This card is built around a red papercut design on a cream background — the kind of intricate, hand-cut look where every edge is deliberate. At the center sits a basket of Easter eggs, ringed by layered floral patterns and butterflies. The red cuts deep against the cream, and the white spaces inside the design give it room to breathe. There are no gradients, no photography, no soft washes of color — just the contrast of red and cream doing all the work. The overall feeling is loud in the best sense: festive, traditional, and a little bold.
Two people come to mind immediately. First, your grandmother who sets out a proper Easter spread every year — the colored eggs, the lamb, the whole thing — and who still expects a card that looks like a card, not a meme. She'll open this on her phone or tablet and recognize the papercut style as something close to the decorative traditions she grew up with. Second, your coworker whose family hosts a big Easter dinner and who sends cards to everyone on the list — this design is vivid enough to stand out in a busy inbox without being over the top.
Red and cream leave you less room than a neutral-palette card, so think about photos where those tones already appear naturally. A shot of the Easter table before everyone sits down — red napkins, a cream tablecloth, eggs in a bowl — will slot in without clashing. A close-up of your kids in their Easter outfits works well if there's a pop of red or white in what they're wearing. Even a simple phone photo of decorated eggs on a light surface reads cleanly here. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images you include are genuinely theirs to keep.