The card opens on a cream background with a floral wreath built from olive-green leaves, lavender blooms, and soft-pink petals. Tucked into the wreath are small illustrated grapes, a piece of matzah, and a gold goblet — Passover symbols worked into the botanicals rather than displayed separately. The gold lettering of "Happy Passover" sits at the center. The overall look is quiet and traditional, the kind of design that reads as considered rather than loud, and feels calm without being plain.
Your aunt who hosts the Seder every year and has the whole haggadah memorized would find this card fitting — she takes the holiday seriously, and the matzah and goblet in the wreath signal that you do too. Your college roommate who is Jewish and lives far from family, spending the first night of Passover on a video call instead of at the table, would appreciate getting something that feels genuinely tied to the holiday rather than a generic spring card. Two or three sentences from you matter here; the design carries the rest.
Photos that work well here are ones with natural light and earthy tones — a shot of the Seder table before everyone sits down, with the seder plate and candles visible, would photograph beautifully against the cream and gold of this card. A candid of your aunt mid-conversation at the table, or a close-up of the matzah in its cloth cover, ties directly to the holiday's mood. Because the recipient can tap any photo and download it at full original resolution, a well-lit table shot or a family moment from the evening becomes something they can actually save and keep.