About DigiBouquet

A digital bouquet builder backed by practical flower and message guidance

What Is DigiBouquet?

DigiBouquet is a free online tool for creating digital flower bouquets with personalized cards. It also publishes the flower guides, bouquet examples, and message-writing resources that help users decide what to send before they open the builder. The goal is not only to let someone create a bouquet quickly, but to help them make better choices about tone, symbolism, and wording.

Why We Created DigiBouquet

The project was built to solve a very specific problem: sometimes the right emotional gesture is clear, but the practical route is not. You may want to send care, gratitude, or affection immediately, without arranging delivery or overthinking the message. DigiBouquet was created so the bouquet and the note can still feel deliberate even when the gift is digital.

Many digital gifting tools treat the message as an afterthought. DigiBouquet treats it as the whole point. The flower selection matters because flowers carry meaning. The card style matters because visual tone changes how words land. The message matters most of all, which is why the site spends as much energy on guidance as it does on the builder itself.

Who Maintains the Site

DigiBouquet is maintained by Tommy Tang, who is responsible for the product, the published guides, and the editorial review of updates. That setup matters because the public content is checked against the real bouquet builder instead of being written in isolation. When the product flow changes, the related guidance is updated as well.

How to Use This Site

If you already know what you want to send, go directly to the bouquet builder. The builder walks you through flower selection, greenery, card style, message, and background. When you are done, you get a shareable link that opens the bouquet in full for the recipient.

If you are still working out what to send, start with the content library:

  • Flower pages explain what each flower means, where it fits emotionally, and when to use it or avoid it. These are the right starting point if you are unsure which flowers match the relationship or occasion.
  • Guides cover specific gifting scenarios — birthdays, apologies, long-distance relationships, anniversaries, and more. Each guide includes a worked bouquet example and multiple message variations.
  • Bouquet examples show complete, ready-to-adapt bouquets for common situations, with step-by-step notes on how to build them in the creator.

Most visitors find it useful to read one guide, look at the matching bouquet example, and then open the builder with a clearer sense of direction.

How It Works

The site is split into two connected parts:

  • The builder, where you choose flowers, card style, background, and message.
  • The content library, where you can compare flower meanings, review bouquet examples, and improve the wording before you send.

That split is intentional. Some visitors already know what they want to say. Others need help deciding which flowers fit the relationship or whether the note is too formal, too romantic, or too vague. DigiBouquet supports both paths.

Our Content Philosophy

Every guide and flower page on this site is written with a specific goal: to help the reader make a better decision in the builder, not to fill space. That means each piece of content needs to do something useful — explain a concept, show a worked example, or help the reader recognize a mistake before they make it.

All content goes through a review step before publication. That review checks the guidance against the actual builder flow to confirm that the advice works in practice, not just in theory. When the builder changes, related content is updated to stay accurate.

The site does not publish guides on general flower topics that have no connection to the gifting decisions DigiBouquet is built to support. The goal is a smaller, more reliable library rather than a large one that drifts away from its purpose.

What Makes the Content Different

The site’s guides are written to solve real product decisions, not to inflate page count. Each major guide is expected to do three things: show a named author or reviewer, cite public sources, and include a practical bouquet example that can be checked against the live DigiBouquet flow. If a guide becomes too generic or drifts away from the actual product experience, it is revised.

What Comes Next

Future work on DigiBouquet focuses on two tracks: improving the bouquet experience itself and expanding the guidance library with better examples, stronger sourcing, and more real gifting scenarios. Planned additions include more flower varieties in the builder, a wider range of bouquet examples for workplace and cultural gifting contexts, and improvements to how the shared bouquet looks on the recipient’s end. The goal is to make the site more useful, not simply larger.