Loading...
Loading...
On-Air Promo Creative 115x175
|| News ||
Page 1 of 1

Now on the Hallmark Aisle: Gay Marriage Cards

The nation's largest greeting card company is rolling out same-sex wedding cards -- featuring two tuxedos, overlapping hearts, or intertwined flowers -- with best wishes inside. ''Two hearts. One promise,'' one says.



Most states don't recognize gay marriage -- but now Hallmark does.

The nation's largest greeting card company is rolling out same-sex wedding cards -- featuring two tuxedos, overlapping hearts, or intertwined flowers -- with best wishes inside. ''Two hearts. One promise,'' one says.

Hallmark added the cards after California joined Massachusetts as the only U.S. states with legal gay marriage. A handful of other states have recognized same-sex civil unions.

The language inside the cards is neutral, with no mention of wedding or marriage, making them also suitable for a commitment ceremony. Hallmark says the move is a response to consumer demand, not any political pressure.

''It's our goal to be as relevant as possible to as many people as we can,'' Hallmark spokeswoman Sarah Gronberg Kolell said.

Hallmark's largest competitor, American Greetings Corp., has no plans to enter the market, saying its current offerings are general enough to speak to a lot of different relationships.

Hallmark started offering ''coming-out'' cards last year, and the four designs of same-sex marriage cards are being gradually released this summer and will be widely available by next year. No sales figures were available yet.

''When I have shopped for situations like babies or weddings for gay friends I have good luck in quirky stores,'' said Kathryn Hamm, president of the website GayWeddings.com.

''But if you are just in a generic store...the bride and groom symbol or words are in most cards,'' she said. ''It becomes difficult to find some that are neutral but have some style.''

The Williams Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles, School of Law estimates that more than 85,000 same-sex couples in the United States have entered into a legal relationship since 1997, when Hawaii started offering some legal benefits to same-sex partners.

It estimates nearly 120,000 more couples will marry in California during the next three years -- and that means millions of potential dollars for all sorts of wedding industry businesses.

Hallmark, known more for its Midwest mores than progressive greetings, has added a wider variety lately. It now offers cards for difficulty getting pregnant or going through rehab. At any given time Hallmark has 200 different wedding cards on the market, including some catering to interracial or interreligious marriages and blended families.

Advocate.com first reported that Hallmark pulled a controversial card last year that featured the punch line ''Too queer? Yeah, I thought so too'' after it was criticized by some customers.

The Greeting Card Association, a trade group, says it does not track how many companies provide same-sex cards but believes the number is expanding.

''The fact that you have someone like Hallmark going into that niche shows it's growing and signals a trend,'' said Barbara Miller, a spokeswoman for the association.

Rob Fortier, an independent card maker who runs his company, Paper Words, out of New York, added same-sex wedding cards to his mix after thinking about what he would want to receive.

''A lot of people think a gay greeting card needs a rainbow on it,'' Fortier said. ''I don't want that.''

But for some time, it was difficult to even find the words for what anyone wanted to say, he said.

His first card poked fun at the challenge. On the outside it featured lines that had been scratched out: ''Congratulations on being committed!'', ''Congratulations on being unionized!'', and finally ''Congratulations on being domestically partnered!'' The inside wished the couple congratulations on choosing to be together forever.

''It really comes down to language,'' he said.

John Stark, one of the three founders of Three Way Design in Boston, which makes gay-themed cards for occasions from adoption to weddings, has several new designs sketched out and ready.

But he has hesitated to add more wedding cards to his mix until after the November election, when California voters will decide whether to approve a constitutional amendment that would again limit marriage to a man and a woman in the state.

''What is scary is to produce a marriage line, and then November comes and it's recalled -- then we have thousands of dollars of inventory waiting,'' he said.

The gay-friendly business can be challenging, companies said.

Hamm said although she has found many vendors willing to work with her company, some have asked to be removed from the website because of hate mail or some other backlash.

Hallmark says all of its stores can choose whether to add the latest offerings. (AP)

Follow us on Twitter Follow us on Twitter. Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Facebook. Page 1 of 1
Reader Comments
  • Name: Kristoffer
    Date posted: 8/21/2008 8:27:00 PM
    Hometown: Atlanta

    Comment:

    How long do we think it will be before the protesting starts? First it will be some church group protesting Hallmark, then it will move to protesting any of the stores that decide to carry the cards.

  • Name: Michael
    Date posted: 8/21/2008 6:08:00 PM
    Hometown: Baltimore, MD

    Comment:

    The hate from the straights is getting tiresome for everybody (gay and straight). Go to church and ask for forgiveness for your inside hatred and anger (it only hurts you). Talk to your Pastor. Or maybe, find a good shrink. Good luck.

  • Name: d
    Date posted: 8/21/2008 6:05:00 PM
    Hometown: oklahoma city

    Comment:

    of course, they could be doing this for the money only. let's see if they sway on their stance when religious groups start ranting.

  • Name: Marcus
    Date posted: 8/21/2008 3:36:00 PM
    Hometown: Daly City, CA

    Comment:

    It's about time!



More Online Only
  • Art Slideshow Flag Artist Spotlight: Que Duong

    A fortune-teller told Que Duong's mother he would amount to nothing — which is why he gives everything he has to each photo he takes.

  • Music Thicke and Juicy

    Sexy soul singer Robin Thicke opens up about his Precious wife, homophobia in the music industry, and the gay men who’ve shaped his life and love since childhood. 

  • Internet Herman on Why He Wants to Stop H8

    Fitness trainer, Real World alum, and marriage equality advocate Scott Herman took some time between crunches to tell The Advocate that his concern for gay rights isn't manufactured, and he doesn't mind men checking him out.

  • News Celebration of Courage Not So Courageous

    Advocate contributor Michael Lucas says the International Gay and Lesbian Human Rights Commission needs to be doing more to stop violence against gays and lesbians in countries "oppressed by Islam."

  • Commentary The Truth Behind Her Name Was Steven

    Advocate contributor Eden Lane says CNN's Her Name Was Steven will help raise the visibility of trans people on TV, but the most compelling part of Susan Stanton's journey was left to a title card at the end of the film.

  • Television Laverne, Surely

    I Want to Work for Diddy alum Laverne Cox leads a trio of transgender ladies in VH1’s Transform Me, a new makeover show that flatters her hooker-heavy résumé.

  • Music Cherie’s Jubilee

    With The Runaways, the new film about her life with Joan Jett, pioneering rock star Cherie Currie is enjoying a renaissance ... with a little help from Dakota Fanning.

  • Activism Sex-Ed Student Turns Teen Activist

    When sex education classes at Danny Sparks's high school failed to address the issues important to him, he took matters into his own hands ... and became an activist in the process.

  • Photography Slideshow Flag Artist Spotlight: Ryan Colford

    From his "candy shoppe" line — sweet treats made oh-so sexy — to his black and white studies of the male form, photographer Ryan Colford exposes the beauty of the male body.

  • Commentary What Massa Could Learn From Ashburn

    COMMENTARY: Matthew S. Bajko says Republican California state senator Roy Ashburn deserves praise for coming out of the closet despite his antigay voting record. Now, if only former congressman Eric Massa would follow his lead.

  • Music The Truth About Tracy and Kim

    Don’t be tardy for this party! DJ Tracy Young comes clean — mostly — about her rumored lesbian relationship with Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kim Zolciak.

  • News Video Content Flag Kids Say the Darndest Things

    Micah Schraft and his boyfriend, John, were filming Micah's family at Thanksgiving when the 5-year-old son of a family friend wanted to know if the two were husbands. The result is a video you have to see. 

  • Commentary The Importance of Being Counted

    With benefits from boosting hate-crimes and marriage equality laws to simply letting legislators know gay Americans indeed exist, the 2010 Census is a chance to stand up and be counted.

1037 COVER X135 | ADVOCATE.COM