The "So Much Love" card opens on a watercolor bouquet of pink and white flowers spilling out of a painted envelope. Sage-green leaves and stems fill the negative space, while the background sits in soft buttercream-yellow and peach tones. A handwritten-style script carries the text, and the overall palette — soft-pink, lavender-purple, pastel throughout — keeps everything light without being loud. The result is quiet, the visual equivalent of a note slipped under a door rather than announced across a room.
This card works well for someone like your friend who organised your entire baby shower and never asked for anything in return — the floral, handwritten look matches the care she put in. A few sentences and a photo say more here than a gift would. It also suits a situation like thanking your mum's neighbour who checked in on her every week while you were living abroad. That's a relationship where a generic store card would feel off, but something painted and personal lands right. The botanical style reads as considered without being over the top.
For photos, lean into the pastel palette. A sunlit shot of flowers from the garden — even a phone photo taken on a bright morning — will sit naturally against the watercolor tones. If the card is for someone who helped you through a hard stretch, a candid photo of the two of you on a good day tells the story better than a posed one. You could also drop in a photo of something they made or gave you — a meal, a handmade item, a place you visited together. The recipient can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so the images travel with the card rather than disappearing into a feed.