The card opens on a white background with a loose watercolor bouquet at its center — tulips and daffodils painted in pastel-pink and soft-yellow, surrounded by mint-green stems and leaves. Lavender and sky-blue butterflies drift around the arrangement, and pastel-colored Easter eggs are tucked in among the flowers. The whole thing is painted in the slightly uneven, water-pooled style of real watercolor, so edges bleed and colors bleed into each other the way they do on wet paper. The overall feeling is quiet and fresh, the way a Sunday morning in April feels before anyone else is awake.
This card works well for your mom who hosts Easter dinner every year without fail — the one who dyes eggs with the grandkids and keeps the table set properly. She'll open it on her phone, see the flowers, and know you thought of her specifically. It also fits a close friend who moved to a new city this year and won't make it back home for the long weekend. A card like this, with a few photos of your last time together tucked inside, gives her something concrete to hold onto. She can download those photos straight from the card at full resolution and save them.
For photos, think small and specific. A shot of last year's Easter table — dishes, centerpiece, natural light — drops right into the card's pastel tones without clashing. A close-up of someone's hands holding a painted egg, where the colors land in that same pink-and-yellow range, will look like it belongs in the bouquet. If you're sending this to a friend who's far away, a candid phone shot from a recent visit together gives the card real weight. Recipients can download every photo from the card at full original quality, so the pictures don't just decorate — they're something to keep.