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Within Love & Friendship Cards
A marriage proposal is one of the few moments in life that deserves more than a screen. You are asking someone to choose you — permanently — and the words you use to do that should exist somewhere tangible, something they can fold up, keep in a drawer, and find again twenty years from now. A handwritten card written in real ink does that in a way that a text, a caption, or even a beautifully designed app notification simply cannot. It is evidence of intention, of time spent, of a person who sat down and thought carefully about what they wanted to say before they said it.
Cards From You makes it possible to get a proposal card into someone's hands even when logistics are working against you — whether you are planning a surprise from across the country, coordinating with a restaurant, or just want the card to arrive the morning of. Every card is handwritten in real ink by a human writer, not printed to mimic handwriting, and mailed directly to whatever address you choose. You can schedule delivery in advance, customize the message entirely, and trust that what arrives is a real physical object worth keeping — not a placeholder for the moment, but part of it.
Most people use the card as part of the proposal itself — placed at a table setting, tucked into flowers, or handed over right before or after the question is asked. If you are proposing in person, timing the card to arrive the same day at a shared address works well. For a surprise proposal away from home, consider having it delivered to a hotel or mailed to arrive the day you return.
Skip the grand declarations and write something only you could write — a specific memory, the exact moment you knew, or one concrete reason you want to marry this person. A single honest sentence lands harder than three paragraphs of superlatives. If you are stuck, start with 'I want to marry you because' and finish it truthfully.
The message is entirely yours — there are no fill-in-the-blank templates. You write exactly what you want said, and a real person writes it out by hand in ink before it is mailed. There are no character limits that would force you to cut something meaningful.