Pastel pink and lavender roses cluster around the card's script text, with sage-green leaves and small white flowers filling the gaps between blooms. The background stays light — close to cream — so the florals read clearly without competing with each other. Soft gray sits in the shadows of the petals, keeping the palette from going flat. There are no sharp lines anywhere in the design; everything curves. The overall effect is quiet and soft, the visual equivalent of a slow Sunday morning rather than a loud party.
This card works well for your best friend who you always do Galentine's brunch with, even when life gets messy — she'll recognize the inside joke of the occasion before she even reads your message. It also fits your college roommate who moved to another city two years ago and whom you don't see nearly enough; the floral script style matches the kind of friendship that survives distance without needing to explain itself. Send it to your sister-in-law who held your hand through a hard year, or the coworker who always saves you a seat.
For photos, think candid over posed. A slightly blurry shot of the two of you laughing at last year's dinner table reads more honestly than anything staged. If you have a photo from a trip you took together — even just a phone shot outside a coffee shop — that kind of image sits naturally against the cream and pastel-pink tones of this design. A close-up of flowers from her garden or yours also works, tying back to the roses in the card itself. Recipients can tap any photo to download it at full resolution, so pick ones worth keeping.