Summary
What this review covers
This review focuses on the listed 100 card and envelope count, folded 4.25 x 5.5 inch card size, A2 envelope format, product imagery, and fit for pressed flower cards and garden notes.
Pros
The upside
- The 100 card and envelope count supports a full season of small garden notes.
- The folded white surface gives pressed flowers, drawings, labels, and handwritten messages a clean base.
- Matching A2 envelopes keep finished cards ready for gifting or mailing.
Cons
The tradeoffs
- White cardstock shows smudges, so a clean table and dry hands help.
- Thick pressed stems may need a shallow card layout and a protective sleeve.
Where to check it
Check Ohuhu Blank White Cards and Envelopes 100 Pack
Open the current merchant listing if the buyer fit and tradeoffs still line up.
- Amazon opens the Ohuhu blank white cards and envelopes product page.
Breakdown
Full review
A clean card base for pressed flowers
Ohuhu Blank White Cards and Envelopes give pressed flower projects a simple folded card and a matching envelope. The white surface leaves room for a small bloom, a handwritten plant name, a garden date, and a short message.
The A2 format feels natural for thank-you notes, seed share cards, seasonal greetings, and small keepsakes from a patio or backyard bed.
Useful for batch card making
The 100 pack gives a gardener enough cards for a full pressing season. A stack can stay beside dried flowers, mounting corners, vellum, twine, and labels so finished pieces are ready when the flowers come out of the press.
Folded cards also work for quick herb notes, plant gift tags, and seed packet inserts when a short message needs a neat place to sit.
Pair with sleeves and light backing
Pressed petals sit nicely on a clean card when the card surface stays dry and flat. Use a small backing sheet, clear corner, or strip of vellum when the layout needs a defined area.
A clear card sleeve helps protect the finished surface during storage, gifting, or mailing preparation.
What to expect
Keep the cards indoors with dry paper supplies. Work on a clean surface and let ink dry fully before flowers, sleeves, or envelopes are added.