The card is built around a paper art composition of large pink roses, white daisies, and sage-green leaves arranged across a cream and white background. Small hearts are scattered through the arrangement, and the Galentine's Day message sits in script lettering that sits comfortably inside the floral cluster. The dusty-rose and soft-pink tones pull the roses and the heart accents into the same visual register, while the cream base keeps the whole thing from feeling heavy. The overall mood is quiet and cheerful — the kind of thing you look at and feel genuinely glad someone sent it.
This card suits a friend who has been your ride-or-die since college, the one you text first when anything goes wrong or right. She probably has a soft spot for flowers and would notice the paper art detail immediately. It also works well for your coworker who organized last year's Galentine's dinner and somehow made seventeen people feel at home in her apartment. She put the effort in for everyone else, and this card is a direct acknowledgment of that. Both of these women will open it on their phone, see something that looks considered, and feel seen rather than sent a generic greeting.
For photos, lean into the dusty-rose and sage-green palette: a snapshot from a brunch the two of you shared, plates still on the table, natural light coming through a window, works well here. A candid of your friend laughing at something off-camera in an outdoor setting also sits naturally against the card's soft tones. If you have a group photo from a recent dinner or trip together, the cream and white in the background will keep it readable on screen. The recipient can tap any photo inside the opened card and download it at full resolution to keep or print at home themselves.