Eid Mubarak
Eid Photo Card
Share Eid celebration photos with family worldwide.
An ornate design featuring a golden crescent moon and star with intricate patterns on a deep teal background, accented with Arabic calligraphy.
Create This CardEid Photo Card
Share Eid celebration photos with family worldwide.
An ornate design featuring a golden crescent moon and star with intricate patterns on a deep teal background, accented with Arabic calligraphy.
Create This CardYour card opens just like a real greeting card — add photos on the left, your message on the right, or simply send a heartfelt message
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The card opens on a deep teal background layered with geometric Islamic art patterns in gold and burnt-orange. A golden crescent moon and star sit at the center, surrounded by intricate lattice work that pulls the eye inward. Arabic calligraphy runs through the design, giving it weight and intention. The tones are rich rather than bright — teal holds the composition steady while gold catches attention without noise. The overall feeling is quiet and ceremonial, the kind of thing you stop scrolling to look at properly.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Eid al-Fitr dinner every year and pulls out her best tablecloths for it — she'll notice the calligraphy and the care in the patterning. It also fits a university friend who is spending Eid away from home for the first time, studying abroad or working a new job in another city. For her, getting something that looks like this on her phone screen is genuinely meaningful, not just a quick message. The card holds enough visual weight to feel like an occasion, not an afterthought.
The deep teal and gold palette rewards photos with warm skin tones and natural or candied light. A photo from last year's Eid dinner table — dishes out, everyone leaning in — sits well here. A candid shot of kids in new Eid clothes in bright morning light works too, since the gold in the design picks up warm yellows. Or try a close-up of henna on someone's hand, which echoes the ornate patterning in the card itself. Recipients can tap and download each photo at full resolution directly from the card, so the images are theirs to keep and print at home.
Yes. This design carries a ceremonial, formal weight that doesn't translate well to casual or secular contexts. Sending it to someone who isn't observing Eid, just to wish them a general happy holiday, can feel mismatched. It also doesn't work for condolence messages or anything somber — the gold and burnt-orange are unambiguously festive in tone. If the recipient isn't Muslim or isn't connected to Eid personally, a different card will land better.
Keep it short and direct. The design already carries a lot of visual significance, so a long message competes with it rather than adding to it. Two or three sentences work best — something like a specific memory, a genuine wish for their Eid, or a line about missing them this year. Avoid generic filler phrases. If you're writing to someone older or more traditional, a brief line in Arabic alongside your English message is a small detail that tends to land well.
Avoid photos with heavy blue or green casts — think overcast outdoor shots or heavily filtered images with cool tones — as they can disappear into the teal background when the card opens. Photos with warm tones do the opposite: golden-hour light, candle-lit dinner tables, and bright indoor shots with orange or amber tones all contrast cleanly against the deep teal. Neutral backgrounds in the photos, like a white wall or wooden table, also give the card's ornate patterning room to breathe around them.
Nothing in the design is specific to either occasion — the crescent moon, star, and calligraphy are common to both Eids. The ceremonial tone arguably fits Eid al-Adha well, given its more solemn religious significance. The card is equally usable for both. Where it gets less fitting is outside the two Eids entirely — sending it for Ramadan greetings, for instance, works visually but the phrasing 'Eid Mubarak' in the design itself would be inaccurate timing if Eid hasn't arrived yet.