Upload a photo, tell us a bit about him, get a personalised card in under two minutes. Send it by WhatsApp, or post a printed copy through the letterbox before he’s even noticed what day it is.
From £0.99. Preview free, pay only when you’re happy with the design.
Pick his energy
You know which one he is. He’s been that one since 1987.
The no-fuss dad
Says he doesn’t want anything every year without fail. Will absolutely read the card twice and prop it next to the kettle. Dry humour, a specific memory, a good photo of the car. Tier 1 image card, £0.99.
Build a no-fuss cardThe sentimental dad
Keeps every card in a drawer. Tears up at the school video. Step it up with an animated 5-second card built around a photo that means something, the wedding, the graduation, the grandkids. Tier 3 video, £3.49.
Build an animated cardWho’s it for
Father's Day
The main event. For dads, grandads and anyone who fills the role.
StartThanks, Dad
For the lifts home, the driving lessons, the quiet sorting-out of things.
StartThinking of you
For dads going through a rough patch. Low-key, no grand statements.
StartMiss you, Dad
For when there's a few hundred miles between the kitchen table and his.
StartJust retired
The first Father's Day without the 7am alarm. Mark it properly.
StartPrompt ideas
Paste any of these into the wizard, swap in his actual photo, and tweak the details. The AI handles the rest.
The usual questions
Sunday 21 June 2026. UK Father's Day always falls on the third Sunday of June, which is different from some other countries. If you're ordering a printed card, give yourself at least three working days for UK delivery.
The "don't buy me anything" dad is a species of his own. A personalised card built around a photo he actually remembers, his car, his shed, his dog, lands better than a gift he'll feel guilty about. It's a fuss he can't refuse because it costs a quid and fits on the mantelpiece.
The reliable angles: the shed he disappears into for three hours to do nothing in particular, the telly volume war, his one recipe, the way he says "right" when he's about to stand up, his opinions on motorway junctions. Feed any of those into the prompt box and let the AI do the rest.
Keep it short and specific. One memory, one thank-you, one sentence about now. "Remember when you taught me to drive in the Tesco car park" beats a paragraph of feelings every time. Dads respond to evidence, not essays.
Printed, if it's the first few Father's Days. A card posted to the door, addressed to him, says something a WhatsApp can't. Later on, when it's a standing arrangement, the shared digital card works fine. You can order both from the same design in the wizard.
Yes, and they handle the tone problem well. A father-in-law card needs to be warm without overstepping. A photo-led AI card based on a shared memory, the wedding day, a holiday, the pub he took you to, lets the picture do the heavy lifting without any "best dad ever" phrasing that wouldn't sit right.
Two minutes in the wizard. One card he’ll prop up next to the kettle and pretend he hasn’t looked at twice.
Questions? Drop us a line.