Our story

It started with a card
nobody could read.

TouchCard was born from a small, painful moment at a birthday party in Hamburg. What followed was two years of learning, making, and slowly building something we're genuinely proud of.

Lena, co-founder of TouchCard, inspecting a card in the workshop
Friends gathered at a birthday party

The card that started everything

Lena's best friend Maya turned 27. It was a good party โ€” candles, cake, everyone crowded around the kitchen table. At some point, the birthday cards came out. Maya, who lost most of her sight at 19, sat and waited while someone read each card to her out loud.

Lena watched and felt a quiet sting. "She's listening to her own birthday cards." Not reading them. Not holding them privately. Just listening, politely, while everyone else moved on.

On the way home, Lena typed a note into her phone: why isn't there a birthday card she can read herself? She didn't do anything with it for three months. Then she mentioned it to her flatmate Jonas, who happened to be studying product design. He said: "That's actually a really interesting problem."

Hands carefully embossing Braille dots on paper

A lot of failed attempts and one good one

Neither of them knew anything about Braille. Lena studied communication design; Jonas had never embossed anything in his life. Their first attempts looked terrible โ€” dots too shallow to feel, paper too thin to hold the texture, layouts that made no spatial sense to someone reading by touch.

They reached out to DBSV, the German Federation of the Blind, and were connected with Thomas โ€” a Braille transcription specialist who had been working with print-disabled communities for over two decades. He was, in his words, "sceptical but curious."

Thomas became their first collaborator, and eventually their head of Braille quality. He rewrote their process from scratch. The first card that actually worked โ€” readable, sturdy, beautiful โ€” they sent to Maya. She called Lena the next morning.

Beautifully packaged card with kraft envelope and wax seal

"We shipped 11 orders the first week.
We cried after the third."

TouchCard launched quietly in January 2024 with a small Instagram post and no advertising budget. Within a week, 11 orders had come in. Most were from people in exactly the situation Lena had been in โ€” someone they loved couldn't read standard cards, and they'd never found an alternative.

The emails they received in those early weeks shaped everything that came after. People wrote paragraphs. They shared stories about parents, siblings, friends, partners. One woman ordered a card for her brother and wrote: "He's going to read this himself for the first time in his life. Please make it perfect."

They made it perfect. They still do, for every single order.

"She called me the next morning and said โ€” I read it. I read it myself, three times. I didn't need anyone to read it to me."
โ€” Lena Hoffmann, co-founder, about sending the first card to Maya
What we stand for

Built around one idea: dignity in small moments

Nothing about us without us

Every product decision, every design change, every new card format is tested with and reviewed by our community of blind and visually impaired users. We don't assume โ€” we ask.

Quality that lasts

Braille is only as meaningful as it is readable. Every card is proofread by a certified human specialist. We use FSC-certified paper stock thick enough to hold Braille dots clearly for years.

Beautiful on both sides

A card that looks beautiful matters โ€” for the person giving it and the people who see it in someone's home. We care as much about the visual design as the tactile experience.

Personal, always

We will never send a generic message. Every card carries your actual words, transcribed with care. The intimacy of a handwritten card, made accessible.

The people

A small team with a clear purpose

We're three full-time and a small network of specialists who care deeply about getting this right.

Lena Hoffmann, co-founder

Lena Hoffmann

Co-founder & Creative

Communication designer by training. Passionate about the intersection of accessibility and aesthetics. Responsible for every card design and the brand.

Jonas Weber, co-founder

Jonas Weber

Co-founder & Product

Product designer with a background in tactile and sensory design. Obsessed with the details โ€” paper weight, dot depth, envelope feel. If it can be improved, he's already testing it.

Thomas Bauer, Head of Braille Quality

Thomas Bauer

Head of Braille Quality

Certified Braille specialist with 22 years of experience. Every message that leaves our workshop has been reviewed and approved by Thomas personally.

How we got here

From a kitchen table to 2,000+ cards sent

September 2022

The idea

A birthday party in Hamburg. Lena notices Maya listening to her birthday cards. A note in her phone that evening.

March 2023

First prototypes

Lena and Jonas build the first 30 test cards in Jonas's apartment. Most are unusable. They reach out to DBSV for guidance.

June 2023

Thomas joins

Braille specialist Thomas Bauer becomes the third member of the team. He rewrites the transcription and quality process entirely.

January 2024

TouchCard launches

11 orders in the first week. The emails from customers change how the team thinks about what they're building.

Today

2,000+ cards sent across Europe

Cards delivered to 14 countries. Still three people, still one clear purpose: a card they can read themselves.

Send one to someone you love.

It takes two minutes to write. It might mean everything to them.

Choose a card