The card opens on a watercolor illustration of a wicker basket packed with pastel-colored Easter eggs in pink, lavender, yellow, green, and sky-blue. Tulips and daffodils crowd around the base of the basket, and a pink ribbon curls across the front. The watercolor style keeps the edges soft and the colors slightly washed, nothing harsh or overworked. The overall effect is quiet and cheerful — the kind of image that reads as genuinely spring-like rather than loud or commercial. It sits comfortably between a children's card and one you'd send to an adult who still enjoys the season.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the family Easter dinner every year without fail, the one who dyes eggs with the kids and sets a proper table. She'll open it on her phone the morning of and it'll land at the right moment. It also fits a close friend who moved to a new city and is spending Easter away from family for the first time — someone who would appreciate the gesture of being remembered on a holiday when distance feels bigger. The pastel palette keeps the tone warm without being over the top.
For photos, lean into the season's actual colors. A snapshot of a bowl of dyed eggs on a kitchen counter, still wet, works well against the card's soft yellows and pinks. A candid of the kids in the backyard during an egg hunt — grass-stained knees, baskets in hand — fits the card's playful but gentle mood. If you're sending it to that friend who's far away, a recent photo of the two of you together gives the card a personal weight that no illustration alone can. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution and keep it.