This Easter eCard opens on a vintage-style bouquet of pink roses, lily of the valley, and blue forget-me-nots arranged against a soft background. Ornate gold detailing frames the whole composition, pulling the soft-pink, sage-green, sky-blue, and gold tones into something that looks lifted from a nineteenth-century botanical print. The typography sits quietly inside the frame rather than competing with the flowers. The overall feeling is calm — not loud, not overly festive, just quietly pretty in a way that reads as considered rather than rushed.
This card suits your grandmother who hosts Easter dinner every year without fail, sets the table with her good china, and would notice the lily of the valley because she grows it herself. Send it a few days before so she has time to open it properly on her phone or laptop. It also works for a close friend who recently moved abroad and won't be at the family table this year — someone who would appreciate a card that feels less like a novelty and more like a small note. The botanical style gives it enough weight to stand in for a real conversation.
Photos that work here lean soft and natural. A shot of your kids in the garden on Easter morning, slightly overexposed in spring light, sits well against the pale palette. A close-up of the Easter table — painted eggs, a white tablecloth, maybe a single flower — echoes the card's botanical tone without clashing. For the friend abroad, a casual recent photo of the two of you works as a reminder of home. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images they get are worth keeping, not just viewing once on a small screen.