The card opens on a cream background covered in interlocking geometric shapes and hand-drawn-style floral motifs in navy blue, crimson red, and golden yellow. The patterns fill the frame edge to edge, with the words "Eid Mubarak" sitting at the center in a lettering style that matches the ornate surroundings. Nothing about this design is minimal — every corner is busy with detail. The overall effect is loud in a good way: the kind of card that reads like a proper occasion, not a quick message dashed off at the last minute. The mood is full and festive, unmistakably so.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year without fail — the one who sets the table with her good china and makes sure everyone gets a proper plate before they leave. Send it to her the morning of, and the gold-and-crimson palette will feel right at home on her phone screen. It also fits your childhood friend who moved abroad three years ago and misses the family Eid gatherings. He's spending this one in a flat with two flatmates, and a card with this much detail and tradition behind it says something a brief text message never quite would.
The cream background in this design reads almost like aged paper, which means photos with warm, natural light sit inside it without clashing. A photo taken at the Eid prayer ground with morning light coming in sideways would work well here. So would a close-up of a plate of ma'amoul or sheer khurma before the family sits down to eat — something that puts the occasion in concrete visual terms. The recipient can tap any photo to download it at its original resolution, so if you include a family group shot from this year's gathering, they get to keep that photo too, not just the card.