The card opens on a navy-blue background packed with sunflowers and intricate floral patterns in sunflower-yellow, burnt-orange, and leaf-green. Ornate decorative borders frame the layout, and the text — both Spanish and English — sits inside the composition rather than floating over it. The flowers are drawn with enough detail that each petal reads clearly on a phone screen. The overall result is loud in the best way: high-contrast, full of color, and unapologetically bold. There is nothing understated about it, and that is exactly the point.
This card fits your mom who grew up speaking Spanish at home and who has always kept flowers on the kitchen table — the sunflowers will read as familiar, not decorative. It also works well for your grandmother who came from Mexico or Central America and for whom a card in her first language carries more weight than one in English alone. Send it to your tía who raised you alongside her own kids, the one who shows love through food and never expects anything in return. Each of these people will notice that someone chose a card specifically for them, not just grabbed the first option.
Sunflowers in the card mean sunflowers in the photos tend to land well — if you took a picture of her in the garden last summer, that one belongs here. A candid shot from a family dinner, with everyone at the table and the overhead light catching faces mid-laugh, gives the card a lived-in feeling the design supports. A photo of her hands holding something — a coffee cup, a grandchild, a bouquet — works too, because the detail in the design draws the eye toward detail in the image. Recipients can download every photo at full resolution directly from the card itself.