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Within Funny Cards
A funny card sent to a coworker hits differently than a Slack message or a gif in the group chat — it means someone actually stopped, thought about the joke, wrote it down, and mailed it. That physical weight matters in an office context, where most recognition is digital and forgettable. Whether you are roasting a colleague on their last day, acknowledging a brutal quarter with some dark humor, or marking a promotion with a card that gently reminds them the real work starts now, a handwritten card in real ink signals effort in a way that a screen notification never will. It is the kind of gesture that ends up pinned above a monitor for months.
Cards From You makes that gesture effortless without making it feel automated. You pick a genuinely funny card designed for the workplace, write your message, and the service handles the rest — printing your words in real ink on the actual card, addressing the envelope, and dropping it in the mail. You can schedule delivery to land on the right day, whether that is a retirement send-off, a work anniversary, or a Monday that desperately needs a laugh. No printer, no post office run, no last-minute scramble.
Order at least 5 to 7 business days before the date you need it, especially if it is tied to a specific event like a last day, a work anniversary, or a retirement party. Cards From You mails via USPS First Class, so domestic delivery typically takes 3 to 5 days once the card ships, but building in a buffer protects you from postal delays.
It depends entirely on your actual relationship, not their title. If you trade jokes with your manager regularly, a well-chosen funny card will land well. If the relationship is more formal, lean toward dry wit over anything that touches on their age, salary, or job performance — those jokes work between peers but can read as passive-aggressive going upward.
Keep it short and specific — one or two sentences that reference something real, like an inside joke, a project you both survived, or a running bit in the office. Generic humor in a card feels like a forwarded email; a detail that only the recipient would recognize is what makes it genuinely funny rather than just a card that says it is funny.