Thursday, December 17, 2009

Museum of Modern Art Cards on Sale

All of the Museum of Modern Art's holiday cards are now 50% off.  The Museum's New Year's card is sold out, but dozens of other designs are still available to send now or put aside for next year. 


MoMA's store is especially known for its intricate pop-ups by Robert Sabuda and other talented young designers.

The cards don't have the Museum's name on them, by the way. 

Anne

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Suggestions for Nonprofits That Are Considering Producing Holiday Cards

The end of the 2009 holiday card season inspired me to come up with 11 Suggestions for Nonprofits That Are Considering Producing Holiday Cards.  See if you agree with these.


1. Use good quality paper stock. Some cards (not on CardsThatGive.org) are printed on what feels like thick copy paper. 80# is the minimum. 100# is even better.

2. Put your cards on line early. Some large businesses place their orders in the late summer. Traffic is heavy in September. If your cards appear later than this, you have missed customers.

3. Essential: include your nonprofit's name and website address on the card, as well as a brief description, if the charity's purpose is not clear from the name alone. The card should also mention that the purchase of the card benefited the charity. Many buyers look for this.

4. Another important one, I think: keep greetings simple and dignified. Whimsical greetings with exclamation points, dreamy or emotional messages, puns, and other quirky sentiments can deter some buyers.

5. Make your cards easy to find on your website, and easy to order. If you ask buyers to download and print out a PDF, or call or email an individual who is not always available, you will lose sales.

6. Don't put the date on the card, even in small print on the back. You can sell -- and people can send -- cards for several seasons if they're undated.

7. Print the card greeting in a clean, easy to read, classic font. Simple is best.

8. The back of the card may contain facts about the charity, sponsor logos, acknowledgements, and other details. To reduce clutter, consider printing the information in the same font style, size, and color, with logos as small as possible.

9. Choose children's art carefully. Many organizations use these images for holiday cards; they can be charming, but the art must be well done and pleasing. Bonus points for images that are a little different. Lots of snowmen out there.

10. Choose a card image that suggests the holiday spirit.  A vase of spring flowers, a monkey, and a summer boating scene are images that have appeared on nonprofit holiday cards this year.  Holiday images usually sell better.

11. If you hope to appeal to buyers from across the country, consider whether you want to feature images of local skyscrapers, stadiums, and other icons, beloved though they may be.

Let me know if you disagree, or if you have more suggestions to add to the list.

Anne

Friday, December 11, 2009

First Day of Hanukkah

On the first day of Hanukkah, my true love sent to me... an eCard!  Here are a few nonprofits that have created Hanukkah eGreetings:

Chabad.org (animated and still)


The Jewish Federation of Greater Des Moines (some still, some animated)

The Jewish Museum (still)

The Jewish National Fund - Australia (still)

Hanukkah ends on December 19th.  Please let me know if you know of more nonprofit Hanukkah eCards.


Anne

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

Sale Cards

You have plenty of time! I just ordered our cards yesterday. And cards are starting to go on sale. All Shutterfly "Support a Cause" cards are 20% off, for example.

Shutterfly prints cards for the Special Olympics, the American Lung Association, the World Wildlife Fund, LiveStrong, and Heifer International.

The price for 101 cards is now $120.19 (instead of $150.49), which includes personalization and insertion of several photos, if you want to do that. (Smaller quantities are available.)

I'll let you know about future sales.

Anne








Tuesday, December 1, 2009

Postcards


Why aren't there more holiday postcards? Not just flat cards in an envelope. Cards that you can stick a stamp on and drop in the mail. Less paper. 28 cents instead of 44. You could print a photo or a great image on one side and a message on the other.


I can only find one nonprofit that offers these: The Pine Tree Society, which helps disabled children and adults in Maine.


Don't you think it would be excellent to have more holiday postcards?


Anne

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Tribute Card Section is Up


We used to get a pecan pie every year as a business gift from someone my husband worked with. That was okay, but we'd eat it and then we'd feel bad about it. Our new Tribute Card section should have been around back then! A donation in our honor to send a child to school or fight cancer or plant some trees would have made us feel great.

This section is new, and we'll keep adding non-profits to it. But please scroll down the list and see if you can think of someone who might appreciate a donation instead of a fruitcake.

Anne

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

New Tribute Card Section


I'm excited about our upcoming Holiday Tribute Card section. Tribute cards represent a donation to a charity -- typically $5-$25 per card -- in the recipient's honor. They are generous and much-appreciated gestures that can provide remarkable benefits to non-profits.


I'm gathering information about a great selection of these cards, and hope to put them on the site within a day or two.


Some of the Tribute Cards will come from organizations already on the site; others will be from charities that are new to us.


If you know of a wonderful charity that offers a holiday tribute card, please let me know.


Anne

Friday, November 6, 2009

Central Park Conservancy


In August, a fierce storm devastated New York City's Central Park. Within minutes, 70-mile-an-hour winds destroyed more than 500 beautiful trees and damaged hundreds more. With cleanup and restoration costs estimated in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, it's a good time to support the Central Park Conservancy by sending their holiday cards.





The tranquil, snow-frosted scenes are lovely reminders of what a treasure Central Park is.














Anne




















Thursday, October 29, 2009

Last year, Chicago Friends of the Ovarian Cancer Research Fund, a small group of Chicago residents with personal connections to ovarian cancer, decided to create holiday cards to benefit OCRF. Brian Munck, whose mother was very ill, offered to donate the materials, packaging, and printing services to produce the holiday cards through his company, Graphic Suisse, Inc.



Jill Gray, another OCRF supporter, asked Chicago-based graphic designer Marian Williams to be a part of the project. Marian generously donated her time to create four festive card designs.



Income from the cards will help fund ovarian cancer research. Although Brian's mother died as the cards were being delivered, he hopes that funds from the cards will help make a difference in other women's lives.


Because of Brian Munck's and Marian Williams' donated goods and services, the entire price of the cards goes directly to OCRF's research programs.


Anne

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Wildflower Seed Card from New York Public Library


Here's a great card from the New York Public Library shop. Wildflower seeds are embedded in the (recycled) paper. After the holidays, your friends or clients can plant the card and soon - if all goes according to plan - Baby Blue-Eyes, Chinese Houses, and other wildflowers will appear.

The cards are $3.75 each, but how many cards come with Catchfly seeds? And they help the New York Public Library.

The card also comes in shooting snowflake and red bird designs.

Anne

Sunday, October 11, 2009

New Jonathan Adler Card for God's Love We Deliver


Designer Jonathan Adler has created a vivid, happy card for God's Love We Deliver.

GLWD prepares and delivers nutritious, high-quality meals to men, women, and children in the New York City area who -- because they are living with HIV/AIDS, cancer, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's diseases, and other life-altering illnesses -- are unable to provide or prepare meals for themselves.

The cards cost $17 a set, $12.75 of which goes directly to provide meals to those who need them.

Anne

Thursday, October 8, 2009

Humble Hearts School for the Deaf, Nairobi

Humble Hearts School for the Deaf in Nairobi, Kenya, educates students who are orphans or from poor families that cannot afford the costs of special education. The children learned how to make block prints in early 2007, and since then they have created sweet, simple holiday cards each year.

A new residential cottage at the school will open soon, but students still lack beds, tables, and additional furnishings for the building. Card purchases will help furnish the new space.

A set of ten cards costs $13, of which $9.75 goes directly to Humble Hearts.

Anne

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Redlands Christian Migrant Association


No, it’s not a typo. Redlands Christian Migrant Association receives 680% of the price of its holiday cards to help children of migrant farm workers in Florida.

For every $15 set of cards, RCMA receives $6.45 after production costs. State and federal sources then match that $6.45 sixteen to one. So a $15 card purchase results in $103.20 for RCMA.

The largest non-profit child-care provider in Florida, RCMA provides quality child care and early education for nearly 8,000 children of migrant farm workers and rural, low-income families throughout the state. More than 2,000 children are on waiting lists.

Anne

Friday, September 25, 2009

New eCards Section


We’ll be adding more eCards to our site in the coming weeks. Visitors have been asking for virtual cards, but at first it seemed that including them might draw supporters away from the traditional cards that provide more income to non-profits.

I suspect, though, that the two distinct types of cards might appeal to different audiences. And while the free eCards don’t create immediate income, they spread information and awareness, which is valuable, too.

We’ll keep in touch with the non-profits and see what happens.

Anne

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Perkins School for the Blind

Our newest non-profit is the Perkins School for the Blind, which was founded in 1829 and was the nation’s first school for the visually impaired.

Perkins students created the three card designs by cutting textured fabrics into holiday shapes. The cards also include the artists' comments about their designs. Here are 12-year-old Rose Ellen Moynihan’s thoughts about the snowflakes she created: “Snowflakes are frosty covered rain. They are quiet, different, and very pretty.”

Eight-five percent of the card price is used to support Perkins' educational programs.

Anne

Monday, September 7, 2009

100% Recycled Cards

A new feature: an icon that marks the cards printed on 100% recycled stock. I hadn't expected that only five of the more than 100 charities on our site would receive this icon: Project Bread - The Walk for Hunger, Marine Mammal Center, Farm Sanctuary, Wilderness Committee, and National Arbor Day Foundation. We'll watch for others.

Other cards on the site are partially recycled. Heal the Bay, for example, uses paper that is "50% recycled, 30% post-consumer waste, elemental chlorine free, and manufactured with 100% renewable energy offsets."

A few non-profits use stock that, while not recycled, has been certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC). This means that the paper comes from managed forests with criteria for tree replanting, habitat preservation, elimination of illegal logging, and other practices. Chicago Lights and the Courage Center, for example, use FSC-certified stock.

Still other organizations include a few recycled cards among their card offerings.

So the 100% recycled icon doesn't cover all environmentally-friendly options, but we hope you find it helpful.

Anne

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Friends of Boston's Homeless

In October we'll be adding cards by Friends of Boston's Homeless, one of the largest providers of homeless services in New England. Their cards feature whimsical drawings by Robert Guillemin, known in Boston as Sidewalk Sam. My favorite is Frog Pond (at left). FOBH receives 85% of the card price for its programs.


Anne

Sunday, August 16, 2009

New Non-Profits and Designs Coming

Over the next few weeks you will see some new non-profits on the site – we hope to add the Perkins School for the Blind and the Western Canada Wilderness Committee (one of whose cards is shown above), for example.

We’ll also be adding new cards from current charities, such as a new hand-painted Egyptian papyrus card from Ten Thousand Villages.

Please keep checking back for new offerings.
Anne

Thursday, August 13, 2009

Pine Tree Society, Maine


Each summer, Maine's Pine Tree Society invites artists from all over the state to submit designs for their holiday cards. Site visitors submit comments about the artists' work, and the Society selects two images in July. We're happy to include the Pine Tree Society, which helps children and adults with disabilities, as our newest non-profit. Want to see which images they picked? You can view -- and order -- them here.

Anne

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Cards for Rosh Hashanah


We have a new Rosh Hashanah section; please take a look if you plan to send greetings to commemorate the Jewish New Year. This year, the holiday begins at sundown on September 18th. We hope to add more non-profits to this section as we find them.

Anne

Thursday, July 16, 2009

New E-Card Section


In response to many requests, next month we’ll add an e-card section to CardsThatGive. Do you send e-cards? Do you appreciate receiving them? Here are my thoughts:

Pro:
- inexpensive and easy to send
- environmentally friendly
- can inform recipients about an organization or issue
- can be beautiful, entertaining, ingenious

Con:
- some recipients don’t open them (too busy, wary of viruses)
- can be less personal, with more fleeting impact than a card
- usually no financial benefit to the charity involved (some require a donation, but most are free)

Please watch for our new section, coming soon.
Anne

Sunday, July 5, 2009

It's July, but 2009 Cards are Coming

A steamy July weekend in Houston is a perfect time to start thinking about holiday cards. Over the next few weeks CardsThatGive will start adding 2009 cards to our gallery.

A few organizations -- National Arbor Day Foundation, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Chicago Lights, Marwen -- have already posted some images of their new offerings, and more charities will follow soon. This makes sense, actually, as many businesses begin preparing for their large holiday mailings in the summer. I think that non-profits whose cards aren't available till late in the fall could be missing some important customers.
Anne