Upload a photo of you both, describe the scene, get an animated video card in about ninety seconds. No 9pm-on-the-13th panic, no generic shop card with a cartoon bear. Something they’ll actually keep.
Free to preview. Pay only once you’re happy with the design.
Two ways to do this
Which one you need mostly depends on what day it currently is.
Pick the angle
Valentine's card
The classic 14 Feb card, just about the two of you
StartJust because
For when 'I love you' needs no occasion, just saying it
StartProposing on Valentine's
A card that doubles as the moment you pop the question
StartValentine's anniversary
For couples who got together on 14 Feb and mark it double
StartLong-distance
Different time zone, different country, same card opening at 8pm
StartPrompt ideas
Specific prompts make specific cards. Vague prompts make the sort of Valentine’s card that could have been sent to anyone.
Questions we actually get asked
Yes, this is genuinely what we're built for. Upload a photo of the two of you, describe the vibe, and you'll have a shareable video card in roughly two minutes. Drop the link into WhatsApp or iMessage before bed and they'll see it first thing on Valentine's morning. No posting, no guilt, no garage-forecourt bouquet.
A 5-second animated card of the two of you reads as thoughtful, not over the top. It's the sort of thing that goes in their camera roll and gets shown to their mates, not the kind of gesture that scares a new relationship off. Keep the prompt playful rather than declaration-of-forever and you're in the right zone.
Pick a prompt that nods to something only the two of you would get. The running joke from your first date, the holiday you've been talking about for three years, the song from your wedding playlist. Specificity is what makes a long-term Valentine's card land - a generic 'love you' card after fifteen years is the problem you're trying to solve.
The shareable link opens on any phone in any time zone, no app or account needed. A lot of our 14 Feb traffic is long-distance couples sending the card to land at breakfast their partner's time. The animated version works especially well here because it gives you the face-to-face moment you can't have in person.
Go with whichever register you'd actually use at the dinner table. If you'd take the mickey out of your partner opening the card, write a funny prompt. If you'd go soft, go soft. The tool doesn't care either way, but pretending to be soppy when you're not is how cards end up feeling off. Most of our best-performing Valentine's cards are about 70 percent cheeky, 30 percent sincere.
For UK Royal Mail delivery we recommend ordering by the 10th of February for the 14th. Printed cards go through our UK print partner and post first class. If it's already later than that, send the digital version now and post the printed one as a 'belated' follow-up - honestly, a second card arriving a few days later is a better gesture than one rushed card at the right time.
A Valentine’s card about the two of you, rendered in under two minutes. Sent by link, or posted first class.
Ordering a printed card? Check UK posting deadlines