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Within Invitation Cards
Friendsgiving occupies a specific emotional register that a group text or a Facebook event simply cannot reach. It is the meal where you chose the people at the table, which makes the invitation itself a statement — one worth delivering on paper, in ink, by hand. A printed e-vite gets ignored in a crowded inbox; a handwritten card gets propped up on a kitchen counter and looked at again. That is the difference between announcing a dinner and actually inviting someone into it.
Cards From You handles the entire process so you are not hand-addressing forty envelopes the week before Thanksgiving. You write your message, pick your card design, and the team puts it on paper in real ink — genuinely handwritten, not a font pretending to be handwriting — and mails it directly to each guest. You can schedule delivery in advance, which matters when you are coordinating around holiday travel and want cards to land at least two weeks before the meal. For a gathering built entirely on intention and friendship, the invitation should reflect that same level of care.
Send them at least two to three weeks before the date, and push that to four weeks if your guests travel for Thanksgiving or have complicated schedules. November fills up fast, and a mailed card needs a few days in transit on top of your lead time.
Include the date, start time, address, and whether guests should bring a dish or drink — people need logistics, not just warmth. A single personal line, like referencing something you are all looking forward to together, goes a long way without turning the card into a letter.
Yes — Cards From You mails anywhere in the United States, so you can invite guests across multiple cities or states from a single order. Each card is addressed and mailed individually, so every recipient gets their own envelope rather than a forwarded group message.