The card centers on a carved wooden egg, rendered in warm browns, oak, and chestnut tones. Floral patterns wrap around its surface in the style of traditional hand-carved folk art, and the words "Happy Easter" are etched directly into the wood at the center. The lines are sharp enough to read as actual relief carving rather than flat illustration. No pastel colors, no cartoon bunnies — just the texture and depth of worked wood. The overall effect is quiet and grounded, the kind of Easter image that feels rooted in something older than chocolate eggs and plastic grass.
This card suits your grandmother who grew up in a household where Easter meant church, a big Sunday dinner, and hand-painted eggs passed down from her own mother. She will recognize the folk-craft reference immediately. It also works well for a coworker who collects antique or handmade objects and would find a generic pastel card slightly off — someone who has actual carved woodenware on a shelf at home and notices the difference between decorative and sincere. For that person, the ornate etched detail reads as effort rather than fuss.
Photos that sit well against the warm chestnut and oak palette tend toward natural light and earthy tones. A snapshot of a family Easter dinner table — roast, bread, candles — carries the same grounded mood as the card itself. A photo of kids hunting eggs outside in morning light, where the grass and shadows are still cool, adds life without clashing with the card's tones. You could also include a close-up of homemade Easter bread or decorated eggs someone in your family actually made. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full original resolution, so the photos inside the card are genuinely theirs to keep.