What if your Christmas
gift could grow?
Make someone’s day with a gift that grows
This Christmas, give a gift that truly grows. Our selection of eCards aren’t just a beautiful way to send holiday cheer – they help grow Community Pocket Forests in the places that need them most. Each eCard you send supports native seedlings planted in heat-vulnerable suburbs, restoring biodiversity, creating cooler neighbourhoods, and building habitat for local wildlife.
Give a gift that grows – and watch your impact come to life.




Why go paperless?
In Australia, we send over 100 million Christmas cards every year.
It’s a heartfelt tradition but one that comes with a significant environmental cost. Those single-use paper cards contribute to deforestation, habitat loss, and the degradation of ecosystems that both wildlife and communities rely on.
To offset the carbon footprint of that paper alone, we’d need to plant around 230,000 trees and let them grow for at least a decade.
At a time when our landscapes are heating, biodiversity is declining, and communities are feeling the effects of climate change, choosing paperless options matters.
This Christmas, choose a better way to give: send an eCard and give a gift that grows.
A simple solution for you, a lasting impact for the environment
Sending an eCard takes seconds – but the impact lasts for generations.
Your gift grows into native seedlings that help cool cities, restore ecosystems, and bring communities together through our Community Pocket Forest program.
Why it matters
Every Carbon Positive Australia eCard helps grow real, on-the-ground restoration across Australia. Your contribution plants native trees in Community Pocket Forests, restoring habitat, supporting endangered species, improving climate resilience, and creating greener spaces for local communities.
Australia is one of the world’s most biodiverse nations, yet more than 2,000 native species are at risk of extinction. Your eCard helps change that by creating new habitat where it’s needed most.
This festive season let’s unite for nature.
Give a gift that grows – and help transform communities that need it most!
About the artists
Anya Brock
Iconic Australian Artist Anya Brock is best known for her spirited and bold use of colour and strokes, exploring the connection between amplification and emotional mark making, creating a distinctive visual language in all her work.
Anya sees her work as semi abstracted interpretations of her subjects. Employing organic exaggeration and distortion – the work is recognizably figurative without entering realism.
Her colourful original paintings and prints feature in the interiors of Australia’s most contemporary homes and her larger-than-life murals can be found splashed across walls throughout Los Angeles, Sydney, Melbourne, Perth and Fremantle.
You can see more of Anya’s work on Instagram or visit her website.


Sami Bayly
Sami is a Newcastle, NSW based scientific illustrator who loves to paint any animal or plant that can be defined as weird, wonderful or even ugly!
She has released three books in the Illustrated Encyclopaedia series and has just released her fourth book (the first of a new of a new series), called How We Came To Be – Surprising Sea Creatures, published by Lothian – Hachette Australia.
With a bachelor of Natural History Illustration (Honours) at UoN, she is trained in scientific illustration and loves to try new mediums and techniques, as she never knows what style she might fall in love with next.
You can see more of Sami’s work on Instagram or visit her website.
Brenton See
Brenton See is a Perth artist specialising in small canvas works to large scale interior and exterior wall murals.
Nature has played a massive part in leading Brenton to the work he now constructs today. A keen photographer and birdwatcher he now spends a majority of his free time in the Western Australian landscape gathering reference photos for upcoming murals. The excitement of sharing the flora and fauna of Western Australia keeps Brenton motivated in his journey to educate the world on just how lucky we are to share our planet with such wonders. His work now focuses on celebrating the native species found within 15km of the location of the wall he is painting. This makes each site unique and helps to educate the public on what can be found close-by.
You can see more of Brenton’s work on Instagram or visit his website.





