10 Ways to Go Green with Christmas Cards
In case you missed my guest post on Blissful & Domestic last week, here it is in full! Keep in mind, this is meant to inspire- -not to inflict guilt. There are many ways to love our environment. These are just 10 of the ways….
So, let’s talk Christmas cards.
I don’t know about you, but the thought of compiling address, stamping envelopes, and signing 70 Christmas cards during the busiest time of year makes me break out into hives. It feels so overwhelming! And I know it overwhelms our landfills.
Christmas cards usually have a pretty short life span during the holiday season. Most get tossed by the new year…unless you’re my Mom and save them for always (love you, Mom).
Two years ago, my husband and I got inspired when we received a digital newsletter from our college friends, Ryan and Kelsey, and decided that we, too, wanted to go green and send a digital Christmas letter to our family. We still wanted to maintain a personal feel to our correspondence, so we started off by handwriting our letters. Then, we scanned them to the computer, added digital photos and text in PowerPoint, converted the file to pdf, and with the click of a button, emailed our Christmas letter to our closest family and friends. All for the cost of: $0.00.
Here are some glimpses at the pages of our letters to give you a sense of the marriage between the digital and handmade:
So, there you have it! #1 on our list:
#1) Digital “Handmade” Letters. We have made this an annual tradition and aim to get our letter out in November before the holiday mayhem descends by mid-December.
Here are nine other ways that you and your family can go green with Christmas cards this year.
(Note: I am not a salesperson for any of the companies listed below…just an avid fan eager to share some great resources.)
#2) E-Cards: One of my favorite sites for electronic cards is Paperless Post. I’ve used them before with e-vites, and they maintain the feeling one gets from opening an elegant card, all while remaining paperless! You even receive the e-card in an e-envelope that opens when you click it (that’s my favorite part of the whole process). You have a barrage of options to choose from when it comes to format, including 66 templates to which you can add your own photos. They range with price, some of them being free, and others costing a few cents. Some other e-card companies include Blue Mountain & Egreetings.
#3) Audio Postcard: This option is about as simple as it gets and is absolutely free. I created an audio postcard with a birthday message for my husband, and it took less then five minutes. Just visit www.Postcard.fm, upload a picture, upload an mp3, enter email addresses, add a message, and you’re done! You could even record your family giving verbal updates using a digital voice recorder in lieu of a song.
#4) Mobile Postcard: Red Stamp is my new favorite iPhone app. First of all, it’s free! Secondly, it’s a great way to send a holiday greeting straight from your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch directly to your loved ones via text or email. They have a wide variety of Christmas and Hanukkah templates, many of which allow you to upload up to four photos. Include a personal message and with a few clicks, you’re done! It’s very user-friendly. We first learned about this app from my bro-and-sis-in-law who sent Mark a Red Stamp birthday message via text. It really made his day! justWink is another free app with similar features that boasts compatibility with Android smart phones, as well.
#5) Send a Song!: Gather the family around to sing a song to email to your recipients as an mp3. My former boss from New York, Suzy, nannied for a little boy named Sam. Each Christmas, they would record a “rough cut” rendition of their new favorite holiday song and email it to friends and family. It was such a personal and delightful message to receive! (Their cover of “Baby it’s Cold Outside” is about the cutest thing ever.) If you’re not feeling musically inclined, consider delivering a spoken message or holiday poem. The sound of your voice is sure to warm the hearts of your loved ones. Wondering about cheap and easy ways to record your voice? Mac users can use the Garage Band application; smart phone users can record a “voice memo” on their phone and email to themselves; and here’s an article on how to record your voice on a P.C.
#6) Photo Collage: A picture is worth 1,000 words, right? So, why not send 16,000 words with a photo collage! Smilebox is the way to go when creating a free photo collage online. They give you a plethora of options when choosing your own background, font, layout, and photos (up to 16). You also have the ability to add your own music. Share your photo collage with friends and family via email or through a post on Facebook.
#7) Video Slideshow: There are several sites that now offer services for creating video slideshows, and Animoto is one of them. You can easily make a video commemorating the events of your year with music, pictures, and video. All you do is upload your pics/vids and select a song (the site does all of the editing and arranging for you). Then, send it to your friends via email or embed it to your Facebook page or blog. It only costs $2.50 – $5, pennies compared to what you’d spend mailing out Christmas cards. You can also use Smilebox to create a very professional looking slideshow with text, photos, and video.
If you’re set on sending paper cards in the mail, here are some green ways to go about it.
#8) Postcards: Not only do you use a quarter less of the amount of paper when opting for postcards over cards-and-envelopes, you also pay less in postage! (The current postage rate is 32 cents.) Here are some sites that allow you to create customized Christmas postcards: Minted, Tiny Prints, & Zazzle.
#9) Buy Recycled Cards – Consider buying recycled or handmade Christmas cards from your shop down the street. Or explore the wealth of options at your fingertips online. Cards Direct, Cards for Causes, and Pear Tree Greetings all offer recycled paper options for your holiday cards.
#10) D.I.Y. Cards – Craft time! Create your own cards using paper you already have on hand (old holiday gift-wrap, brown paper grocery bags, wallpaper samples, scrapbook paper…you get the picture). Bust out stamps, glitter, and glue, turn up the Bing Crosby Christmas tunes, and make it a family affair!
With these supplies: grocery bag, once-used gift ribbon, zig-zag scrapbook scissors, alphabet stamps, stamp-pad, hot glue, and buttons…
…I made this holiday card!
So, there you have it – – 10 easy, inexpensive, and stress-free ways of going green with your Christmas cards this holiday season. Turns out, it doesn’t have to be a hives-inducing event for you or the environment. (What a relief.)
Happiest of holidays to you and yours.
{Linking up here.}
They’re all great ideas, but it’s that handmade card that caught my eye. In fact you’ve just given me an idea. (I intend to make my cards tomorrow night, and hopefully they’ll still get there for Christmas !).
Love that you found some inspiration here today! Have fun making your cards…your recipients will surely feel so touched to get hand-made Christmas cards, no matter when they arrive!
all great ideas! i am going green because i never ordered mine, so thinking i will do a little email letter. 🙂
Ha ha! That’s a “happy accident” then, I suppose. Once you go green, you may never go back! (It’s super easy.)
A post to my heart! This year I am making little booklets, by re-using the blank pages of different notebooks and a cover of pretty magazine pages. It will be accompanied by the new years wish to fill the year and the booklet with new experiences, sweet memories and a lot of love!
I love this idea! Will you share your little booklets on your blog? I’d love to see them…and make my own. What a great way to give a second life to some pretty pages!
Lots of great ideas, but I have to say the card I like the best is your homemade one at the bottom of the page.
Thanks! That was one of those rare moments of creativity in a short amount of time (which is rare for me).
It’s funny this post came up b/c I just spent today trying to take photos of my Christmas cards that I finally finished (I am a card making fanatic) and I couldn’t get good lighting so I went to hell with this and made some candy instead. The scanning is a really great idea b/c I am so not a fan of ecards so this is like homemade meets digital.
Yes, “the digital handmade cards” are our favorites – – I scanned ours yesterday and am working on adding in some digital photos. It’s sort of the best of both worlds! But candy as an alternative is sweeter! So, don’t throw that idea out the window entirely. 😉
wonderful idea! and i love scanning my hand-written letter! i miss when it was only snail mail 🙂
The scanner really is an incredible tool!
Loving these ideas..especially because I’ve been lazy this year and afraid I won’t get my traditional not so green cards out in time. Thanks for the tips!
Hope they’re helpful, then! 😉 We have ours all written, it’s just a matter of scanning, compressing, emailing…the technical part that is less fun. But it’ll be fast once I buckle down and do it! Ah, procrastination…you’ve foiled me yet again.
What a great post! Thank you! 🙂
My pleasure! I had fun compiling it.