Guide · 5 min read
What to put on a love website
Whether you’re asking someone out or building a keepsake for an anniversary, these are the sections worth including — and the ones to skip.
The sections that matter
- ♥Their name, big. Open with their name in a script font. It instantly says “this is for you,” not a forwarded link.
- ♥One clear question. Be my girlfriend? Be my Valentine? Marry me? One question, front and center.
- ♥The runaway No button. A Yes that grows and a No that dodges — the interaction that makes people film their reaction.
- ♥A short message. One or two honest sentences. This is where the feeling lives, not in the decorations.
- ♥A photo of you two. A single framed photo beats a cluttered collage. It makes the page feel real.
- ♥A celebration. Confetti and a warm line when they say yes — the payoff.
Bonus sections for a keepsake
If it’s more than an ask — an anniversary, or a page you both keep — add a short timeline of your story (three or four milestones), and a letter. Those two turn a one-time moment into something they revisit.
- ♥A story timeline. “The day we met,” “the first inside joke,” “today.” Keep each to a sentence.
- ♥A letter. The unfiltered version, signed “— yours.”
What to skip
- ♥Walls of text. Nobody finishes a five-paragraph confession on a phone.
- ♥Autoplay loud music. Subtle is fine; a blast of audio in a quiet room is not.
- ♥Ten photos. One great photo beats a slow, cluttered gallery.
The shortcut
Every section above is built into NoDodger’s templates — the name reveal, the runaway No, the photo frame, the confetti, and (on the keepsake upgrade) the timeline and letter. You write the words; the structure’s already there.