The card opens on a textured ivory background with a stack of matzah draped in a white cloth sitting at the center. Around it, spring flowers in buttercup-yellow, lavender, cornflower-blue, and sage-green crowd the frame, and a few butterflies rest among the blooms. Script text curves across the top in a style that feels handwritten rather than printed. The whole composition leans into the overlap of Passover tradition and spring season — the result is something quiet and genuinely cheerful without being loud or overdone.
This card fits someone like your aunt who hosts the seder every year without fail, sets the table two days early, and would notice that the matzah illustration actually has a cloth over it. It also works for a close friend who is celebrating their first Passover after converting, and who you want to acknowledge without making a big production of it. A card like this, with its spring flowers and familiar seder imagery, reads as both a holiday greeting and a small gesture of recognition — not a performance.
Photos that work well here are ones with natural light and some color in them, so they don't disappear against the ivory and lavender background. A candid shot from last year's seder table — wine glasses, haggadahs, people mid-conversation — sits naturally in this context. So does a photo of your kids or grandkids dressed up for the holiday, or a garden shot taken that same spring week. The recipient can tap any photo in the card and download it at full resolution, so even a phone snapshot becomes something they can actually keep and print at home if they want.