Happy Passover — Passover Photo eCard

Happy Passover

Passover Photo Card

Send Passover greetings with a beautiful photo card.

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A stone archway adorned with blooming flowers opens to a warmly lit room with a table set for Passover, featuring a full moon visible through the window.

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Your card opens just like a real greeting card — add photos on the left, your message on the right, or simply send a heartfelt message

Happy Passover — inside right
Your Message Area Greeting + Message + Signature
Happy Passover — card cover
Happy Passover — inside left
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About This Design

The card opens on a stone archway draped in spring flowers, framing a warmly lit interior where a Passover table is already set and waiting. Through the window, a full moon hangs in midnight-blue sky. Golden-yellow candlelight pulls the eye inward, while lavender and emerald-green from the blooms soften the stone-gray arch. The overall feeling is quiet — like arriving at someone's door just before the seder begins, when the house smells like food and everything is still for a moment before the family fills the room.

This card works well for your aunt who hosts the seder every single year without fail, the one who starts cooking two days ahead and won't let anyone else touch the brisket. Sending this acknowledges the effort she puts in, not just the holiday. It also fits a friend who is observing Passover for the first time since losing a parent — the image of a lit table and an open door carries real weight without saying anything heavy out loud. The moonlit setting gives it a reflective tone that suits someone sitting with both memory and meaning this spring.

For photos, think about images that hold still rather than action shots. A close-up of your family's seder plate, shot on a phone in natural light, works well against the card's golden and stone tones. A photo of your grandmother's hands setting the table, or the haggadahs stacked and ready, fits the quiet mood of the design. If you want something more personal, a candid of the whole table just before everyone sits down reads warmly on screen. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so a meaningful image becomes something they can save and keep.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are there Passover situations where this card would feel like the wrong choice?

Yes. If you're sending something to a large group chat or a work colleague you barely know, the intimacy of this design works against you — the moonlit table and open doorway feel personal, and that can read as odd when the relationship is casual. It's also not the right fit for a purely lighthearted or humorous message. The card has a still, reflective mood; if your note is full of jokes, the two won't match and the humor will land flat.

How do I pick photos that don't clash with the card's color palette?

The card leans on golden-yellow, midnight-blue, lavender, and stone-gray. Photos taken indoors by candlelight or warm lamp — think amber and honey tones — will sit naturally inside that palette. Avoid photos with strong cool-white or neon lighting, which will fight the warmth of the design. Outdoor daytime shots with harsh sunlight can also look disconnected. Images taken during the actual seder, or in a softly lit kitchen the evening before, tend to slot in without any adjustment needed.

What kind of written message matches the tone of this design?

Keep it grounded and direct. The card already does the visual work of conveying something meaningful, so your message doesn't need to repeat it. A sentence or two about the specific person — what you appreciate about spending the holiday with them, or a memory tied to a previous seder — lands better than a long formal note. Write the way you'd speak at the table, not the way you'd write in a card you bought at a drugstore. Plain and specific beats long and flowery every time.

Does this card work for occasions beyond Passover itself, like a spring dinner or a Jewish wedding?

Mostly no. The stone archway, seder table, and full moon are specific enough that recipients will read this as a Passover card immediately. Repurposing it for a general spring dinner or an unrelated Jewish occasion would likely confuse people. That said, if someone is hosting a Passover-adjacent gathering — a pre-seder Shabbat dinner the Friday before, for example — the design still fits that context well. Outside of anything connected to Passover, though, reach for a different template.

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