The card opens on a cream background with pastel-colored eggs, small birds, and flowers arranged in a symmetrical pattern. The border keeps everything contained and orderly. The colors are sage-green, dusty-rose, mustard-yellow, and soft-gray — nothing loud, nothing competing. The eggs and birds sit in a balanced layout that feels almost like a botanical print. The flowers are minimal, just enough to suggest spring without crowding the design. The overall impression is quiet and still, like early morning on a Sunday before anyone else is awake.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts an Easter dinner every year and takes it seriously — the tablecloth is pressed, the lamb is already in the oven by 8am. She would open this on her phone and actually look at it. It also fits a close friend who isn't especially religious but marks Easter as the first real weekend of spring, maybe with a long walk or a garden tidy-up. For her, the birds and sage-green feel right without being too churchy or too commercial.
Photos that work here sit in the same tonal range as the card itself. A shot of kids in the garden mid-egg hunt, natural light, grass still a little wet — that kind of image reads well against the cream and soft-gray. A close-up of a handmade Easter basket, slightly imperfect, filled with foil eggs also fits the mood. If you're sending this to the aunt mentioned above, a candid photo from last year's dinner table would land well. The recipient can tap any photo to download it at full resolution and save or print it at home, which is worth remembering when you choose what to include.