The card opens on a cream-white background with a navy-blue crescent moon at its center. The moon is filled with geometric patterns — tight, repeating shapes that reference traditional Islamic tile work. A small star sits close to the crescent's inner curve. The text "Eid Mubarak" runs in a clean, upright font that holds its own against the pattern without competing with it. The overall palette is two colors only: navy and cream. That restraint is the design's whole point. The result reads as quiet and still.
This card fits someone like your colleague Rania, who organizes the office Eid potluck every year and would actually appreciate that the design isn't overdone. Send it to her the morning of Eid and it lands with the right weight. It also works for your uncle who lives alone in another city and won't be at the family Eid dinner — he gets the card on his phone, and it feels like you remembered him specifically, not like you sent the same thing to fifty people. A card this restrained travels well across generations.
For photos, think about what actually happened around Eid. A shot from the Eid prayer gathering — even a wide one taken from the back of the crowd — sits well against the card's navy and cream tones without clashing. A close-up of the Eid table before the meal, with the serving dishes still full, is another strong choice. If the card is going to a relative abroad, a candid from the family gathering works well — something unposed, shot on a phone. Recipients can tap any photo inside the card and download it at full original resolution, so the images are genuinely theirs to keep.