The card shows a watercolor illustration of a modern suburban house — large windows, clean lines, a paved front walkway, and trees and shrubs painted in loose, brushy strokes around it. The color palette runs through sage-green, soft-gray, warm-brown, and white, giving the whole image the look of a painting done on a slow afternoon. There is no clutter in the composition. The house sits quietly in its greenery, and the overall feeling the design produces is calm.
This card works well for your friend who just closed on their first home after two years of saving and renting. They've been texting you photos of every room — send them something that matches how much that house means to them. It also fits your colleague who transferred cities for a new role and finally stopped living out of boxes. They're not throwing a housewarming party; they just quietly moved in and got settled, and a low-key card like this one reads right for that situation. Neither of these people needs confetti or balloons — they need something that looks like the life they're building.
The sage-green and warm-brown tones in this card sit well alongside photos taken in natural light — think a shot of the new front door on a bright morning, or a photo taken from the driveway looking up at the house. A snapshot of the recipient standing in their empty living room the day they got the keys carries real weight here. Any of these photos can be downloaded by the recipient directly from the card at full original resolution, so they end up with actual keepsakes, not just a greeting they scroll past once.