The card's centerpiece is a flat-style illustration of a mosque, drawn in deep-blue and cream with teal and orange accents on the domes and minarets. Above the mosque, a crescent moon sits in a golden-yellow sky that fans outward in a sunburst pattern, filling the background with radiating wedges of color. The text "Eid Mubarak" runs across the front in a retro letterform — blocky, bold, and set in colors pulled from the same palette. The overall effect is loud and joyful without being cluttered. It reads as festive and loud.
This card suits your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year, the one who sets the table for twenty people and spends two days cooking. She'll recognize the mosque and crescent immediately and appreciate that the card looks considered rather than generic. It also works for a coworker who observes Eid but is far from family this year — someone opening a card on their phone during a lunch break who needs something that actually feels like the occasion. A few warm photos tucked inside make it feel less like a message and more like a visit.
Photos taken at the Eid dinner table itself — dishes laid out, hands passing food, kids in new clothes — look strong against the golden-yellow and deep-blue tones in this design. A quick phone shot of the mosque your family visits for Eid prayer, even slightly blurry, adds real meaning. If the recipient is a child, a close-up of them in their Eid outfit works well. Recipients can tap any photo inside the card and download it at full original resolution, so photos you include aren't just decoration — they're files the recipient actually keeps.