The card shows a cluster of Easter eggs, each one covered in marbled swirls of royal blue, emerald green, and crimson red. The patterns on each egg are distinct — no two look the same — and thin gold accents run through the marbling like veins. The background is dark and textured, which pushes the colors forward and makes the eggs read as almost luminous on screen. Pearl-white highlights catch between the swirls. The overall effect is loud in the best way: vivid, ornate, and a little theatrical — closer to bold than quiet.
Your aunt who hand-dyes real eggs every Easter and posts them on Instagram will recognize what this card is going for. She'll appreciate the detail in the marbled patterns, and the gold threading will feel like a nod to the effort she puts in. Your coworker who grew up celebrating Easter in a country where the eggs are painted with intense geometric patterns — Ukraine, Romania, Greece — will find something familiar here too. The dark background and rich color palette feel less like a pastel-aisle greeting and more like an artifact, which suits people who take the visual side of the holiday seriously.
The dark background in this card means photos with strong light sources tend to hold their own best — a shot of your family gathered around a table with candles lit, or a close-up of your kids' hands holding their dyed eggs against a wooden surface. A brightly lit outdoor photo of an Easter morning egg hunt works well too, since the saturated colors in the card will echo the color in the scene. Recipients can tap any photo inside the card and download it at full resolution, so photos you share here aren't just decoration — they're files the recipient actually keeps.