Born from
missing grandma.

Courrier started with a simple frustration. A 42-year-old tech entrepreneur, Franco-American, often far from home — and a 99-year-old grandmother who would rather receive a photo than read a long letter.

She doesn't use a smartphone. She doesn't check email. But she lights up when a postcard arrives in the mailbox. A real one, with a real photo — something she can hold, show to the nurses, and pin next to her bed.

The idea was born in the time it takes to snap a photo: what if the moment you take a picture, you could send it as a printed postcard — in seconds, from anywhere in the world? No app to download, no form to fill. Just an email with a photo, and La Poste does the rest.

That's Courrier. A bridge between those who live far away and those who wait for news. Between a selfie taken on a hike in Big Sur and a smile in an EHPAD in Vendée.

For grandmothers, grandfathers, parents, and everyone who deserves more than a text message. In less than 15 seconds, for a few euros — deliver real happiness.