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Set of 6 gay notecards/greeting cards inspired by vintage seaside humour. Set A

Set of 6 gay notecards/greeting cards inspired by vintage seaside humour. Set A

Regular price £10.00 GBP
Regular price Sale price £10.00 GBP
Sale Sold out
Taxes included.

This set of cheeky, joyful and attractive cards are perfect for saying “thank you”, “get well soon”, “happy birthday” or “sorry for ruining your carpet again”. Keep them in a drawer so you’re never short of a card, or gift the set as a cute, naughty present. 

Inspired by vintage British “saucy seaside postcard” humour, and designed to look like something you might discover in a (very gay) antique shop, each card features an original retro design. They’re blank inside for your personal message, and the back page has an appropriately aged “back of a postcard” look, because details - like hydration and Vitamin D - matter.

There are heaps of naughty, funny gay cards out there. But if you’re looking for something that's also memorable, thoughtful, distinctive and dare I say classy, these stand out from the rainbows, glitter and Drag Race slang while still being outrageously gay. Not that there’s anything wrong, rainbows, glitter or Drag Race slang. Girl, these cards slay.

KEY STUFF:
6 x A6 cards (postcard size).
Envelopes supplied.
Tent-folded, blank inside.
Matte finish for easy writing and vintage feel.
This set of six cards is one of three available sets.

About me:
I have a background in marketing and graphic design, and I’m also a writer. Among other things I write the UK’s biggest annual gay adult pantomime. Like my stage shows, these “saucy seaside postcard” designs are a way of taking a piece of mainstream “low culture” and queering it up in way that feels defiantly fun. I’m very upfront that I use AI in the design process, but to be clear: these are not simple, single AI-made images. Each illustration is a complex digital collage made by me, combining multiple (often many) AI-generated and non-AI elements, which I then heavily edit and manipulate, pulling them together into one composition, then applying printing and ageing effects. (AI is great at producing individual elements that seem to have been drawn in a certain way at a certain period in history, but it cannot compose a scene that tells a visual joke; and the one time I asked it to draw a helter-skelter, the contraptions it showed me gave me nightmares for a week.) That’s the way I like it – I’m not interested in a quick fix, but in using digital tools to create something that is inherently me, telling jokes my way, and hopefully making you smile.

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