What a Party
Thank You & Celebration Photo Card
Express your gratitude with a photo-filled thank you card.
A shimmering disco ball at the center with radiant sparkles and a dark blue background, featuring bold, reflective text.
Create This CardThank You & Celebration Photo Card
Express your gratitude with a photo-filled thank you card.
A shimmering disco ball at the center with radiant sparkles and a dark blue background, featuring bold, reflective text.
Create This CardYour card opens just like a real greeting card — add photos on the left, your message on the right, or simply send a heartfelt message
Add photos for an extra surprise, or send just a message — it’s your card
Photos tumble out of the card like real printed pictures
Download every photo at full resolution
Download the card to keep offline forever
Create and send without an account
Pick from hundreds of free templates
Upload photos from your device
Add a personal note to your card
Share via link — text, email, or WhatsApp
The "What a Party" card opens on a deep midnight-blue background with a disco ball sitting dead center, throwing silver and gold light in every direction. Rainbow-colored sparkles scatter across the screen as the animation runs, and the bold reflective text reads like something you'd see on a club marquee. The silver and gold tones bounce off each other — nothing here is muted or understated. The overall feeling is loud: this card does not whisper, it announces. It suits a moment where the event actually earned some noise.
This card fits two types of recipients well. First, your friend who threw a 40th birthday party that ran until 2am — the one who rented a fog machine and built a playlist for six months. They put real effort into the night, and a plain white card with cursive text would feel like a mismatch. Second, your work colleague who organized the office end-of-year dinner that people are still talking about in January. They handled the venue, the catering, and the music without complaining, and they deserve a thank-you that matches the energy they brought.
For photos, lean into what actually happened that night. A shot of the dance floor mid-song — blurry feet, colored lights overhead — fits the silver and gold palette without any editing. A candid of the host mid-laugh, drink in hand, works better than any posed group photo. If there was a photo booth or a moment under actual party lights, that image will sit naturally against the midnight-blue background. Recipients can tap any photo in the card to download it at full resolution, so the photos you include are ones they'll actually keep.
Yes, and it's worth thinking about before you hit send. This design is loud by intention — the disco ball, the rainbow sparkles, the reflective gold text. If the gathering you're thanking someone for was quiet or emotionally heavy (a small memorial dinner, a hospital fundraiser, an intimate engagement dinner for two), this card would feel jarring rather than generous. Save it for nights that were genuinely high-energy. For anything understated or tender, a calmer design will land better.
Photos taken under warm or colored artificial light do the most work here. Think stage lighting, string lights, neon signs, or a well-lit dance floor — those tones sit naturally against the midnight-blue and gold without clashing. Avoid bright daylight shots or photos with a lot of white or beige in them; they tend to look flat against the dark background. High-contrast images with some visible color in the light source are your best bet.
Keep it short. The design is already doing a lot visually — the disco ball, the sparkles, the bold text — so a long message competes with it rather than adding to it. Two or three sentences is enough. Name the specific thing you're thanking them for, say what made the night memorable for you personally, and stop there. A message that runs to several paragraphs starts to feel like it belongs in a different kind of card entirely.
Easily. The design isn't locked to birthdays — it's built around the visual language of a big night out, which maps onto any event that had dancing, music, and people staying late. A wedding reception thank-you to the couple who threw the party, a note to friends who hosted New Year's Eve, or even a thank-you to a DJ or event planner would all suit this card. The one requirement is that the event actually felt like a party.