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Birth announcement card with floral border, featuring a newborn baby photo and personalised text on a white background.

Elegant birth announcement card with delicate floral details, ideal for sharing your newborn’s arrival with friends and family.

1) The essentials most cards include

These core details are what friends and relatives instinctively look for. Add them in a tidy, consistent order and you’re already 90% there.

1) Baby’s name (headline)

Use the full name you wish to share—first name and, if you like, middle names and surname. Keep this as the visual focal point.

Example:

Amelia Rose Evans

2) Date of birth

Write the date in your usual household style (e.g., “24 October 2025”). Avoid abbreviations that might confuse in years to come.

3) Time of birth (optional but common)

Many families enjoy including the time. In the UK, “6.52am” or “18:52” both read cleanly—just stick to one style across your stationery.

4) Birth weight

Include either kilograms/grams or pounds/ounces (you can include both if you like).

Example: 3.32 kg (7 lb 5 oz)

5) A photo

A single, well-lit portrait works beautifully. If your design has several image slots, choose one “hero” image and keep any others complementary (e.g., a tiny yawn, a hand in yours).

6) Parents’ names

List whichever form feels right for you: first names only, or full names.

Example: “With love from Olivia & Sam”

7) Siblings (and sometimes pets) (optional)

Older brothers and sisters love a mention. Add it on its own line.

Example: “and proud big brother, Theo”

8) A short sign-off (optional)

Just a gentle line like “So loved already” or “Home and well” can warm the tone without taking space.

A neat order that works on most cards

Name Date Time Weight Parents Siblings Sign-off

Three quick wording templates

  • Classic formal
    Edward James Walker
    Born 12 September 2025 at 6.52am
    3.52 kg (7 lb 12 oz)
    With love, Charlotte & Daniel
  • Modern minimal
    Meet Arlo
    24.10.25 · 3.15 kg
    Olivia & Sam
  • Family-first
    Luna Mae Patel
    24 October 2025 · 6.18pm · 3.30 kg
    Proud parents Priya & Rohan
    Big sister Anaya
Birth announcement card with a newborn baby photo framed by delicate pastel flowers on a white background, flat-lay view.

Elegant birth announcement card featuring a newborn portrait surrounded by soft floral details, perfect for sharing joyful news.

2) Thoughtful additions that make it yours

Once the essentials are set, choose one or two of these extras. They add personality without crowding the design.

A gentle message

A short, sincere note keeps things human: “Grateful, sleepy and so in love” or “Home after a whirlwind, hearts full.”

Photo caption or birth location

If the design places the name over a photo, a tiny caption beneath the image can be helpful. Birthplace is optional—include it only if it matters to you.

Pronunciation or nickname

If you’ve chosen a unique name, a discreet pronunciation guide in brackets can save future awkwardness.

Adoption or surrogacy wording

Consider “With joy, we announce the arrival of…” or “Lovingly welcomed through surrogacy”—plain, dignified and clear.

Religious or cultural element

A brief blessing, verse or symbol can sit nicely as a footer in more traditional layouts.

Privacy note

If you’d prefer photos stayed offline, a gentle “Please enjoy and refrain from sharing on social media” does the job politely.

A link to more photos

Some parents like to add a small QR code linking to a private gallery—ideal if you have too many favourites for one card. On Utterly Printable, templates are fully editable: you can add baby’s name, birth stats, parents and siblings, upload multiple photos, and even include a discreet QR code; choose to order printed cards on FSC-certified stocks or download a high-resolution PDF for digital sharing or home printing.

Birth announcement card featuring baby photos and personalised text, displayed on a burnt orange background in a flat-lay

Elegant birth announcement card with multiple baby photos and custom details, perfect for introducing your new arrival to loved ones.

3) Layout and wording tips to keep your design calm

The most common mistake is trying to include everything. Here’s how to keep it clean, readable and keepsake-worthy.

Aim for 20–45 words total

That’s typically 6–9 short lines of text. Use line breaks to group related details (e.g., put date/time/weight together).

Let the name breathe

Treat the name as the headline. One line is ideal; two lines max for longer names.

Choose one number style

Either “24 October 2025, 6.52am” or “24/10/2025, 06:52”—not both. The same goes for weights: either metric or imperial, or clearly show both in brackets.

Keep punctuation light

Bullets, slashes or centred dots (·) can separate small details more gracefully than commas.

Match copy to layout

If you prefer image-led, white-space-rich stationery, try a crisp modern birth announcement design with very few words. If you love tradition, a text-forward classic style suits full names and formal wording. If you’re after something soft and nature-inspired, our botanical designs frame photos and short captions beautifully.

Think about future you

Imagine Re-reading the card with your child in ten years. Would the wording still make sense? Avoid in-jokes and acronyms. Clarity ages well.

A note on space

If your text feels cramped, change the hierarchy rather than shrinking the font. Move a message to the back of the card, or choose a layout with more white space (e.g., a portrait 5″×7″ or A5). Utterly Printable’s editable templates let you switch sizes such as A6, A5, square 148×148 mm or 5″×7″, keeping your copy comfortable without redesigning from scratch.

Frequently Asked Questions

FAQs: birth announcement wording & etiquette

Every family is different. The aim isn’t to follow a rulebook, but to share your news clearly and kindly. Use these answers to remove doubt, then make choices that fit your household.

Do I have to include the time of birth?

No. It’s popular, but optional. If space is tight, prioritise the name, date and weight.

Should I use kilograms or pounds and ounces?

Either is fine in the UK. Use whichever your family understands best. If you include both, write one as the main value and the other in brackets.

Is a photo essential?

Not essential, but highly loved by relatives. If you prefer to keep photos private, choose a text-led layout and include a gentle privacy note.

Can we add older siblings’ names?

Absolutely. Pop them on a separate line after the parents, e.g., “and big sister Anaya.”

Where should I put a thank-you message?

If you want to thank people for gifts, keep it to a single short line on the back—then consider following up with dedicated thank-you notes later. (Many designs have matching thank-you options for a co-ordinated look.)

When should we send birth announcements?

Whenever you’re ready. Many parents post within the first 2–8 weeks, but there’s no expiry date—especially if you’re waiting on newborn photos.

What if our baby arrived through adoption or surrogacy?

Use warm, clear wording that fits your story, such as “With joy, we announce the arrival of…” or “Lovingly welcomed through surrogacy.” Keep everything else the same.

How do I avoid overcrowding?

Limit the number of “extras” to one or two. If you have more to say, use the card back, a QR code to a private gallery, or choose a roomier format.

Before you design…

If you’ve not chosen a layout yet, browse the full collection of personalised birth announcement cards and explore styles that suit your wording—whether that’s soft botanical, elegant classic, or clean modern. When the words and layout complement each other, the result feels effortless.

Birth announcement card featuring twin newborns in white sleepsuits, lying side by side with floral detail and names above.

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