Use cases
Ways to use Valentine's Week
Personalized, single-page cards for the moments that deserve more than a text.
Send a birthday card they will actually screenshot
User wants a fast, free, custom digital birthday card to share over WhatsApp or social media.
Explore use caseSend a Valentineβs Day card that opens like a moment
User wants a personal, romantic Valentineβs Day card or proposal page they can send digitally.
Explore use caseMark the year with an anniversary card they will save
User wants a personalized anniversary card or note to share with a partner, often long-distance or a milestone year.
Explore use caseA friendship card for the people who actually show up
User wants to send a Friendship Day card or surprise note to a best friend or close friends.
Explore use caseSend the family note you have been meaning to send
User wants a personalized digital note for a family member β mom, dad, sibling, grandparent β for Motherβs Day, Fatherβs Day, or any day.
Explore use caseRun a couple vibe check with your person
User wants a flirty, playful card for their partner that doubles as a small interactive moment.
Explore use caseA card that closes the distance for two minutes
User is in a long-distance relationship and wants a thoughtful, low-friction way to send love or a surprise.
Explore use caseAsk the question with a card built for the answer
User wants to ask their crush out, propose to be their valentine, or shoot a shot in a low-friction, modern way.
Explore use caseSurprise your partner with a card they did not see coming
User wants a small, sweet surprise for their partner that does not require gifts, planning, or being in the same city.
Explore use caseAn apology card for when a text is not enough
User wants to apologize β to a partner or close friend β in a way that feels more sincere than a text but does not require a face-to-face yet.
Explore use caseA card for the early days of something good
User is in a brand-new relationship and wants something sweet, low-pressure, and personal to send their new partner.
Explore use caseTell your college crush, without the lecture-hall stare-down
User wants to confess feelings to a college crush through a private digital card instead of face-to-face.
Explore use caseFor the roommate who witnessed every breakdown and kept the snacks stocked
User wants to thank or celebrate a dorm roommate with a heartfelt, personal card.
Explore use caseSend a graduation card that is not just "congrats"
User wants to congratulate a graduating friend, partner, or family member with a personal card.
Explore use caseSay goodbye to the seniors who made your college years
User wants to send a farewell card to graduating seniors or final-year students who mentored or befriended them.
Explore use caseFor the group chat that carried you through finals
User wants to thank a study group or academic squad that helped them survive a course or exam season.
Explore use caseFor the friend who lives three time zones away and still feels close
User wants to send a card to a close friend who has moved to a different city or country.
Explore use caseFor the group chat that is basically a third therapist
User wants to appreciate their entire friend group or group chat with one shared card.
Explore use caseGalentineβs Day cards, for the women who are the love of your life
User wants to celebrate Galentineβs Day (Feb 13) with cards for their female friends.
Explore use caseFor the new friend who already feels like an old one
User wants to appreciate a recent friend they bonded with quickly.
Explore use caseA card for grandma and grandpa that opens like a hug
User wants to send a heartfelt, simple card to a grandparent.
Explore use caseFor momβs birthday, a card that lands
User wants a sincere, heartfelt birthday card for their mother.
Explore use caseA birthday card for dad that he will actually read twice
User wants a birthday card for their father that balances sweetness and humor.
Explore use caseFor the teacher who saw you before anyone else did
User wants to thank a teacher or mentor who meaningfully shaped them.
Explore use caseFor the person who just finished forty years of showing up
User wants to send a retirement card to a parent, grandparent, mentor, or elder.
Explore use caseWrite the closure letter, send it or keep it, your call
User wants to process a breakup by writing the closure letter they never got, with full permission to keep it unsent.
Explore use caseWrite the "Iβm thriving" letter, mostly for yourself
User wants to write a confident post-breakup note in a pop-culture, self-respect-forward tone.
Explore use caseFor the one that got away, when the timing was off, not the feelings
User wants to write a soft, wistful reconnect note to someone they lost to timing rather than a fight.
Explore use caseThe petty thank-you card, thanks for the lesson
User wants to write a sarcastic-but-classy "thanks for the lesson" card to an ex, humor-forward.
Explore use caseThe Define-The-Relationship card: ask the question, nicely
User wants to ask their situationship to define the relationship in a fun, direct, low-pressure way.
Explore use caseSoft-launch your person without giving away their face
User wants to soft-launch a new partner on Instagram or share a private, partner-in-on-it announcement.
Explore use caseAn olive branch for when you are both still angry
User is mid-argument with a partner, both still heated, wants to stop the escalation without pretending nothing happened or rushing to a full apology.
Explore use caseThe card for when the fight is over and you are rebuilding
User and partner have already aired the argument and cooled down; they want a thoughtful reconciliation gesture that is not a grand gesture.
Explore use caseThe apology when you are clearly in the wrong
User is clearly in the wrong and wants to write a full-ownership apology that names the action, the impact, and the behavior change.
Explore use caseThe quiet "I miss you" after a day or two of silence
User had a fight with their partner, both went quiet for a day or two, wants to send a gentle "I miss you" without pressure or guilt.
Explore use caseYou forgot their birthday. Here is the honest way to say so.
User forgot their partner or close personβs birthday and wants to apologize honestly without leaning on gifts or excuses.
Explore use caseYou forgot the anniversary. Say it plainly.
User forgot their anniversary and wants to apologize in a way that centers accountability rather than panic gifts.
Explore use caseReassure a partner feeling insecure, without brushing it off
User has a partner feeling jealous or insecure and wants to offer reassurance that is specific and non-dismissive.
Explore use caseThe letter for rebuilding trust, slowly and specifically
User broke their partnerβs trust in a small-to-medium way (lied, broke a promise) and wants to write a grounded rebuilding letter that does not promise instant forgiveness.
Explore use caseA card for when they are having a rough day
Userβs partner is having a hard day β work, family, health β and they want to send something that sits with them without trying to solve it.
Explore use caseThe 24-hour check-in: are we okay, no pressure
User is 24-48 hours past a fight with their partner and wants a low-stakes, non-pressuring way to re-open contact.
Explore use caseThe card for when neither of you will text first
User and partner are both too proud to text first after a fight; user wants a self-aware, low-ego way to break the standoff.
Explore use caseRe-opening the door after one of you went cold
User wants to re-open contact after one partner stonewalled or went cold; works both for the person who withdrew and the one who felt shut out.
Explore use case
Have a different occasion in mind?
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