Flowers
Pick a full mix across rose, peony, daisy, orchid, sunflower, and more.
Botanical postcard studio
Compose a private digital flower bouquet, write the card, set the mood, and send it as a small link instead of a public post.
The page mirrors the iOS creator: compact controls, textured paper, and a clear path through the bouquet without turning it into a feed.
Pick a full mix across rose, peony, daisy, orchid, sunflower, and more.
Wrap the arrangement with leafy stems, fern texture, willow, or eucalyptus.
Write the recipient note in a card style that feels personal and restrained.
Choose a backdrop such as rose mist, golden hour, ocean breeze, or midnight garden.
Save locally or send an encoded bouquet link that carries the bouquet payload.
DigiBouquet keeps the gesture focused: one bouquet, one note, one recipient. The design borrows from paper stationery, pressed flowers, and the app's existing SwiftUI cards.
To: You
You have been on my mind. This is a small way to show up in your day.
With love, Me
The iOS app treats meanings as a compact decision library, so the static page uses the same practical tone.
Love and passion, best when the note can be direct.
Romance with a softer, generous shape.
Beauty, distance, and something a little more composed.
Innocence and warmth for support that should feel light.
Adoration and brightness for birthdays or encouragement.
The current app avoids accounts, uploads, and public submissions. Bouquet content is encoded into the shared URL so the recipient can open the gesture without a server-side gallery.
Bouquets are meant for the recipient, not for discovery metrics.
Saved bouquets live locally in the iOS app unless the sender shares them.
Flower mix, card copy, greenery, mood, and seed data fit into the shared URL.
A static companion page for the iOS app, carrying the same botanical paper language and private-sharing posture.