Most restaurant wifi cards live on a sticker by the till in handwriting nobody can read. Yours can be a small framed thing on the host stand or by the bathrooms, doing the work without distraction.
Diners don't want to flag down a server to ask for the password. A small printed card or framed 5x7 in the obvious places (host stand, near the bathrooms, by the bar) means they handle it themselves. We picked six styles that scale from neighborhood bistro to white tablecloth: refined serif options for the older rooms, clean sans for the modern ones.
Manila paper, big bold caps, a single press of cranberry red. Newspaper masthead energy.
A boutique hotel after dark. Forest green walls, brass accents, candlelit serif.
Atomic age. Burnt orange disc, warm beige paper, geometric headline. Eames-adjacent.
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Quiet and architectural. White paper, asymmetric type, light sans-serif.
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Boutique hotel calm. Warm cream paper, italic serif headline, terracotta eyebrow.
Soft sage paper with a delicate botanical sensibility. For garden flats and slow afternoons.
Hotel Brass for darker dining rooms and steakhouses. Letterpress for delis and old-school bistros. Modern for design-driven concepts. Mid-Century for warm sit-down spots. Villa or Botanical for cottage and plant-forward menus.