The card centers on three illustrated bunnies tucked inside a circular floral wreath. The wreath is filled with small blooms in pastel-pink, butter-yellow, and sky-blue, with painted Easter eggs scattered among the leaves in sage-green and soft-white. The background is a plain beige that keeps the whole composition from feeling busy. The bunnies sit close together, ears up, looking outward — the kind of image that reads as playful without being loud. The overall mood is quiet and cheerful, the sort of thing that feels like early April sunshine coming through a window.
This card works well for your niece who is hosting her first Easter Sunday lunch and has spent the week dyeing eggs with her kids. A card like this fits right into that moment — send it the morning of and she'll see it before the chaos starts. It also works for a coworker who mentioned she's driving four hours to spend Easter with her parents for the first time in three years. She's not looking for anything sentimental, just something that marks the occasion without being over the top. The bunny wreath design does exactly that — cheerful, specific to the day, no fuss.
Photos that land well here tend to have soft, natural light — think a shot of the Easter table before everyone sat down, dishes out, a vase of tulips in the corner. The pastel-pink and butter-yellow in the wreath pick up those tones naturally. A candid of the kids hunting eggs in the backyard grass works too, especially if there's green in the shot to echo the sage-green in the design. If you're sending this to a grandparent, a phone-shot of the grandchildren in their Easter outfits, slightly blurry and real, fits the mood without needing to be polished. Recipients can tap any photo and download it at full resolution straight from the card.