Bold red and blue lettering fills the card in a graffiti style, with words that look like they were sprayed straight onto a wall. A winking smiley face holds a spray can at the center, surrounded by paint splatters in red, yellow, and blue, plus scattered stars in black and white. There is nothing understated about it — the contrast is high, the lines are loose, and the whole thing reads loud. It is the kind of card that registers immediately on a phone screen, not a card you scroll past without noticing. The overall feeling is playful and energetic.
This card works well for a friend who texts you memes at midnight and would laugh out loud at a smiley face holding a spray can. Send it when you have not been in touch for a few months and want to break the silence without making it a big deal. It also fits your teenage nephew who thinks everything you send him is corny — this one he might actually screenshot. Or think of that coworker who moved to a different city last year and you keep meaning to message; the card's tone is casual enough that it does not feel like an overdue apology, just a genuine check-in.
Go for photos that match the card's high-contrast color palette — a shot taken in bright daylight, or somewhere with a red or yellow wall in the background, will look right at home next to the paint splatters. A candid of the two of you from the last time you hung out, slightly blurry and laughing, fits the loose energy of the design. Or drop in a recent selfie with a goofy expression — something that mirrors the winking face on the card. The recipient can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so even a spontaneous phone shot is worth including.