The card is built around a cross-stitch illustration of a golden mosque with blue accents, flanked by emerald-green trees and a cluster of hanging lanterns in crimson-red, royal-blue, and gold. A crescent moon sits above the scene, and geometric border patterns run through the design in the same tight color palette of ivory, red, blue, and green. The needlework texture gives every element a hand-stitched look, with the grid of the cross-stitch visible up close on screen. The overall feeling is loud and festive without being chaotic — it reads like something carefully made by hand.
This card works well for your aunt who cooks the Eid al-Fitr dinner every year for thirty people and has done it for two decades without skipping once. She would recognize the cross-stitch style as something close to the embroidered tablecloths she uses that night. It also fits your childhood friend who moved abroad and is spending Eid away from family for the first time — the mosque and lanterns carry a visual familiarity that a plain greeting card would not. Both recipients get something that feels tied to the occasion rather than borrowed from a generic holiday template.
For photos, lean into the warm gold and crimson tones already in the design. A phone-shot of the Eid table spread — dishes out, good light, no staging needed — reads naturally against the card's palette. A candid of kids in new clothes before the Eid prayer works well too, since the bright colors in their outfits will not clash with the design's reds and blues. If you are sending this to someone far away, a simple photo of your front door decorated for the occasion gives them a glimpse of home. Recipients can tap any photo inside the card to download it at full resolution and keep it.