Cards by month
A calendar view of every dated occasion in the directory. Useful when you know the month and want to see what’s in it — or when you’re building a yearly card-sending plan.
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January
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in January.
69 cards -
February
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in February.
48 cards -
March
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in March.
65 cards -
April
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in April.
58 cards -
May
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in May.
82 cards -
June
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in June.
69 cards -
July
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in July.
80 cards -
August
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in August.
69 cards -
September
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in September.
60 cards -
October
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in October.
99 cards -
November
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in November.
86 cards -
December
Holidays, observances and seasonal moments dated in December.
58 cards
Why a calendar view?
Most of the people who use CardVerse don’t arrive looking for a specific holiday. They arrive in early November wondering what’s coming up, or in late April realising they forgot Mother’s Day was a Sunday away. The month index is built for that — it lets you skim a single page and see every dated occasion in that stretch of the calendar, from the well-known holidays (Christmas, Easter, Diwali, Eid, Hanukkah, Lunar New Year, Thanksgiving) to the smaller observances most calendars don’t bother to print.
Many occasions in CardVerse don’t have a fixed date — birthdays, anniversaries, sympathies, life milestones — so they don’t appear in this view. For those, the categories index is a better starting point. The country index is the right starting point if you’re sending a card to someone in a specific country and you want to honour their local observances.
Dates throughout this site come from the same Wikidata dataset that powers many open-source calendars, supplemented with curated milestones for the occasions that aren’t calendar-bound. Where a holiday moves with the lunar or liturgical calendar, the month shown is the most common month of observance — check your local calendar for the exact day in any given year.