Christmas card
From Uncyclopedia, the content-free encyclopedia.
“I just can't get enough!”
~ Depeche Mode on Most things
Christmas cards are especially expensive pieces of reconstituted cardboard usually adorned with some over-stylised, ornate, colourful piece of clichéd design. Produced in their thousands, they are traditionally exchanged by people who can't afford to buy people a proper present each Commercial Conformity Period and the middle of June by the 'slow'.
Over the Christmas period, usually from the beginning of September to New Year's Day, houses can contain a whole tree's worth of card, with cards sent by everyone from the parishoners of the local Church to old Aunt Beatrice, who died years ago.
[edit] Gifts
For the more wealthy, Christmas cards are sometimes used to present gifts such as twenty pound notes, book tokens and free samples of cheese, lending the envelope a fine smell that matures with age. For the poorer, these are more likely to consist of Monopoly money, nuts or dog hairs. It is thought that the latter, combined with three-month old milk, cures Boxing Day hangovers.
Additionally, they are often utilised by Christmas hamper companies in substitute for that bottle of cream or the tinned Christmas pudding which was out of stock at the time. In the case of Farepak, they are actually sent out in place of the hamper itself.
[edit] Disposal
It is custom to re-utilise old Christmas cards by cutting them up for shopping lists or to rub out the handwritten message with an eraser and send them back to the sender next Christmas. This brought rise to the phrase 'A card is for life, not just for Christmas'. Some cards are recorded have been exchanged between the same two people for decades of Christmases, each time with added glitter from Partner's to see who can most infruruate the other.
Rich people collect them in a nice cabinet until January, then either sell the ones costing more than £15 on eBay, or donate them to the Blue Peter Christmas card fund. In turn, these are also sold on and the resulting money used to pay the show's presenters as a substitute for the dog food and sticky-back plastic they are paid in the rest of the year.


