The card is built around a cross-stitch style illustration of a Seder plate, rendered in royal blue, crimson, and sage green on a beige background. Each section of the plate holds a traditional Passover item, stitched in the blocky, grid-based style that reads like counted needlework. A floral border frames the whole composition, with small Jewish symbols woven into the corners. "Happy Passover" runs across the card in bold blue letters. The overall feeling is loud in color but quiet in tone — the kind of design that looks handmade without asking you to notice it too much.
This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Seder every year without fail, sets the table two days early, and still manages to forget nothing. She would recognize every item on that plate instantly, and the cross-stitch style would remind her of the embroidered tablecloth her mother used. It also fits a friend who is attending their first Seder as a guest — someone who just got engaged to a Jewish partner and is learning the traditions. For them, the illustrated plate doubles as a small visual guide, and the card says welcome without being heavy about it.
For photos, lean into the occasion itself. A snapshot of the actual Seder table before the guests sit down — candles lit, haggadahs stacked — picks up the beige and crimson tones in the design naturally. A close-up of homemade matzah or a bowl of charoset works for a host who cooks everything from scratch. If you want something more personal, a candid of your family gathered around the table mid-conversation fits the card's energy without trying too hard. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images are theirs to keep long after the holiday ends.