Happy Passover — Passover Photo eCard

Happy Passover

Passover Photo Card

Send Passover greetings with a beautiful photo card.

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A detailed illustration of a Passover Seder table featuring a blue and white Seder plate with traditional items, surrounded by matzah, wine glasses, and lit candles, accented with floral arrangements.

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Happy Passover — inside right
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Happy Passover — card cover
Happy Passover — inside left
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About This Design

The card shows a detailed illustration of a Passover Seder table. A blue and white Seder plate sits at the center, its traditional items clearly rendered. Around it: stacked matzah, filled wine glasses, and lit candles casting a warm glow across the scene. Floral arrangements in crimson and emerald-green fill the corners, while royal-blue and gold details run through the linework and borders. The ivory background keeps the composition grounded rather than busy. The overall feeling is quiet and festive at once — traditional enough to feel serious, detailed enough to feel alive.

This card works well for your aunt who hosts the Seder every year without fail, the one who sets the table two days early and has her haggadahs color-coded by seat. It signals that you see the effort she puts in, not just the holiday itself. It also fits a close friend who is attending their first Seder as a new member of a Jewish family — someone navigating an unfamiliar tradition with genuine curiosity and care. A card with this much visual specificity — the Seder plate, the matzah, the candles — tells them you respect what they're stepping into.

For photos, think about images that carry the same lived-in quality as the illustration. A shot of your family's actual Seder table before anyone sits down — candles lit, haggadahs open — sits naturally alongside the card's own imagery. A close-up of your grandmother's hands holding the matzah, slightly blurred at the edges, adds something no stock photo could. Or a candid from last year's dinner mid-story, someone mid-laugh across the table. Recipients can download any photo you include at full resolution directly from the card, so a photo that matters is worth adding.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Are there occasions where this Passover Seder card would feel out of place?

Yes — this card is specifically rooted in Passover imagery: the Seder plate, matzah, wine glasses, candles. Sending it for Rosh Hashanah, Hanukkah, or a general Jewish holiday would feel off, like using a Christmas tree card for Easter. It also reads too formally festive for a casual 'thinking of you' note outside any holiday context. If the person you're sending to doesn't observe Passover or isn't connected to the Seder tradition, a different design would be a better fit.

How do I choose photos that won't clash with the card's color palette?

The card runs on royal-blue, gold, ivory, crimson, and emerald-green — all saturated and rich. Photos with strong natural light tend to hold up best alongside those tones. Avoid photos with heavy blue or orange filters applied after the fact, since they'll fight the illustration rather than sit beside it. Warm indoor shots — a candlelit dinner table, a family gathered under a kitchen light — tend to read well. Very dark or underexposed photos can disappear against the ivory background, so brightness matters.

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

The illustration is detailed and traditional, so a short, direct message lands better than something long and conversational. Two or three sentences work well: acknowledge the holiday, say something specific to the person, and close simply. You don't need to be formal, but this isn't the card for a joke-heavy or ironic message — the visual weight of the Seder table sets a tone that a silly note would undercut. Something like 'Chag Sameach — thinking of you and your family at the table this year' is enough.

Could this card work for someone who isn't religious but still observes Passover culturally?

Largely, yes. The imagery — Seder plate, matzah, candles — is tied to the ritual, but plenty of people engage with those symbols culturally rather than religiously. The card doesn't include any overtly religious text in its design, so it reads as traditional without being devotional. That said, if the person you're sending to has specifically distanced themselves from Passover observance and finds the Seder imagery loaded or unwelcome, this level of visual specificity might not land the way you intend.

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