Understanding Why Pet Christmas Cards Are Outpacing Children’s Cards
As someone who has spent years mentoring print-on-demand and dropshipping entrepreneurs, I have learned that the real growth opportunities rarely sit in the “obvious” categories. Holiday cards are a perfect example. On the surface, it would be easy to assume that children’s Christmas photo cards are the main engine of the category. But recent data from major players shows a different picture emerging: pets are quietly taking the lead.
This is not a cute side trend anymore. It is a structural shift in how families, couples, and even single households tell their holiday stories. If you run an on-demand printing or dropshipping business, understanding why pet Christmas cards are growing faster than traditional child-centric designs is the difference between chasing a saturated segment and owning a profitable niche.
What The Data Really Says About Pets, Kids, And Holiday Cards
The starting point is to acknowledge that physical holiday cards are still big business. The Greeting Card Association estimates that U.S. consumers buy around 6.5 billion greeting cards every year, generating roughly 8 billion in sales, with Christmas cards as the leading seasonal category at about 1.6 billion cards sold annually. USPS’s Household Diary Study found that more than 1.3 billion holiday greeting cards were mailed in the year ending September 30, 2018, a 3.8% increase over a three-year period, even as overall First-Class Mail volumes declined. In other words, the channel is under pressure, but it is far from dead.

At the same time, consumer attitudes are clearly evolving. A OnePoll survey of 2,000 U.S. adults reported by a major news outlet found that six in ten people say they now receive fewer Christmas cards than before, and almost three-quarters of them are not upset about it. About 30% do not plan to send any cards, and 44% say they actively hope the decline continues. Cost and digital alternatives are driving that cooling: 60% cite the price of cards and postage, while 58% feel digital communication makes cards less necessary.
That sounds discouraging until you look at more targeted research. Better Homes & Gardens reported that in a Shutterfly/OnePoll survey, 59% of Gen Z respondents think the Christmas card tradition should stay as it is, and 62% of millennials prefer physical holiday cards over digital ones. Across age groups, 55% of respondents favor customized cards over generic designs. When you unpack that combination, a pattern emerges: people are less willing to send generic, obligation-driven cards, but they are very willing to spend on cards that feel genuinely personal and fun.

Pets Already Outshine Babies On Many Holiday Cards
Shutterfly’s Holiday Card Report is one of the clearest signals that pets are reshaping this market. The company expects to produce over 180 million holiday cards in the 2024 season. Within that volume, about 11% of cards feature a family pet, while only about 3% feature a new baby. That translates to roughly one in nine cards showcasing a pet and a much smaller share highlighting a newborn.

Regionally, Shutterfly notes that customers in the Northeast, and states like Vermont in particular, are especially likely to include pets. Vermont comes close to 16% of cards including pets, while North Dakota shows nearly 5% featuring new babies. The directional signal is consistent: when customers choose a “star” for their card, pets now appear more frequently than newborns.
Generational Trends: Pets Versus Children On Cards
A Vistaprint survey of 800 U.S. adults planning to send holiday cards in 2024 adds another layer. It found that 46% of respondents plan to feature pets on their cards. By comparison, only about 16% across all generations intend to send cards that show only their children. Among millennials, that figure rises to about 24%, which is still materially lower than the share planning to feature pets at all.
The same survey shows that 69% of people prefer photo cards, with preference strongest among Gen Z and millennials. Younger adults are highly visual and highly social, but they still value print: 61% overall prefer printed cards over digital, and many others like both equally. They also invest time in personalization. More than half of respondents say they plan to write unique messages to each recipient, and significant portions of millennials and Gen X spend at least 30 minutes choosing and personalizing card designs.
Taken together, the Shutterfly and Vistaprint data points indicate that pets are no longer a side character.

They now rival, and in some contexts surpass, children as the focal point of holiday card imagery.
Physical Cards Are Pivoting, Not Dying
To reconcile the “cards are declining” narrative with the “pet cards are booming” reality, look at what people actually value. According to the Better Homes & Gardens report, 55% of respondents prefer customized cards, and younger generations in particular are open to integrating technology. About 57% of Americans said they used AI tools to help craft holiday cards, whether for copy ideas or design assistance. Card companies are also experimenting with QR codes that link to custom videos and with designs tied to charitable donations.
At the same time, Vistaprint found that 88% of respondents love receiving holiday cards, and 40% highlighted the simple joy of getting a physical card in the mail. The version of holiday cards that is fading is the impersonal, mass-produced family newsletter. The version that is growing is the hyper-personal, visually rich, often humorous card where pets are front and center.

Why Pet Christmas Cards Are Growing Faster Than Children’s Cards
Across the entrepreneurs I mentor, the same thing keeps showing up in customer photos, reviews, and sales reports: people consistently over-invest in their pets. Cards are just one more expression of that.
Humanizing Pets And The Rise Of “Fur Families”
Pet ownership and spending in the United States are at record levels. SoFi’s analysis of pet holiday trends reports that about two-thirds of U.S. households have a pet, and consumers spent nearly $137 billion on pets in the last year, up roughly 11% from the year before. Holiday gifting is mainstream: 70% of owners typically buy their pets gifts, 75% plan to do so this year, and 89% expect to spend something specifically to increase their pet’s holiday joy. More than a quarter of gifters spend more than $100 on holiday pet gifts.
Pets are woven into holiday rituals far beyond toys and treats. According to the same SoFi data, about 58% of pets appear in holiday photos, 47% have personalized decor, 45% get special meals, and 40% wear holiday outfits. Pettable’s survey of 1,000 Americans found that 64% plan to buy Christmas presents for their pets, further underscoring that most owners treat pets as family members.
When nearly six in ten households are putting their pets into holiday photos and almost half give them custom decor, featuring those animals on the front of a Christmas card is the natural next step. For couples without children or for adults who delay parenthood, a dog or cat is often the most photogenic and emotionally central “family member” they have. A pet card lets them participate fully in the tradition without feeling like they have to explain a lack of kids.

Lower Emotional Risk And Higher Humor Potential
There is also a qualitative difference between pet cards and child-focused cards. Pet misbehavior is charming; child misbehavior can be fraught. That gap is gold for card designers.
The 2025 holiday collection from Banter & Charm, sold through print-on-demand platforms like Minted and Zazzle, is a good illustration. Many designs revolve around the classic “naughty or nice” concept, using kids’ scowls and pets’ bad behavior as the joke. Cards like “We’ve been nice-ish” or “Mostly nice with a slight chance of naughty” work especially well for pets, because audiences read the mischief as cute rather than concerning.
Some designs focus purely on pet-centered chaos, such as “Making a List” for dogs that chew everything in sight, or “A Single FaLaLa” featuring cats attacking Christmas trees, created using the designer’s own cats. These concepts practically invite customers to send in a photo of their dog wrecking the wrapping paper or their cat perched in the tree. SoFi’s data shows that 37% of owners worry about pets knocking over Christmas trees and 26% worry about pets stealing food, so this is not abstract; it is a lived annoyance that turns into shared humor when it appears on a card.
Parents are understandably sensitive about how their children are portrayed, especially when cards are preserved as keepsakes. Jokes about “naughty” kids can land awkwardly in some families. With pets, the same gag is almost universally accepted. That gives pet cards a wider comedic range and makes them easier to share with colleagues, neighbors, and distant relatives.

Accessible To More Households Than Child-Focused Cards
Children’s cards are, by definition, limited to households with kids. Pet cards are not. They resonate with singles, couples without children, empty nesters, and multi-pet households. Vistaprint’s survey showed that nearly half of card senders plan to feature pets; that is significantly more than the share planning child-only designs, even among millennials, who are traditionally the core age group for young families.
SoFi’s research also shows that pets inspire multi-generational gifting. In families with children, 61% say kids give gifts to the pet, and nearly one in three grandparents buy presents for “grand-pets.” That tells you something important: pets are relationship assets that span generations. When your card designs feature those animals, you are speaking to a broader emotional network than a card built solely around kids.
From the entrepreneur’s standpoint, that means the addressable market for pet cards is simply larger. You can sell pet-themed cards to a child-free millennial couple, and you can also sell them to a grandparent who wants a card showcasing the family dog. You cannot make the reverse assumption about children’s cards.
Content Creation Is Easier With Pets Than With Kids
Creating a great family photo with small children can feel like a production: outfits, timing, moods, and coordination all have to line up. Many parents, especially mothers, describe this as a “mental load” that is hard to justify, an argument echoed in the Better Homes & Gardens coverage of social media debates about cards.
Pets lower the bar. Shutterfly’s holiday trends report notes that customers now include an average of 4.5 photos per card, up 32% versus 2020 and 21% versus 2023, reflecting a move toward multi-photo storytelling. When you scroll recent cards, you see a consistent pattern: quick selfies, candid shots of dogs in the snow, cats lurking under the tree, and pets flopped on couches in matching pajamas.
Content from Shutterfly’s own Ideas & Inspiration hub and from partners like Chris Loves Julia reinforces this approach. Rather than insisting on a perfect outdoor shoot, they encourage families to use real-life images: at-home backdrops, casual selfies, candid lifestyle scenes, or one highlight image from a favorite trip or moment. Pet-focused guides from Minted emphasize similar tactics, including using simple props such as festive collars, scarves, or light-up antlers, while warning that cats often resist accessories and should not be forced into anything that stresses them.
For an overwhelmed parent, it is far easier to grab a candid photo of the dog under the tree than to coordinate a full-family portrait with young kids. Pet cards align with the low-friction, high-authenticity style consumers increasingly prefer, while still producing visually compelling designs that print well.

What This Means For On-Demand Printing And Dropshipping Businesses
When you put the consumer behavior and card statistics together, the conclusion for e-commerce operators is straightforward: pet Christmas cards are no longer a side category. They deserve the same strategic focus you may currently reserve for children’s cards, if not more.
The Pet Segment Is Already Validated At Scale
This is not an untested niche. Shutterfly is producing around 180 million holiday cards and reports that about one in nine feature pets. Vistaprint finds that almost half of its surveyed senders plan to include pets. Major card brands have built dedicated pet collections: Minted’s pet holiday cards position animals as the main subject; Zazzle runs pet-focused design challenges with product lines extending into posters, pillows, and mugs; Nations Photo Lab, PhotoAffections, Truly Engaging, and others offer pet Christmas card categories or dog-specific sets.
On marketplaces, pet card sets perform well. The Best Card Company’s “Christmas Dogs” greeting card set holds a customer rating around 4.6 out of 5 stars based on more than a hundred reviews at a mid-range price point a little above twenty dollars, roughly $1.70 per card. That combination of volume, price, and satisfaction is exactly what you want to see when targeting a niche.
Pet Customers Are Willing To Spend And Personalize
Pet owners do not behave like reluctant card buyers. They behave like enthusiasts. According to SoFi, 82% of pet owners spend at least $25 more than usual on their pets during the holidays, and 34% spend at least $100 more. A large share dress their pets in holiday attire, with 71% of those who dress pets buying sweaters and 61% using themed collars or harnesses. About 35% even purchase matching pajamas for themselves and their pets. Those purchases are not just for fun at home; they feed directly into photo opportunities for cards.
On the card side, Vistaprint reports that younger generations in particular are willing to increase their card budgets. Half of millennials and more than a third of Gen Z respondents plan to spend more on cards in 2024 than in 2023, and most of them expect to spend above twenty dollars. Many of those buyers are using online printing services that allow more customization, which also raises average order value.
Better Homes & Gardens notes that 55% of people prefer customized cards, and more than half of respondents in their survey said they used AI tools to help craft holiday card messages. This willingness to experiment with technology, combined with higher pet-related spending, creates perfect conditions for on-demand products that offer personalization with relatively low marginal cost.
Seasonality And Operational Timing
Operationally, pet cards follow the same seasonal curve as the broader category, but with a few nuances. Shutterfly’s Holiday Card Report shows that holiday card orders generally peak around the week of Cyber Monday, with early surges beginning around Halloween in U.S. territories and military post offices, and Veteran’s Day on the mainland. High-volume states like California and Texas see their first meaningful spikes shortly after.
USPS publishes recommended mailing deadlines each holiday season, and Minted’s etiquette guidance suggests mailing domestic Christmas cards about two to three weeks before Christmas, and international cards four to six weeks out. For on-demand and dropshipping sellers, that means your designs and product pages must be fully live, search-optimized, and tested by late October if you want to capture early planners, with promotional pushes intensifying through Thanksgiving and Cyber Monday.
Service expectations are rising at the same time. Nations Photo Lab has run early Black Friday promotions featuring up to 60% off and free shipping above a certain order value. Truly Engaging advertises discounts as high as 65% off plus free shipping during key sale periods. PhotoAffections offers rush services where orders placed before a certain cutoff print in one day and ship via overnight delivery, and even “Lightning Service” that prints the same day. Shutterfly reports that about one in five holiday card orders now include pre-addressed envelopes, and a meaningful share of customers use their Direct Mail service to have cards mailed directly.
The lesson is clear: if you partner with print labs or dropship suppliers, you need to know exactly which service levels they can reliably support for November and December. Pet card buyers are no more forgiving of late deliveries than any other card customer.
Designing Pet Christmas Cards That Outsell Children’s Cards
Once you accept that the demand is there, the next question is design strategy. Pet cards that sell tend to combine three things: a clear creative position, alignment with real-life use cases, and painless customization.
Clarify Your Positioning Within The Pet Space
“Pet Christmas cards” is not a single style. The segment already contains distinct micro-niches.
There are photographic, family-style designs where the pet is part of a broader family portrait. Shutterfly and Minted excel here, encouraging at-home scenes that feel editorial but achievable with a tripod or a phone, such as the “grand family portrait” trend Chris Loves Julia describes. There are also highly stylized, artist-made animal cards, like Pergamo Paper Goods’ collage-based illustrations featuring anthropomorphic animals in sweaters, party dresses, and scenes like a “gay moose under the mistletoe.” These appeal to buyers who want visually striking, display-worthy art more than personal snapshots.
Humorous and sarcastic cards make up another pillar. Banter & Charm’s “naughty or nice” themes, “nice-ish” captions, and pet-shaming setups are examples. Pear Tree’s catalog of twenty-five pun-based sayings for pet cards, such as “Happy Howlidays,” “Have a Meowry Christmas,” and “We Woof You a Merry Christmas,” gives you a ready-made vocabulary of wordplay.
As an entrepreneur, you do not need to cover every angle at once. In fact, a tight focus often performs better. Decide whether your brand voice is sentimental, witty, art-forward, inclusive, or some combination, and design your pet line accordingly.
Match Designs To Proven Use Cases
Pet cards sell best when they map to specific storytelling needs your customers already have.
One common use case is introducing a new pet. Minted’s pet holiday card guidance explicitly highlights new pet introductions as a reason to send pet-centric cards, and Zazzle’s designs include “year in review” formats where a new animal joins the family narrative. Here, multi-photo layouts work especially well: one close-up of the pet, one playful or candid shot, and one family photo where the pet appears alongside people. Shutterfly’s finding that the average card now contains 4.5 photos tells you customers are comfortable with density; they want small collages, not single images.
Another use case is documenting long-running traditions. In one Facebook example from a poodle enthusiasts’ group, the card creator has staged an annual Christmas card photo shoot for thirty-two consecutive years, keeping one card from each year. The series records both the pain of losing older dogs and the joy of welcoming new ones. When you design pet card templates, think about how they will look side by side over a decade. Consistent typography, flexible photo grids, and room for evolving pet lineups make cards more collectible.
A third use case is gifting to pet lovers. Pergamo’s illustrated animal cards, Minted’s custom pet portraits, Zazzle’s “Twelve Dogs of Christmas” collections, and Shutterfly’s pet-themed ornaments show how card designs can extend into framed prints, pillows, mugs, and other gifts. If your print partner supports it, consider building coordinated product families where a customer can buy a card, a matching ornament, and a small framed print using the same artwork.
Lean Into Humor, Wordplay, And Real-Life Chaos
Pet cards thrive on personality. Pear Tree recommends selecting sayings that reflect whether a pet is playful, sweet, or mischievous, and pairing them with well-lit, high-quality photos. Shutterfly’s dog card ideas catalogue is full of setups like dogs entangled in tinsel, “helping” decorate the tree, or snoozing among gifts, captioned with puns such as “Deck the paws,” “Santa Paws is coming to town,” or “Fleas Navidad.”
These concepts align neatly with the concerns SoFi highlights, such as worries about pets knocking over trees or stealing food. When your card copy and imagery transform those stress points into shared jokes, you tap into very real experiences. From a design perspective, that often means giving text more room than you would on a serious children’s card. Bold headline-style phrases and smaller secondary greetings allow the pun to carry the message.
Make Customization Frictionless
Across Shutterfly, Vistaprint, Truly Engaging, Minted, and others, one consistent factor in positive reviews is ease of customization. Shutterfly offers more than a thousand holiday card designs with adjustable colors, layouts, and greetings, plus premium finishes. Truly Engaging’s customers praise its online design platform for being intuitive, with flexible templates, color schemes, and the ability to upload custom designs or print recipient addresses directly on envelopes. Shutterfly notes that about one in five card orders now includes pre-addressed envelopes, and its Direct Mail service handles mailing for about one in twenty-five customers.
As an on-demand seller, you may not control the underlying editor, but you can control how you structure your templates. Keep photo drop zones clearly differentiated, ensure text areas are easy to edit without breaking the layout, and provide alternate versions that work for both single-pet and multi-pet households. Minted’s messaging guidelines suggest that even when the main message is printed, a short handwritten note and signatures make cards feel meaningful. That is a cue to leave a clean area on the back or inside for handwriting.
You can also embrace the fact that many customers are using AI to help write messages. Offer a few example phrases in your product description or mockups, and encourage customers to adapt them. Better Homes & Gardens found that Americans are already blending AI-written text with traditional cards, so you are not introducing something foreign; you are meeting the customer where they are.
Consider Inclusive And Niche Angles
Inclusivity and niche representation are not just ethical choices; they are market opportunities. Pergamo’s “gay moose under the mistletoe” design signals LGBTQ+ inclusivity in a playful way. Their catalog also includes animals celebrating Hanukkah as well as general winter festivities, making the cards suitable for multiple seasonal occasions beyond Christmas.
Similarly, Banter & Charm’s “fresh out of Falalas” cards speak to people who have had a hard year or feel over the holiday season, using unimpressed pets or kids to acknowledge that not everyone is living a picture-perfect Christmas. When you design your pet line, consider cross-holiday coverage, mental-health-aware humor, and representation of diverse families and pet types. These nuances give customers reasons to choose your cards over generic alternatives.
Pricing, Promotions, And Profitability In The Pet Card Niche
On the pricing side, the pet card market looks similar to the broader holiday card space, but with some useful benchmarks. The dog-themed “Christmas Dogs” set from The Best Card Company sells around the low twenty-dollar range per set, translating to roughly $1.70 per card, and maintains high customer satisfaction. That price positioning, coupled with occasional modest discounts, indicates that pet card buyers are comfortable paying mid-tier prices when quality is strong.
Large photo labs and stationery brands condition customers to expect aggressive promotions during November and December. Nations Photo Lab has advertised up to 60% off sitewide and free shipping for orders over a certain dollar amount during early Black Friday sales. Truly Engaging has run promotions with 65% off plus free shipping under codes like “MERRY65.” Partners like Chris Loves Julia have offered Shutterfly discounts of 40% off orders above a threshold, with free shipping around forty dollars.
Vistaprint’s survey notes that 24% of respondents rank value for money as a key purchase criterion, and 23% prioritize fast shipping. SoFi finds that many pet owners already use coupons, brand emails, and even influencer recommendations to save on pet-related spending. You should expect your pet card customers to behave the same way.
In practice, that means structuring your margins so you can support at least one strong promotional window between Veteran’s Day and Cyber Monday, and perhaps a smaller last-minute push for rush shipping. It also means being honest about shipping timelines. Pet card buyers are enthusiastic, but they are still sending cards to others; missing USPS cutoffs can sour the experience.
Here is a simple comparison, using only the quantitative and qualitative signals described so far:
Factor | Pet-focused cards | Child-focused cards |
|---|---|---|
Representation in Shutterfly’s 2024 output | About 11% of cards feature a pet | About 3% feature a new baby |
Plans among Vistaprint’s surveyed senders | Around 46% plan to feature pets somewhere on their cards | About 16% send children-only cards across generations; around 24% of millennials do so |
Emotional positioning | Often humorous, light, inclusive of various household types | More sentimental, tied closely to parenting milestones |
Content creation effort | Easy to source from candid pet photos, selfies, and casual lifestyle shots | Higher perceived “mental load” for many parents, with pressure to stage coordinated family images |
Addressable market | Appeals to child-free adults, families with kids, and multi-generational pet lovers | Limited primarily to households with children and close relatives |
For a print-on-demand entrepreneur, those differences translate into expanded demand and more flexible creative territory on the pet side.
Risks And Downsides Of Overweighting Pet Cards
No niche is risk-free, and pet Christmas cards are no exception.
The most obvious risk is seasonality. Holiday cards generate intense but short-lived demand from late October through mid-December. Pet cards do not change that. You will need adjacent products, such as everyday pet stationery, birthday cards, or pet-themed wall art and gifts, to smooth revenue outside the season.
Competition is also increasing. Because pet cards have moved from niche to mainstream, large platforms like Shutterfly, Minted, Zazzle, and Truly Engaging invest heavily in this space. If you are a smaller brand, you cannot win by being generic. You have to differentiate either through a distinct art style, a very specific audience focus, or a superior customer experience.
There is also the emotional dimension. Cards that feature pets can become painful reminders if an animal passes away. Long-running traditions, like the thirty-two-year poodle card series, show that many people keep these cards for decades. As you design, it is worth offering options that celebrate memories in a gentle way, perhaps with templates that work even when a beloved pet is no longer alive.
Finally, you should not abandon children’s cards entirely if your customer base includes young families. Vistaprint’s data still shows a meaningful share of millennials choosing child-only cards, and many households include both kids and pets. The shift here is not “pets instead of children” but “pets joining or surpassing children as equal stars.” A balanced product mix can capture both.
Strategic Roadmap For E-commerce Entrepreneurs
If you are running or planning a print-on-demand or dropshipping venture in this space, the practical play is to lean into pets while keeping your options open.
Start by auditing your current catalog. If pets only appear as an afterthought in a few generic templates, you are leaving money on the table. Develop a focused pet Christmas card line with clearly defined creative direction, whether that is minimalist and chic, playful and pun-heavy, or illustrated and art-forward. Use data-backed behaviors as your guide: multi-photo layouts; room for humorous headlines; formats that can introduce new pets or commemorate long-running traditions.
Next, align your operations with the calendar. Confirm cutoffs and rush options with your print partners, and plan your merchandising to ramp from Halloween through Cyber Monday, with clear messaging about mailing deadlines. Consider offering coordinated products like ornaments or small art prints featuring the same pet images to increase average order value without much extra design work.
Finally, stay close to your buyers. Monitor which pet designs get the most organic social media sharing, reviews, and repeat purchases. Many successful brands in this space make a habit of turning customer photos into new template ideas, as long as privacy and licensing are handled correctly. The more you design alongside your customers, the more resilient your pet card line will be.
FAQ
Are pet Christmas cards a passing fad? The consistent presence of pets in large-scale data suggests otherwise. Shutterfly reports that about one in nine of their holiday cards features a pet, and Vistaprint finds that nearly half of card senders plan to include pets. SoFi’s broader spending data shows that holiday pet gifting and photo rituals are deeply entrenched. Those are the kinds of patterns that underpin lasting categories, not short-term fads.
If my audience is mostly families with children, should I pivot away from kids’ cards? Not necessarily. Vistaprint’s research indicates that a meaningful portion of millennials still send children-only cards, and many households want cards that show both kids and pets. Rather than replacing children’s cards, consider expanding into pet-inclusive designs: layouts where a dog or cat appears alongside children, or alternate card options that focus on the pet for some recipients and the kids for others.
How can I quickly test whether pet cards will work in my store? In practice, the fastest path is to launch a small, tightly curated pet card collection ahead of the holiday season and measure performance against your existing designs. Promote these cards explicitly in your email campaigns, social content, or ads, perhaps using a limited-time offer similar to the early Black Friday discounts used by major labs. Track click-through, conversion, and average order value relative to comparable children’s cards. Once you see traction, you can scale depth within the winning styles.
In a crowded holiday market, the brands that grow are the ones that reflect how people actually live, love, and spend. Right now, that reality includes dogs under the tree, cats in the wrapping paper, and “fur families” who expect to see themselves on the front of the card. If you structure your print-on-demand or dropshipping business around that truth, pet Christmas cards can become one of the most reliable and scalable corners of your seasonal portfolio.
References
- https://www.bhg.com/are-christmas-cards-going-out-of-style-8757160
- https://www.minted.com/pet-holiday-cards
- https://www.peartree.com/cute-sayings-for-pet-christmas-cards.aspx
- https://www.photoaffections.com/dog-christmas-cards?srsltid=AfmBOooxPN7VlPZgcYq4eFvj-Oh6DJa-SfgQERgdSl8tbLtkr9QZkEok
- https://www.snapfish.com/pet-christmas-cards
- https://banterandcharm.com/funny-christmas-cards-for-kids-and-pets/
- https://chrislovesjulia.com/4-photo-trends-im-loving-for-christmas-cards-in-2025/
- https://www.nationsphotolab.com/collections/pet-holiday-cards?srsltid=AfmBOoqyiJGZA2M6U2vYe-RZ2OjFH55qnOSxDwfMbLAW518h_0G2Wb-o
- https://pergamopapergoods.com/collections/holiday-cards?srsltid=AfmBOoqhiqKCrbAvoyRsr4gvI8HqBgUrOJzLljxnvS40JlQ91dYIM2cK
- https://pettable.com/blog/holiday-pet-survey