This card opens on a cream background with a cluster of Easter eggs drawn in an art deco style. Each egg carries geometric linework in navy blue and dusty pink, with rose-gold accents tracing the borders and inner patterns. The central "Happy Easter" text sits inside a gold frame that mirrors the angular symmetry of the egg designs. Nothing about the layout is loose or casual — every line meets another at a deliberate angle. The overall impression is quiet and composed, closer to calm than loud, with enough gold detail to keep it from feeling plain.
This card suits someone like your aunt who hosts an Easter dinner every year and takes the table setting seriously — she'll notice the art deco geometry and appreciate that it doesn't look like a grocery-store card. It also works for a colleague who recently moved abroad and won't be home for the holiday; the navy-and-cream palette reads as considered rather than childish, so it carries weight across professional distance. A few sentences and this card does the job without overshooting.
For photos, lean into the palette. A shot of your Easter table with a navy linen cloth and cream dishes will look like it was staged for this card — drop it in and the colors align without effort. A close-up of decorated eggs, especially ones with geometric or painted patterns, will echo the design's own egg motifs and feel intentional. If you're sending this to someone far away, a candid photo of the family gathered before the meal gives the card its real substance — and since the recipient can download each photo at full resolution straight from the card, those pictures don't just sit in a message thread and get forgotten.