Curated wording samples

Hand-written, occasion-specific messages in three lengths. Use any of them as-is, mix and match, or use them as a starting point for something more personal. For more on the craft of card writing, see our companion notes on warm correspondence.

Short messages For inside a small folded card

Happy 50th. Half a century, and the most interesting half is still ahead.

Fifty deserves a good cake and an honest toast. Here is the toast.

Happy 50th — to the years behind you and the ones still to write.

Medium messages For a 5×7 card with breathing room

Happy 50th birthday. Fifty is a generous age — old enough to know what you are doing, young enough to still be excited about doing it. Here is to a year that uses both.

Half a century. You have built something real with that time — a life, a family, a body of work, a circle of people who would show up for you in any weather. That is the actual measure of a good fifty.

Heartfelt long-form For when the relationship calls for it

Happy 50th birthday. Fifty is a thoughtful age. Most people I know who handled it well used it as a chance to take stock, not in a sentimental way, but in a practical one — what is working, what is not, what they want more of, what they are quietly done with. You have always been good at that kind of honest accounting. I expect this decade to be a productive one, and a happy one, in roughly that order.

Half a century is a real number. Most card-shop birthday cards either dodge it or make a joke out of it, and both moves are wrong. The right move is to say what is true: you have lived a life that has mattered to a lot of people, including me. The next decade is going to be different — different in some good ways and some hard ways and some surprising ways — and it is going to be a privilege to watch you navigate it. Happy 50th.

Design tips for a 50th birthday card

Palette & mood

warm and modern — soft cream and blush with a single confident accent

#F8F1E5 #F4DCD6 #C9A55B #2C1810

Typography

a warm serif for headlines (Cormorant, Lora, or Playfair) paired with a clean humanist sans (Inter, Source Sans) for supporting copy

Imagery direction

one strong piece of imagery — either a single photograph or one bold piece of typography — never both competing on the front

Craft tips

  • Lead with one strong typographic moment and let everything else support it.
  • Limit the palette to three colors on the front of the card; use the fourth as accent only.
  • Leave the inside of the card 70% empty so the handwritten message has room to land.
  • Print on 110lb (300gsm) uncoated cover stock for a tactile, premium feel.
  • Hand-address the envelope. A label tells the recipient nobody really cared.

Printable template preview

50th Birthday

Happy 50th. Half a century, and the most interesting half is still ahead.

CardCraft · 5 × 7 · printable PDF

How the printable template is built

Every 50th birthday template ships with three formats so the same design works whether you print it, text it, or email it. Color profiles are pre-tuned for both screen and CMYK home printing, and bleed and safe areas are pre-marked in the print-ready PDF so nothing important gets trimmed.

The template is opinionated about layout but not about content — the inside is left meaningfully blank so your handwritten or hand-typed message has room to land. Edit the front-of-card copy in any vector editor (Illustrator, Affinity, or a free option like Figma) and you can be ready to print in under a minute.

  • Printable PDF 5×7 inches, print-ready with bleed · print at home or send to a print service
  • Square digital 1080×1350 px · send via messaging app or post on social
  • Email-ready 600 px wide · paste into an email client preview

Wording for specific relationships

13 targeted guides

Hand-written 50th birthday card wording samples calibrated to who you are sending the card to. Each guide is its own page with a relationship-aware essay and six unique messages.

What makes a great 50th birthday card

A great 50th birthday card is not a piece of art that someone happens to write inside. It is a piece of writing that happens to live inside a small piece of art. The design's job is to set the tone in the first second the recipient looks at the envelope, and then to step out of the way so the words can do their work. Every 50th Birthday template in this collection is built with that priority in order — front-of-card art that hints, interior space that defers, and printable formatting that respects whatever you actually want to say.

What that means in practice: the front of the card carries one strong typographic moment, usually the recipient's name or the occasion word. The supporting design — illustration, photograph, or pattern — frames it without competing. The inside of the card is left meaningfully blank. There is no pre-printed sentiment trying to do your job for you, because pre-printed sentiments are how cards end up in a recycling bin instead of on a fridge.

50th Birthday in particular tends to attract one of two failure modes in greeting cards. The first is over-design — too many ornaments, too many fonts, too many colors trying to convey importance through volume. The second is under-design — a generic template with the occasion word swapped in and nothing else considered. Neither feels like the sender meant it. The collection below is curated specifically to avoid both: every card is opinionated about its visual direction, and every card respects the message you are about to add.

If you are unsure which design fits the moment, start with the relationship. Cards for very close people benefit from quieter designs that let a personal message land hard. Cards for less-close people — coworkers, neighbors, the friend of a friend — benefit from slightly more design presence, because the warmth has to come from the card itself rather than the depth of shared history. The design notes on each card detail page call out which direction the template leans, so you can match the card to the recipient instead of the calendar.

Finally, a note on printing. The printable PDF version of every 50th Birthday template is built to standard 5×7 card stock, with bleed and safe areas pre-marked. If you are printing at home, use 110lb (300gsm) uncoated cover stock for the right tactile weight; if you are sending through a print service, soft-proof in CMYK first, because the warm tones in the 50th Birthday palette tend to shift on uncoated paper. Either way, hand-address the envelope. A printed mailing label on a 50th birthday card tells the recipient nobody really cared.

Recommended reading: A short guide to choosing the right paper stock for printable cards — covers weight, finish, and the two specific stocks we recommend for the 50th birthday palette above.

Designs in this collection

4 templates