The card shows a navy-blue mosque illustration centered on an ivory background. A crescent moon and a scatter of stars sit above the mosque's domes and minarets, drawn in the same single-color style throughout. The text "Eid Sa'id" and "Happy Eid" appear in bold lettering that reads clearly on any screen size. The two-color palette — deep navy on off-white — keeps nothing competing for attention. The overall feeling is quiet and still, the kind of image that signals this is a proper occasion without being loud about it.
This card suits your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year and sends greetings to a long list of relatives across different countries — the bilingual text means she does not have to explain the Arabic to anyone. It also works for a coworker who just observed their first Ramadan and is stepping into Eid with some nervousness; a card that reads simply and traditionally does not overwhelm. And it fits a university friend you have not spoken to in months — the clean design carries the greeting without demanding a long accompanying message.
For photos, lean into the occasion itself. A shot from your Eid morning — the table laid out before the meal, with the good dishes out — reads warmly on screen and gives the recipient something to keep. A group photo from outside the mosque after prayers, even a slightly rushed phone shot, carries real weight here. The navy and ivory of the card will not clash with most natural-light photos. Recipients can tap any photo inside the card to download it at full original resolution, so a photo you include is genuinely theirs to save and print at home if they want.