The card opens on an ivory background carrying a detailed Seder plate at its center, drawn with royal-blue and gold patterning across the rim and the plate's sections. Each traditional element — the shank bone, bitter herbs, charoset, and the rest — sits in its own place on the plate. Silver candlesticks rise on either side, flanked by small green-stemmed flowers. The ornate blue and gold borders frame the whole composition without crowding it. The overall feeling is quiet and traditional, the kind of design that signals this is a real holiday, not a generic seasonal greeting.
This card suits a few very specific people. Think of your aunt who hosts the Seder every year without fail, sets the full table, and takes the ritual seriously — she'll recognize every element on that plate and appreciate that the card does too. It also works well for a Jewish coworker who mentioned they're leading their first-ever Seder this year and is clearly nervous about getting it right. Sending this one says you paid attention to what the holiday actually looks like, not just that you knew it was happening.
Photos that sit well against the ivory, gold, and blue palette tend to have natural or warm lighting rather than harsh flash. A candid shot of the family gathered around the table before the meal starts works well here — faces lit by actual candles, haggadahs open. A close-up of the Seder plate your family actually uses, even a battered one passed down for decades, adds something personal. Or a photo of the kids asking the Four Questions, mid-sentence. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so these become keepsakes they can save or print at home long after Passover ends.