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NH - A Recycled Greeting for Earth Day

Launch gallery slideshow

Swap Coordinator:Cristin91 (contact)
Swap categories: Themed  Letters & Writing 
Number of people in swap:13
Location:International
Type:Type 2: Flat mail
Last day to signup/drop:April 11, 2013
Date items must be sent by:April 22, 2013
Number of swap partners:1
Description:

For this swap, let’s send a greeting made from repurposed/recycled materials to each other.

Who

  • This swap is open to everyone in the group who is in good standing and has sent their name and address to one of the group founders.
  • I will ban anyone with late swaps on their dash.
  • I will ban anyone who has not signed in to swap-bot within 3 days of the sign-up deadline.

What

  • We will be making 1 flat card/post card out of repurposed materials and sending it to 1 partner.
  • Please see the “How” section for all of the nitty-gritty details.

Where

  • This swap is international.

When

  • The deadline for sending your greeting is Earth Day, April 22nd.

How

Step 1 - There are three different options for making your greeting:

a) You can send a chunk of cardboard. It must be clean, non-corrugated cardboard. Something like a cereal or cracker box. Trim it down to size, and send it as a postcard.

b) You can cut off the front of an old greeting card. (Cards that have writing on the flip-side won't work for this. Nor will ones with lots of dimensional embellishments.) Trim it down to size. If it is from fairly hefty cardstock, send it as a postcard. (Thin postcards seem to get lost in the mail much more often.)

c) You can do either of the options above, and then stick it in a handmade envelope and mail it as a flat card. Your envelope must still be made of recycled materials. (I’ve used maps, take-out menus, and old calendar pages. I’ve received ones made from doubled-up catalog and magazine pages.)

I’ll be doing option C, because I haven’t always had the best of luck with sending postcards.

"Recycled" doesn't mean "trash"! Even though we're recycling, please send a card that you'd be happy to receive.

Step 2 - Write a short greeting on the back, along with the swap name and your username (for quick & easy rating).

Step 3 - Address it, and put the correct amount of postage on it. Send it by the deadline, and remember to mark that you’ve sent it here.

Step 4 - Rate your partner when you receive.

More Details

  • Minimum card size for this swap is 4 x 6 inches (about 10.2 x 15.3 cm).

If you are sending from the US:

  • Any card over 4.25 x 6 inches needs standard (non-postcard) postage.
  • Maximum card size is 6 1/8 x 11 1/2 inches.

If you are sending from another country:

  • Please observe your postal service's maximum size for the type of card you're mailing.

Please feel free to PM me with questions. :)

Discussion

pne 03/15/2013 #

Are the min/max sizes USPS requirements, swap requirements, or both?

Or to put it differently, do those size requirements also apply to people sending from other countries, or can they also send smaller and/or larger cards if their local postal service allows that size for international postcards?

pne 03/15/2013 #

For those who think in metric: min size = 4×6 in = 10.2×15.3 cm (rounded up); max size = 6⅛×11½ in = 15.5×29.2 cm (rounded down)

Cristin91 03/15/2013 #

The minimum 4 x 6 is a swap requirement.

The maximum is a US postal service requirement. If you're sending from another country, you can use the max for your postal service.

pne 03/15/2013 #

Thanks for clarifying!

aipoopyhead 03/16/2013 #

So if I want to send the greeting in postcard form, can I send it naked? Or does it have to be sent in an envelope?

Cristin91 03/16/2013 #

@aipoopyhead , you can send it naked. Envelopes are optional.

VivaLaDiane 04/ 1/2013 #

Thank you for hosting this Cristin♥♥

wonderfulwendy 04/ 4/2013 #

Ok - I know this is a silly question, but when we send a "chunk of cardboard" I assume we can decorate it?

TC 04/ 9/2013 #

@Cristin91 , excellent swap description! Love your use of the Who, What, When, Where, How headings.

Cristin91 04/11/2013 #

@wonderfulwendy , you may decorate the chunk of cardboard if you wish. Sounds fun!

@TC , thanks! You can see my elementary school training there. Can't remember anymore which grade that was, but one of my teachers sure got the "how to describe an event" lesson engraved in my brain. :)

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