The card opens on a deep forest-green background anchored by a golden crescent moon and star at its center. A terracotta arch frames the composition, and the surrounding space is packed with geometric shapes in gold, burnt orange, and cream — repeating angles and facets that give the design real visual density. Nothing about it is quiet. The palette is rich and direct, the geometry is busy in a way that feels intentional, and the overall effect lands somewhere between festive and loud, which is exactly the right register for Eid al-Fitr or Eid al-Adha.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the big Eid dinner every year and does it completely from scratch — she'll recognize the traditional color language immediately. It also fits your coworker who grew up celebrating Eid abroad and is now spending the first one away from family; the familiar imagery carries weight in that situation without needing much explanation. A few sentences in the message go a long way here. The design does a lot of the communicating on its own, so the words you add just need to be genuine, not elaborate.
For photos, lean into the occasion itself. A candid shot of the family gathered around the Eid table, shot on a phone with the food still out, reads as real rather than staged. The gold and burnt-orange tones in the design sit naturally alongside warm indoor lighting, so photos taken in the evening or under soft overhead light will look cohesive on screen. If you have a photo of the kids in their Eid clothes, that works too — the cream and terracotta in the design won't fight the colors in most traditional outfits. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution directly from the card.