Happy Passover — Passover Photo eCard

Happy Passover

Passover Photo Card

Send Passover greetings with a beautiful photo card.

Free · No account needed

A beautifully set Passover Seder table featuring a Seder plate, matzah, wine cups, and candles, with a rich color palette of royal blue, gold, and ivory.

Create This Card
Photos fall out like real prints
Full-quality photo downloads
Keep forever as an offline file
Free, no signup needed

See What Your Recipient Gets

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
Photo Area Add up to 15 photos

Add photos for an extra surprise, or send just a message — it’s your card

Free to createNo account requiredPhotos fall out like real printsFull-quality downloads

Photos Fall Out

Photos tumble out of the card like real printed pictures

Print Quality

Download every photo at full resolution

Keep Forever

Download the card to keep offline forever

Free, No Signup

Create and send without an account

How It Works

1

Choose a Design

Pick from hundreds of free templates

2

Add Your Photos

Upload photos from your device

3

Write a Message

Add a personal note to your card

4

Send Instantly

Share via link — text, email, or WhatsApp

About This Design

The card opens on a richly set Seder table rendered in royal blue, gold, and ivory. A Seder plate sits at the center, surrounded by matzah, wine cups, and lit candles. Emerald-green and crimson-red details appear throughout, keeping the palette grounded in Passover's familiar imagery. The gold catches the candlelight, the ivory gives breathing room, and the royal blue anchors everything without competing with the ritual objects. The overall effect is quiet and ceremonial — not loud, not minimalist. It reads like a table you'd actually sit down at.

This card fits your aunt who hosts the Seder every year without fail, the one who irons the tablecloth and polishes the Seder plate the day before. Sending this acknowledges the work she puts in, not just the holiday itself. It also works well for a college friend who is spending their first Passover away from home, maybe in a city where they don't know anyone else who observes. Two or three sentences in the message about what you'll miss doing together this year will land better than any generic greeting.

For photos, lean into the table setting itself — a close shot of your own Seder plate, still messy after the meal, tells a real story. A photo of the kids at the table hunting for the afikomen, blurred motion and all, fits the gold-and-blue palette without clashing. Or try a quiet shot of two wine cups side by side, which reads warmly on screen without needing explanation. Recipients can download any photo at full resolution straight from the card, so include shots worth keeping — the kind people actually want saved on their phone.

Similar Passover Cards

View All

Frequently Asked Questions

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

Yes — this card leans into traditional Seder imagery, so it doesn't translate well outside a Passover context. Sending it as a general spring greeting or a generic Jewish holiday card would feel mismatched. It also isn't the right fit for someone who has recently lost a family member and is skipping the holiday this year; the ceremonial, festive tone could land badly. Save it for people who are actively gathering, hosting, or observing Passover in some form.

What kinds of photos work best against this card's royal blue and gold color scheme?

Photos with warm indoor lighting tend to hold up well here — candlelit table shots, close-ups of food on white or cream dishes, or family portraits taken in a warmly lit dining room. Avoid photos with heavy green or blue color casts, like outdoor shots taken in shade, since they fight the palette rather than sitting alongside it. High-contrast, brightly lit phone photos also work fine. The ivory in the design gives neutral photos room to breathe without looking washed out.

What tone should the written message inside this card take?

Match the card's ceremonial but unhurried feel. A short paragraph works better than a list of wishes. Reference something specific — a memory from a past Seder, a dish the recipient always makes, or a tradition you share. This design doesn't push toward humor or casual banter; it sits closer to the sincere end of the scale. That said, it doesn't require formal language. Write the way you'd speak at the table, not the way you'd write a speech.

Does this card work for Passover-adjacent occasions, like sending a thank-you after attending someone's Seder?

Reasonably well, yes. A post-Seder thank-you sent within a day or two of the dinner makes sense with this design, since the imagery is still fresh and relevant. It works less well as a belated message sent weeks after Passover has ended — at that point the Seder table imagery feels disconnected from the moment. For a thank-you, keep the written message brief and specific: name something from the evening that stuck with you rather than writing a general note of appreciation.

Make Their Day Special

Free, no account needed. Ready in minutes.

Create Your Card Now
Create This Card