Kitchen Supplies Flower Card Template
“Stemming” from my love of picking up weekly flowers, these illustrated cards make for a creative twist on the gift of florals.
PRINTING & PAPER
Upon completing checkout, you will receive an email containing a PDF with both your flower card template and a print guide. For successful printing at home, I advise doing a test print on regular printer paper, but for the finished product, using a 8.5 × 11 inch card stock. This paper is sturdy enough to hold the flowers and still thin enough to go through a basic home printer.
You can order the card stock I use here - cream looks best with these design colors but feel free to get creative!
FLOWERS
Each design template is suitable for 1-3 stems, though if you want to add more, you can cut past the dotted lines, just be cautious not to force the stems through to avoid tearing the card stock. I also advise not using flowers with thick stems as they may weigh down the card, though a single sunflower may look adorable!
Flowers that work best are poppies, ranunculus, carnations, daisies, baby’s breath, rose buds, peonies, and tulips.
Trim your flowers at your discretion, but what typically looks best is cutting them a quarter inch shorter than the bottom of the card. My hack for easy cutting? Dermaplaning razors! But fret not, scissors work too ;)
“Stemming” from my love of picking up weekly flowers, these illustrated cards make for a creative twist on the gift of florals.
PRINTING & PAPER
Upon completing checkout, you will receive an email containing a PDF with both your flower card template and a print guide. For successful printing at home, I advise doing a test print on regular printer paper, but for the finished product, using a 8.5 × 11 inch card stock. This paper is sturdy enough to hold the flowers and still thin enough to go through a basic home printer.
You can order the card stock I use here - cream looks best with these design colors but feel free to get creative!
FLOWERS
Each design template is suitable for 1-3 stems, though if you want to add more, you can cut past the dotted lines, just be cautious not to force the stems through to avoid tearing the card stock. I also advise not using flowers with thick stems as they may weigh down the card, though a single sunflower may look adorable!
Flowers that work best are poppies, ranunculus, carnations, daisies, baby’s breath, rose buds, peonies, and tulips.
Trim your flowers at your discretion, but what typically looks best is cutting them a quarter inch shorter than the bottom of the card. My hack for easy cutting? Dermaplaning razors! But fret not, scissors work too ;)
“Stemming” from my love of picking up weekly flowers, these illustrated cards make for a creative twist on the gift of florals.
PRINTING & PAPER
Upon completing checkout, you will receive an email containing a PDF with both your flower card template and a print guide. For successful printing at home, I advise doing a test print on regular printer paper, but for the finished product, using a 8.5 × 11 inch card stock. This paper is sturdy enough to hold the flowers and still thin enough to go through a basic home printer.
You can order the card stock I use here - cream looks best with these design colors but feel free to get creative!
FLOWERS
Each design template is suitable for 1-3 stems, though if you want to add more, you can cut past the dotted lines, just be cautious not to force the stems through to avoid tearing the card stock. I also advise not using flowers with thick stems as they may weigh down the card, though a single sunflower may look adorable!
Flowers that work best are poppies, ranunculus, carnations, daisies, baby’s breath, rose buds, peonies, and tulips.
Trim your flowers at your discretion, but what typically looks best is cutting them a quarter inch shorter than the bottom of the card. My hack for easy cutting? Dermaplaning razors! But fret not, scissors work too ;)