What is in the envelope?

Main Letter + Conversation page

At the heart of every Letter Bug Club delivery is the main letter! A carefully written note created to be read together.

Each month, your child receives a thoughtful letter that introduces a seasonal theme, a small idea, or a curious question. The letter is designed to slow things down and invite connection. It isn’t something to rush through, it’s something to sit with.

Alongside the letter is a conversation section, filled with simple prompts, wonder questions, and little moments of reflection. These are meant to spark meaningful back-and-forth between you and your child, no right answers, no pressure, just space to talk, imagine, and listen. These moments might look like:

• A special one-on-one “coffee shop date” with hot chocolate

• A quiet morning at the kitchen table before the day begins

• A picnic in the backyard or favorite park

• A cozy bedtime check-in after the house goes still

Together, the letter and conversation page help children practice expressing thoughts and feelings, build confidence in their voice, and feel truly heard. All while creating a shared ritual you’ll both look forward to.

It’s not just mail.

It’s a moment you get to keep.

Illustration of a bunch of wheat stalks in brown color on a black background.

Seasonal Art Print + Coloring Postcard

Each Letter Bug Club delivery includes a seasonal art page! A thoughtfully illustrated print created to reflect the rhythm, colors, and feeling of the month.

These pages are designed in collaboration with my sister, an artist who has been creating for many years. Working together on these pieces has become one of the most meaningful parts of Letter Bug Club. A chance to blend storytelling and art, and to create something with family that is meant for other families.

The artwork is gentle and inviting, encouraging children to slow down, notice details, and engage creatively in their own way. The full-color art print is designed for grown-ups to display, while children receive a matching postcard that features the same artwork in black and white, inviting them to color it in themselves. There’s no right or wrong way to use it, each family can enjoy it however they choose.

Each illustration ties into the month’s theme and complements the main letter, offering another quiet entry point into conversation, creativity, and seasonal awareness.

More than a page, it’s a piece of art made to live with your family for a while. On a wall, a fridge, or folded carefully into an envelope to be rediscovered later.

A collaboration between sisters.

Created for your family.

Meant to be kept.

Illustration of wildflowers, including daisies, with a red butterfly resting on one of the stems.

Bucket List Card + Encouragement Note

Each month, Letter Bug Club includes a bucket list card—a simple, joyful collection of ideas created to help children engage with the season in meaningful ways.

The list isn’t about doing everything. It’s about trying, noticing, and creating small moments together. Activities are gentle, open-ended, and designed to fit into real life—things that can happen on an ordinary afternoon or a slow weekend morning.

Some ideas invite creativity, some invite movement, and others simply invite presence. Children can check them off, circle favorites, or revisit the card throughout the month as a guide for intentional play and connection.

Alongside the bucket list is a short encouragement note for moms—a few grounding words meant just for you. This note acknowledges the unseen work of parenting and offers reassurance, perspective, or a quiet reminder that what you’re doing matters.

It’s not advice.

It’s not another thing to do.

It’s a pause. A breath. A gentle encouragement tucked into the mail just for you.

Together, the bucket list and encouragement note help create a shared rhythm for the month—one that supports both your child’s wonder and your own heart.

For your child to explore.

For you to be encouraged.

For the month you’re in.

Light blue flowers in a glass vase on a black background.

“The best inheritance a parent can give his children is a few minutes of his time each day.”

— Orlando Aloysius Battista