Unique card-giving ideas: creative ways to share love and support that lasts

A trio of friendship cards are laid out on a coffee table next to a snack tray.

Greeting cards are great. We’re Hallmark, so we have to say that, but it also happens that we truly believe it. But with cards having been around over 100 years, some of us card-senders are looking for more creative ways to give greeting cards, to mix it up with a little surprise and delight for ourselves and the people we care about and to go beyond the expected occasions, because we know cards can be powerful connecting tools every day for every reason.

So we put our heads together to come up with these unique ways to send cards and other thoughtful card ideas for friends and family.

Inspired? Create and share by tagging @HallmarkStores.

Creative ways to give cards for milestones  

A big birthday, a significant anniversary, an excitedly anticipated graduation—life is full of so many milestones when someone might want to create a more meaningful tradition and here are a few ways to do it creatively with cards.

  • Turn cards into a time capsule: Take all the cards the celebrant receives for their milestone occasion (or all the cards YOU give them) and box or tie them together to safekeep for a future day. Each card-giver can write about a shared memory or a message reflecting the time in the recipient’s life so they can open and relive the big milestone years down the road. Perfect for younger birthday milestones like 13 or 18, graduations and weddings.
  • Decorate a “card wall”: Whatever the milestone, the cards a celebrant receives can be creatively hung on a wall in the celebration space after they’ve been read. Or for more card-opening and reading fun, the cards can be hung first for the recipient to pick and read during the celebration.
  • Card scavenger hunt: For a more active card-giving experience, cards celebrating a milestone can be “hidden” in meaningful places that played a part in achieving the milestone. Graduation cards placed at the different schools the graduate attended, for example, or cards for an anniversary left at locations that the couple remembers from over the course of their relationship, like the place they had their first date.
  • “Countdown” cards: Using the Hallmark Cards Now app (or your own organizational skills), sign and send or give a card a day leading up to the milestone to build anticipation and fun. Think 18 days of cards for an 18th birthday or a Wedding Week of cards the week before the ceremony.
In one lifestyle shot, two cards sit propped up on a kitchen counter top; in another lifestyle shot next to it, a trio of cards are laid out on a blanket next to a charcuterie board, as though part of a floor picnic for an anniversary.

Creative ways to surprise and delight with cards  

We’re always trying to think up ways for cards to create a memorable experience, and one of the most tried and true methods is by making your cards a delightful surprise for the recipient. Here are a few easy ways you might do that.

  • Mail a card to a recipient in your own home: Sure, it’s easy to just hand someone you live with like a child, a significant other, or an elder relative a card on their special occasion. But who doesn’t love getting actual mail (that’s not junk)? Address and stamp a card for the person you live with and watch the smile form as they open their mailbox to find a little surprise something special mailed by you.
  • Have your pet deliver a card: Any furry friend with a collar can have a card attached to it or tied around their neck for a special furry delivery to your recipient. Dog, cat, cow, you name it. We even bet you could find a creative way to have it delivered by your iguana or fish (taped to their aquarium, perhaps?).
  • Disguise the card as junk mail: Another way to surprise your recipient via US Mail is to carefully design the envelope to look like a piece of business or junk mail that when opened is nothing of the sort. Just be careful not to disguise it too well or it may find itself right in the trash!
  • Hide it under the party treats: For the foodie, you can wrap the card in plastic or put it in a sandwich bag and hide it underneath a cake or beneath a pile of plated cookies or other yummies.
Two downshots of cards in different lifestyle situations...the left shows three cards spread out on a couch with a phone and pen nearby, as though the viewer is preparing to write in and send the cards; the second shows a trio of friendship cards laid out on a table next to a snack tray.

Creative ways to give “open when” cards  

You never know when someone might need a smile, a pick-me-up, or a reminder of how special they are, but you DO know they’ll need it at some point, because we all do. That’s what “Open When” cards are perfect for: any mood, any location, any set time.

Here are a few ideas for giving these pre-planned cards:

  • When they’re away and missing home: From summer camp to college, deployment to business travel, our loved ones will have to venture out and away from us at different times in their lives. But you can show them they’re never that far from home with a card to open when they need it most wherever they may be.
  • Cards for parenting milestones: Raising kids comes with every emotion imaginable, from the biggest joys to the biggest worries and everything in between. Give the loving parents you care about cards written specially for those unique moments and milestones only a parent can understand—first time using the potty, first words, first day of kindergarten all the way up to their child’s graduation or marriage. In good times and bad, parents appreciate all the support they can get.
  • To celebrate someone all year long: Birthdays and special occasions are natural times to give cards, but a year in the life of anyone is full of special ordinary days, too. Give someone a stack of 12 cards to open at the start of each month, and they’ll have a reminder of you and your caring like clockwork. Need to save money? Buy boxed cards! Because it’s what’s inside that really matters.
  • First anniversary cards: Weddings are delightful and well-deserving of a card full of best wishes and congratulations. But a lot happens between “I do” and a first anniversary. Giving the couple (or your own significant other) an “Open When” card for that special occasion will be a testament to their commitment, a reminder of the special day, and a considerate show of support for your loved ones’ dedication to each other.
A bundle of cards have been hole punched in the upper left-hand corner and strung onto a bright green ribbon with a tag that reads

Creative ways to give cards as part of a gift or gathering  

Cards go with gifts and gatherings like peas go with carrots or PB goes with J. But how can you make their inclusion more creative, more memorable or, in some cases, more of a shared party experience? Well, we have a few ideas here:

  • Make cards the reason for the gathering: We know that everyone has at least one good reason to write and send a card at any given time, but for some it’s just one too many things on the to-do list. So throw a card-writing party! Get family and friends together to write thank-you cards for a Gratitude Gathering or cards of support for a mutual loved one going through a hard time or just a Girls’ Night of card-writing and cocktails (or mocktails so the writing stays legible). You may be surprised at the many reasons for someone to send cards or the stories behind them!
  • Use cards for seating place cards: You’ve planned a gathering, invited the people you care about, and you want to make sure they know where to sit…and how much they mean to you, too. Use carefully chosen cards to place at their table space for an emotional connection that makes the night uniquely memorable for everyone.
  • Choose a coordinated card-writing theme: When your circle is preparing to get together to celebrate someone, make it fun by choosing a theme for everyone to write their card around. Folks could share inside jokes they each have with the celebrant (maybe the funniest one wins a prize) or choose and write cards inspired by the recipient’s favorite thing (gardening, Star Wars™, country music, tax law, anything, really!) or even have a contest to see who can write the best poem. By coordinating, the recipient will feel seen and the circle will grow even closer.
  • Give card envelope-friendly gifts: This idea’s been around since the first grandmother enclosed a shiny, new quarter in her grandchild’s birthday card. Gift cards, stickers, concert tickets, even a bag of a delicious tea can be easily inserted into the card or envelope and remain a surprise until it’s opened.
A card that reads,

Everyday moments worth a card  

So now you’ve got some ideas about different ways to give or send your cards with a little added creativity and wow-factor to make the recipient truly feel seen, understood, and cared for on special occasions like birthdays, weddings, and other special days on the calendar.

But as important as those days are, they’re really only a drop in the ocean of moments where a card can uplift, comfort, celebrate or just put an unexpected and needed smile on a recipient’s face.

So when you’re thinking of your circle and the bajillion reasons they may appreciate a card, consider some of these moments worthy of a card, and consider some of the ways to make your little card have a BIG impact. For example:

  • Parenting and step-parenting support
  • Life changes (new job, school, home, etc.)
  • Addiction recovery
  • End or beginning of cancer treatment
  • Job loss
  • Coming out
  • End or beginning of a relationship
  • New pet
  • Recovery from illness/injury
  • Caregiver support
  • Recent accomplishment (business, art, hobby, civic, etc.)

 

With so many simply human moments to celebrate, commemorate, or offer support through, there’s literally no limit to the reasons to share a card with someone you care about and so many ways to make your message a bit more special.

(But don’t worry. Even though we think all these ideas can add fun and meaning to your card giving, sending or giving a simple card in an envelope is still a great way to do it, too!)