The card centers on three illustrated Passover symbols arranged against a textured cream background. A rust-red wine goblet anchors the left side, a mustard-yellow matzah sits flat in the middle, and a teal-green Star of David ringed with small leaves and dots fills the upper right. The palette is warm but not soft — the rust and mustard push the design forward while the teal pulls the eye back into balance. No photography, no gradients, just flat illustration that reads clearly on any screen. The overall feel is loud in a quiet way — traditional without being stiff.
This card fits your aunt who hosts the seder every single year, the one who pulls out the same Haggadah her mother used and still hides the afikomen in the same spot behind the bookshelf. She will recognize the goblet and matzah immediately and appreciate that someone sent something that actually looks like Passover. It also works for a coworker who is observing Passover for the first time since converting, still learning the rituals but proud to mark the holiday — sending this card signals that you see it as meaningful, not just a cultural footnote.
For photos, lean into the seder table itself. A close-up of the seder plate with the shank bone and bitter herbs in natural light photographs well and ties directly to the card's illustrated symbols. A candid of the family gathered around the table before the meal starts — someone mid-laugh, someone reading the Haggadah — gives the recipient something to keep. A third option is a portrait of the host, apron still on, standing in the kitchen an hour before guests arrive. The recipient can tap any photo in the card to download it at full resolution and save or print it at home.