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A bouquet spelled with your name

Spell a name in wildflowers

Type any name. We draw a soft, hand-illustrated flower per letter — rose, daisy, tulip, bell, star — and lay them out as a frameable bouquet card.

Letters become flowers. Spaces become a small gap.

A bouquet, waiting for a name

Your bouquet appears here.

The flower alphabet

About this card

Name in Flowers turns a name into a small botanical card. Each letter maps to a real flower — A is anemone, B is bluebell, R is rose — and we draw it in a soft, vintage-illustration style with stem and leaves. The result feels like a page from an old herbarium, not a clip-art emoji line-up.

It's the kind of thing that makes a sweet wedding favour, a baby announcement, a frame for a desk or a no-budget greeting card. Type, download, print.

How to use

1. Type any name in the box. 2. Watch the bouquet bloom letter by letter. 3. Press Shuffle blooms to roll a different flower per letter, or Download card to save the bouquet as a PNG you can print, frame or post.

Two-word names get a small gap between them — perfect for first + last name cards.

Frequently asked questions

Is the flower-letter mapping standard?
It's our curated mapping — every letter gets a real flower whose common English name starts with that letter. We chose flowers that recognisably illustrate, so the bouquet reads like a botanical plate.
Can I use the card commercially?
Yes — the illustrations are generated from our own SVG primitives, no stock art. Use the downloaded PNG on invitations, prints, mugs, anything.
Why do some letters get the same shape?
We draw from five base shapes (rose, daisy, tulip, bell, star) tinted to match each flower's typical colour. The shape repeats but the colour and meaning don't.
What about non-Latin names?
We strip accents before mapping, so Beatriz and Beatríz bloom the same. Letters outside A-Z are skipped silently.
Where does the file save to?
Wherever your browser usually puts downloads. The file is named after your typed name, like rosemary.png.
Is the name stored anywhere?
No. Everything runs in your browser — the name never leaves your device, and we don't log anything.