Some gifts you buy; this one you already own. Keeping far-flung family close through art is the moment a child's drawing stops being clutter on the fridge and becomes the most personal present in the room. A scribble that captures exactly how your child sees distant relatives, the too-big smile, the spelling that is almost right, cannot be ordered online or topped by anything in a shop. This page is about turning that into a real gift without the last-minute panic.
VaultIt keeps you ready for any occasion. Scan each drawing as it comes home into a private timeline, so when keeping far-flung family close through art arrives you already have a clean, square image to print, frame or turn into a book, no scrambling, no lost originals, no dim photos.
You do not have to spend a penny: a scanned drawing printed at home in a charity-shop frame moves distant relatives far more than anything expensive. Most of the gift is the handwriting and the wobble, not the production cost.
For distant relatives, a single drawing printed onto a mug, a tea towel or a cushion cover usually lands between ten and twenty-five pounds online. It keeps the gift practical and used daily, rather than tucked in a drawer.
When the occasion is large, a hardback book of a year's drawings or a framed multi-aperture mount sits around thirty to sixty pounds and feels like a proper keepsake. Save these for distant relatives when the moment really warrants it.
Toddler scribbles work best as bold, abstract prints and wrapping; detailed drawings from a six- or seven-year-old suit books, framed pieces and calendars where you can read the story. Pick the gift to flatter the age of the artwork.
How far ahead should I plan a gift for keeping far-flung family close through art?
Give yourself at least a week if anything is being printed and posted, and two if it is a book. The scanning takes minutes, but print-and-delivery is where people get caught short. For distant relatives, a clean scan saved in advance means you are never scrambling the night before.
What makes a child's drawing such a good gift for distant relatives?
It is the one present that genuinely cannot be bought. Distant relatives can buy themselves anything off a shelf, but not a four-year-old's lopsided portrait of them with enormous hands. The imperfection is the value, and that is exactly what makes it land.
Do I need to ask my child's permission to use their artwork as a gift?
For little ones it is more about courtesy than consent, but asking matters, and they usually light up at the idea that their drawing is good enough to be a present. With older children, do ask first, some feel protective of certain pieces and would rather a different one was used. A good habit is to scan everything into VaultIt as it comes home, then choose together from the saved collection, so the original is never given away without a copy and your child feels part of the decision.
“I scanned a drawing my son made and had it printed for distant relatives. They actually teared up, and it cost me less than a fancy card would have.”
— Dom, dad of two