About this card
International Workers' Day is the kind of occasion that benefits from a card you can hold — not a text, not a forwarded image, not a calendar reminder, but something printed on real paper that someone can prop on a shelf or tuck into a book. The verses below were written specifically for International Workers' Day rather than adapted from a general template, so each one carries the right register: warmer where warmth fits, quieter where quiet fits, lighter where the moment can take a smile.
Pick the verse that suits the person you're sending it to. If two feel right, you can use one as the front-of-card line and the other as the inside note. If none feel quite right, scroll down to the related occasions — sometimes a sibling card has exactly the tone you're looking for.
Print at home: these verses fit a standard A2 (4.25×5.5″) folded card or a half-letter (5.5×8.5″) flat card on 80–110 lb cardstock. See the printing guide for layout templates and paper recommendations.
Five verses for International Workers' Day
- On International Workers' Day, may we remember why this day matters — not as flags and parades alone, but as the long, ordinary work of caring for one another.
- Wishing you a meaningful International Workers' Day — a day to honour the past, hold onto each other in the present, and imagine more for the future.
- Holidays like International Workers' Day belong to neighbours as much as to nations. May yours be full of good food, good company, and quiet pride.
- Here\'s to International Workers' Day: to the people who built what we have, to the people building what comes next, and to the ones beside you on the porch tonight.
- Across every kitchen table, the spirit of International Workers' Day lives on. Wishing you a day of warmth, history, and hope.
Writing tips for this occasion
If you're adding a personal line of your own beneath the verse, keep it specific. Mention a small thing — a shared memory, a thing you noticed, a way they made you feel last week. Generic compliments slide off the page, but a single concrete detail ("I still think about your tomato sauce," "your handwriting on that birthday list") lands hard and lasts.
Sign with the name they call you, not the name on your driver's license. Cards are intimate; signatures should be too. And if you're mailing it, write the address by hand — the envelope is part of the card. For more on the small choices that distinguish a memorable card from a forgettable one, the CardVerse card etiquette guide walks through register, format, and timing across cultures.
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