The Editors Mailbox

The Editors Mailbox

Make a Wooden Greeting Card

comments (1) May 9th, 2009 in blogs

MBerger Matt Berger, contributor
thumbs up 5 users recommend

This year for Mothers Day, my wife gets a wood greeting card made of maple veneer and decorated with a hand-written doodle and message.
A thin strip of masking tape supports the fold like a book binder. 
What could be more personal than a wood greeting card from a woodworker? Only veneer, scissors, tape, and thoughtful message required.
This year for Mothers Day, my wife gets a wood greeting card made of maple veneer and decorated with a hand-written doodle and message. - CLICK TO ENLARGE

This year for Mother's Day, my wife gets a wood greeting card made of maple veneer and decorated with a hand-written doodle and message.


I decided to make my wife a mother's day card this year rather than sorting through the greeting card racks at the local drug store and suffering through their sappy copy writing. 

My idea, which came to me in the shower like most of my crazy ideas, was to use layers of thin wood veneer to craft a handmade card and envelope, decorating it with an elaborate marquetry design in the shape of my message. Brilliant, I thought. Have you ever seen a wooden greeting card before? For a woodworker, you can't get more personal than that. 

With my deadline looming, I pulled out a stack of decorative veneers, my utility knife, some masking tape and wood glue, and got to work cutting small wood shapes of various colors from my collection of bubinga, lacewood and maple veneers. Let's just say, my idea didn't work out at all. Veneer warps something terrible when you apply glue to it without a flat clamping press of some sort. Eventually it began to look more like a clamshell than a greeting card. Not to mention, writing a message from marquetry pieces is easier said than done.

Frustrated and nearly out of veneer, I scraped my work and simplified the project. I cut a single piece of maple veneer in the shape of a card, made a score with my utility knife down the centerline to facilitate the fold, and decorated it with a hand-drawn doodle and message. I added some extra support to the wood fibers on the fold with a thin strip of masking tape.

It's not the veneered masterpiece that Silas Kopf would give his mom, but hey, it's the thought that counts.


posted in: blogs, maple, greeting card


Comments (1)

bowyer bowyer writes: Great idea, simple, elegant and keeps me out of the card stores
Posted: 8:32 am on May 13th

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