The card opens on a deep-teal background layered with geometric paper art shapes. A golden mosque sits at the center, its minarets rising toward a crescent moon. Colorful lanterns in vibrant red, bright blue, and emerald green hang across the scene, and stars scatter across the upper field. The text "Eid Mubarak" sits over the composition in gold. Every element is cut-paper flat, which keeps the whole thing bold without being busy. The overall feeling is loud in the best way — festive, warm in color, and unmistakably joyful.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year and sends the family invitations weeks in advance — she will appreciate the detail in the mosque and the lanterns. It also fits your childhood friend who moved abroad and will be spending Eid away from home for the first time; opening something this visually rich on their phone screen makes the occasion feel less distant. For a colleague who recently converted to Islam and is marking their first Eid, the card's imagery is clear and genuine without being overstated.
The deep-teal background absorbs a lot of light, so photos taken indoors with warm overhead lighting tend to hold up best here. A shot from the Eid dinner table — dishes out, family crowded in — reads well against the jewel-toned palette. A close-up of children in new Eid clothes works too, since the bright colors in the card pick up on those outfit colors naturally. If you have a photo of the local mosque at dusk or night, that ties directly to the card's central image. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full original resolution, so the pictures travel with the card itself.