The card opens on a textured ivory and charcoal-gray background, with a stylized crescent moon at its center. The moon is filled with tight geometric patterns in teal and burnt-orange — angular repeating shapes that read as traditional tilework. Stars of varying sizes scatter across the background in mustard-yellow. "Eid Mubarak" sits in clear, bold lettering. When the animation runs and your uploaded photos fall onto the screen, the warm tones frame them without competing. The overall feel is loud in color but structured in layout — vibrant and direct.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year and fills her home with family from three cities over. She has cooked for twenty people and deserves something with real visual weight, not a soft pastel card that disappears on a phone screen. It also fits your university friend who is spending their first Eid away from home, studying abroad. That person isn't looking for something understated — they want to feel the occasion across a screen, and the geometry and color here deliver that without needing decoration.
For photos, think group shots from the Eid prayer gathering or the dinner table loaded with food — images with natural warmth in the lighting will sit well against the burnt-orange and mustard tones. A candid of kids in new Eid clothes works well too, since the bright background holds up against colorful outfits rather than washing them out. If you're sending this to someone far away, a photo of the family laid out at the table gives it real personal weight. The recipient can tap any photo and download it at full resolution, so include ones worth keeping.