object into a secret between you.
Ideas from a daughter or son
- "Dad. Legend. Est. [year the first child was born]"
- The kids' names in birth order — nothing else needed
- "Whenever you read this — we love you"
- A child's actual handwriting of the word "Dad" (we engrave from a photo of the handwriting — the single most emotional option we make)
- "First my father, forever my friend"
Ideas from a wife or partner
- Wedding date + initials: "M ♥ K · 21.09.2012"
- Coordinates of where you met, married, or live
- "The best decision I ever made" (inside the wallet, where only he sees it)
- An inside joke — three words are enough; you two know the rest
By occasion
- Birthday: his initials + the year, or "60 years — still the strongest man I know" for milestone birthdays.
- Father's Day: from small kids — the handwriting option; from adult kids — "Thanks for every lift, loan and lecture."
- Christmas: the family name + the year ("The Ivanovs · Christmas 2026") marks the object as a family piece, not just a present.
- Anniversary: the date, always the date — see our anniversary gifts by year guide for which year calls for leather.
Where the engraving goes, by object
- Wallet: initials outside corner (visible) or a full line inside the note pocket (private). Both is the premium move.
- Belt: inside the strap near the buckle — he knows it's there, nobody else does.
- Wallet & belt set: same initials on both pieces ties the set together.
- Bracelet: outside — name or coordinates; inside of the clasp plate — the date.
What NOT to engrave
- Long quotes. Anything over ~40 characters shrinks the type and weakens the impact — put long messages in the card instead.
- Trends and slang. The gift outlives the meme. Names and dates don't age.
- Anything you'd hesitate to explain to his friends — unless it goes on the hidden side (see rule 3).
Frequently asked questions
What is a good sentimental gift for dad?
A daily-use object carrying something only your family understands: a leather wallet with the kids' names inside, a belt with the wedding date hidden in the strap, or a keepsake engraved with a child's real handwriting. Sentiment sticks when he touches it every day.
What's a good budget friendly gift for dad?
Small engraved leather goods — a cardholder or an engraved accessory in the €20–40 range — carry the same personal engraving as the big pieces. The engraving is the gift; the object is the carrier.
How many characters fit in an engraving?
Depends on the piece: a wallet corner comfortably takes 10–15 characters, an inside line 30–40, a belt strap up to ~40. When in doubt, cut the message in half — it gets stronger, not weaker.
Written by the makers at The Craft House Gift — a family leather & jewellery engraving workshop in Bulgaria, shipping across the EU and UK. Every example above is an engraving type we have actually made for customers. Last updated: 3 July 2026.