Three ornate lanterns dominate the front of this card, rendered in deep orange and teal-blue with crescent moons and small stars worked into their frames. The background is a textured cream that keeps the lanterns from competing with each other. Arabic script runs across the design alongside the greeting "Kul 'Am wa Antum Bikhayr," which translates roughly to "May every year find you well." Bright yellow and coral-red accents appear in the star details and the script border. The overall look is loud in colour but settled in its layout — festive without being chaotic.
This card suits your aunt who hosts the Eid dinner every year and sends voice notes to the whole family the moment Ramadan ends. She would open this on her phone and immediately recognise the lantern motif she probably has hanging in her own home. It also works for a coworker who fasts quietly at the office and never makes a fuss about it — someone you want to acknowledge without making things awkward. A short message alongside the Arabic script says you noticed and you mean it.
Photos that work here lean into the card's colour story. A shot of the Eid table before everyone sits down — the orange of the dates bowl, the brass tea set — lands naturally against the deep-orange lantern tones. A candid of kids in new Eid clothes, especially anything teal or yellow, will read clearly on screen. A phone-shot of the moon on the last night of Ramadan, even a blurry one, carries real meaning here. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images you include travel with the card as keepsakes they actually keep.