The card opens on a cobalt-blue and white scene drawn in a traditional illustrative style. Pyramids rise against the sky on one side while a parted sea rolls back in layered waves on the other. Seder symbols sit at the center, and a grapevine border frames the whole composition — clusters of grapes and curling vines running along every edge. The two-color palette, cobalt against white, keeps the imagery clean and direct. Nothing competes for attention. The overall feeling is quiet and reverent, the kind of stillness that matches the weight of the holiday itself.
This card works well for your grandmother who leads the Seder every year without fail, the one who still uses the same Haggadah she's had since the 1970s. She'll recognize the imagery immediately and appreciate that nothing about it is ironic or modern. It also suits a close friend who converted to Judaism a few years ago and is hosting their very first Seder this spring — the traditional visual language here feels welcoming rather than exclusive, and a personal note alongside it carries real meaning. For either recipient, the card arrives on screen as something considered, not casual.
For photos, lean into the occasion itself. A snapshot from last year's Seder table — the Seder plate in the center, candles lit, everyone mid-conversation — sits naturally against the cobalt-and-white palette without color-clashing. A close-up of the matzah or the wine cups on a white tablecloth also works well; the simplicity of the photo echoes the card's own restraint. If you want something more personal, a candid of the family gathered around the table tells the story better than any posed shot. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images you include are genuinely theirs to keep.