Free birthday bouquet · for a coworker
Send Birthday Flowers For A Coworker
A warm but appropriate bouquet in cream, gold, and soft pink. Works for the person two desks over, your boss, a client, or anyone where you want to mark the day without overstepping. Send through Slack, Teams, or email in a minute.
Build their birthday bouquet
We started one in neutral, appropriate colors. Swap any flower, keep it cream-and-gold, write a brief note.
Why send virtual birthday flowers to a coworker?
A bouquet on someone's desk is awkward if they don't sit near you, expensive if you're remote, and weird from a manager. This works for all three.
Appropriate without trying
The cream and gold preset reads as warm without being personal. No one is going to wonder what you meant by it.
Works for remote teams
If half your team works from home, a real bouquet is impossible. Send the link in Slack or Teams instead.
Easy to make group
Build it once, post the link in the channel, let everyone add their own message around it. One bouquet, many signers.
Free, so no Venmo thread
No "I'm collecting $5 from everyone for Jen's bouquet." No spreadsheet, no chasing. Free for everyone, always.
Best flowers for a coworker's birthday
Neutral colors, classic flowers. Skip red roses, skip anything that reads as a date invitation. These all stay in the warm-but-professional lane.
Cream Peony
Lush without being romantic. Cream peonies say "thoughtful" rather than "I have a crush on you," which is what you want at work.
White Daisy
Cheerful, simple, neutral. White daisies in the mix keep the bouquet from feeling fancy. Reads as office-card friendly.
Yellow Tulip
Cheerful thoughts, sunshine. Yellow tulips work for almost anyone and almost any work relationship. The safest choice if you're not sure.
Pink Carnation
Carnations are the office-card flower. Long history of being the appropriate one. Pink reads as warm rather than serious.
Sunflower
One sunflower for the focal point. Loyalty and admiration, neutral enough for a boss or client. Brightens the cream-heavy mix.
Message ideas for a coworker
Warm, brief, professional. Works for boss, peer, or client. Tap to drop one in.
How it works
Four steps, about a minute total.
Pick flowers
Tap a flower to add it. We started you with a neutral set. Swap any of them.
Write a note
Their name, your name (or "the team"), a short professional message.
Generate the link
One click. The whole bouquet encodes into a single URL.
Post or email it
Slack channel, Teams chat, or email. The bouquet unfurls a preview image automatically.
Frequently asked
Is a virtual bouquet too casual for work?
Not if the message is professional. A cream-and-gold bouquet with "Happy birthday — hope you have a good one. From the team" reads as warm and appropriate. It's the digital equivalent of signing the office card. The default colors here keep it neutral on purpose.
Can I send this to my boss?
Yes, and the tone scales. Keep the message short and warm without being personal. "Happy birthday, [Name]. Hope today's a good one." from a direct report lands fine. Skip emojis or cap them at one. Don't pick the bright pink preset.
What about a client or vendor?
Same rules as a boss. Cream, gold, and white flowers read more professional than hot pink or red. Address them by their preferred name, sign off as you would in email, no inside jokes. The bouquet is a thoughtful touch without crossing into personal-relationship territory.
Can the whole team sign one?
Sort of. Put "The team" or "Marketing" in the From field and post the link in your team Slack or Teams channel. People can reply with their own messages around it. One bouquet, many signers.
Will it work in Slack or Microsoft Teams?
Yes. Paste the share link and Slack or Teams will unfurl a preview image of the bouquet. The recipient clicks through and the bouquet opens in their browser, same as on phone.
Ready to send their bouquet?
Sixty seconds. No collection, no awkward delivery.
Build their bouquet ↑Other recipients: For mom · For dad · For best friend · For teacher · All birthday flowers · Flower meanings: Peony · Tulip