Four watercolor wine goblets sit at the center of this card, each one painted in rich burgundy and golden-yellow with floral details at the stems and rims. The cream background carries loose golden splashes that look like light catching a polished surface. Olive-green leaves and faint lavender accents fill the gaps between the goblets, giving the composition weight without crowding it. Script text reads "Happy Passover" and "Chag Pesach Sameach" in a style that nods to traditional Jewish holiday typography. The overall feeling is quiet and settled — not loud, not plain.
This card fits your aunt who hosts the Seder every single year, sets the table three hours early, and still makes the brisket from scratch. She will recognize the four cups immediately, and that recognition matters more than any generic holiday graphic. It also suits a friend who is attending their first Passover Seder as the non-Jewish partner in a new relationship — someone stepping into the holiday for the first time who would appreciate a card that takes the occasion seriously and shows that you did too, without being over-the-top about it.
The goblets in this card are painted in deep burgundy and gold, so photos with similar tones read well on screen — a shot of the Seder table set with wine glasses and the good china, taken before everyone sits down, works especially well. A candid of your grandmother reading from the Haggadah, lit by the overhead dining room light, carries the same warm color range. If you are sending this to the friend attending their first Seder, a photo of the two of you from a recent evening together gives the card a personal anchor. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution directly from the card.