The card opens with bold black calligraphy set against watercolor washes in navy-blue, teal, and burnt-orange. A crescent moon sits near the top, and hand-drawn lanterns hang at the edges, their outlines touched with gold. The cream background keeps the colors from crowding each other. Gold accents run through the lettering and the lantern frames, catching the eye without overwhelming the rest of the design. When the animation plays and your photos fall into view against all that color, the overall effect is loud in the best way — vivid, festive, and alive.
Your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year and has done it alone since your uncle passed deserves something more considered than a group text. This card gives her something to open properly, and the photos you add can be ones she hasn't seen — candid shots from last year's gathering she wasn't in because she was in the kitchen. Your best friend who moved abroad and is spending their first Eid away from family is another strong fit. Distance makes this kind of card land harder. Drop in a few photos that remind them of home and people they're missing.
For the aunt who hosts, dig through your phone for a shot of the table she set last Eid, or a candid of the cousins crowded around it — the kind of photo she never gets to take herself. For the friend abroad, a picture of the mosque back home or a familiar street lit up at night says more than words. The navy-blue and burnt-orange in the design sit well next to warm artificial light and deep shadows, so evening shots tend to look particularly sharp here. Recipients can tap any photo in the card to download it at full resolution and keep it.