Pressed flowers can move from the press into simple cards, seed notes, and small seasonal gifts. A useful card station keeps blank cards, envelopes, sleeves, backing sheets, vellum, twine, and labels within reach.
Work with dry flowers, clean hands, and a flat table. Write the plant name and date before the finished card goes into a sleeve or mailer.
Start with blank folded cards
Ohuhu Blank White Cards and Envelopes give pressed flowers, seed notes, and garden thank-you messages a clean folded A2 card with a matching envelope.
Use the card front for one pressed flower, a small vellum panel, or a short handwritten plant note. Keep the inside message simple so the card still feels light and personal.
Keep kraft envelopes ready
ValBox A2 Brown Kraft Envelopes give finished cards a warm paper cover. Brown kraft paper pairs naturally with dried petals, seed packets, and handwritten labels.
Use dark ink or a small white label when the plant name or date needs to stand out on the envelope.
Sleeve finished cards before storage or gifting
Clear A2 Greeting Card Jackets keep each card and envelope together while the card front stays visible.
Slide flat cards in slowly, especially when the card includes a stem, label strip, or vellum overlay. Handle the sleeve by the edges so the clear surface stays neat.
Use firm mailers for flat cards and photos
ProLine 5 x 7 Rigid Photo Mailers give pressed flower cards, plant photos, seed packet images, and small flat records a firm self-seal mailer.
Check postage before sending. A finished card, clear sleeve, and rigid mailer can create a different mailing profile than a plain envelope.
Add vellum, backing sheets, and twine
Cridoz Vellum Paper can be trimmed into overlays, belly bands, card inserts, and soft label panels.
MagicWater 9 x 12 Chipboard Sheets add a firm backing layer for card fronts, sleeve inserts, and mailer support.
Cotton Twine String Bakers Rope ties card bundles, kraft envelopes, seed packets, and small tags with a natural brown and white cord.
Pack finished cards as garden gifts
The garden gift box, wrap, and display guide gathers kraft boxes, cotton filled boxes, tissue paper, crinkle shred, flower sleeves, thank-you seals, and clear display stands for finished cards, seed-note sets, and small keepsakes.
The garden gift table signs guide adds acrylic holders, mini chalkboards, tent cards, kraft bags, strung tags, card holders, and chalk markers for naming pressed flower card rows.
Use those pieces after ink, glue, petals, and labels are fully dry. A plant name, garden spot, and date should travel with each finished piece.
Connect cards to the pressing routine
The flower drying and pressing guide covers presses, silica gel, blotting paper, and dry storage pieces before flowers reach the card table.
The pressed flower mounting guide covers clear corners, mounting strips, hinging tape, and mending rolls for finished pages and card fronts.
The garden archive handling guide covers cotton gloves, a bone folder, a micro spatula, cutting mats, and a paper trimmer for preparing clean layouts.
The garden archive binder page guide covers photo sleeves and binder pages when finished cards become archive records.
The garden archive labels and glassine guide covers small sleeves, archival pens, filing labels, and translucent packets for labeled pieces.
Where to check it
Open the pressed flower card supply reviews
These reviews cover blank cards, kraft envelopes, clear sleeves, rigid mailers, vellum, chipboard, and twine for pressed flower cards and garden gifts.
Keep each card connected to the garden
A small plant name, garden spot, and date turn a pressed flower card into a seasonal record. Keep those details close before the card moves into an envelope, sleeve, or mailer.