Personalized cards — Eid al-Adha

A studio service

Eid al-Adha cards with date palms, not Eid al-Fitr lanterns.

Eid al-Adha cards designed with the correct iconography: date palms, geometric medallions, and calligraphic 'Eid al-Adha Mubarak' in warm earth tones. No animal imagery, no lanterns, no iconographic mixing. Personalized with recipient name and optional du'a.

Personalized Eid al-Adha Mubarak card with gold date palm motif and geometric border on terracotta

Sample cards

Every card, made by hand.

Eid al-Adha card with gold date palm illustration on terracotta background
Eid al-Adha Mubarak card with geometric medallion on warm ochre
Bilingual Arabic-English Eid al-Adha card on cream
Formal Eid al-Adha card in deep brown and gold
Minimalist Eid al-Adha card with single date palm on ivory
Community Eid al-Adha card with tessellation pattern and calligraphy

Personalisation

Every detail, yours to choose.

Recipient name

Set in the same calligraphic style as the salutation — Arabic or any language.

'Eid al-Adha Mubarak' or Hajj greeting

Correct Arabic calligraphy as the primary salutation. 'Hajj Mabroor' also available.

Bilingual layout

Arabic with English, Urdu, French, or any second language at no extra cost.

Earth-tone palettes

Terracotta, ochre, warm ivory, deep brown, or sand — the natural palette of the occasion.

Motif choice

Date palm, geometric medallion, arabesque, or Kaaba silhouette (architectural, no figures).

Bulk CSV

25+ recipients — one personalized card per name, same design throughout.

Getting it right

Eid al-Adha has its own iconographic vocabulary

Most generic Eid card templates use the same lantern-and-crescent imagery for both Eids. That's wrong. Eid al-Adha — the Festival of Sacrifice, during Dhul Hijjah — has its own visual tradition: date palms, geometric medallions, the Kaaba, and warm earth tones that reflect the season of Hajj. We design each Eid correctly.

01

Date palm

The tree of the Arabian Peninsula and Islamic tradition — the principal motif of Eid al-Adha cards.

02

Geometric medallion

Circular tessellation patterns drawn from the architectural tradition of the mosque — formal and appropriate.

03

No animal imagery

We do not include sheep, goats, or any figurative animal depictions in Eid al-Adha cards.

Card styles

Six styles, one brief.

Date palm

Date palm

The principal Eid al-Adha motif — in illustrated or geometric form.

Geometric medallion

Geometric medallion

Complex circular tessellation pattern in gold on warm background.

Arabesque

Arabesque

Vine and floral motifs on earth-tone palettes.

Calligraphic bold

Calligraphic bold

Bold Arabic salutation as the central design element.

Formal earth tones

Formal earth tones

Deep brown and gold — formal and dignified.

Minimalist

Minimalist

Single date palm or medallion, generous space, clean type.

Community orders

For mosques, Islamic schools, and Muslim businesses

We do bulk orders for community Eid greetings. Upload a CSV of community member or staff names, choose a design, and we generate one personalized card per row. Mosques use this for their congregation, Islamic schools for students and parents, and Muslim-owned businesses for clients.

Investment

Fixed price. No surprises.

Single Eid al-Adha card $4.99. Bulk (25+ recipients) from $2.49/card.

  • Four design variations
  • Print-ready PDF with bleed
  • Digital share link
  • Bilingual layout at no extra cost
  • CSV bulk personalization for 25+
  • Free revisions within 24 hours

Questions

The answers we give most often.

What makes an Eid al-Adha card different from Eid al-Fitr?

Eid al-Adha is the Festival of Sacrifice. Its iconography uses date palms, geometric medallions, and earth-toned palettes — not lanterns or crescents, which belong to Eid al-Fitr. We never mix them.

Will there be any animal imagery in the cards?

No. We never include animal depictions in Eid al-Adha cards. The visual vocabulary is date palms, geometric patterns, calligraphy, and earth-tone palettes only.

Can the card include 'Eid al-Adha Mubarak' in Arabic?

Yes — correct Arabic calligraphy 'عيد الأضحى مبارك' is the default salutation.

When should I order?

Eid al-Adha falls on the 10th of Dhul Hijjah. Order at least 5 days ahead for digital delivery, 2 weeks ahead for printed physical cards.

Can it include a message for those performing Hajj?

Yes — we have specific salutations for Hajj pilgrims: 'Hajj Mabroor' in Arabic calligraphy.

Do you do bulk orders for a community or masjid?

Yes — CSV upload for 25+ recipients, one card per name. Used by mosques, Islamic schools, and Muslim businesses.

Next step

You know the card you want.

Send us the details and we'll have a first proof in your inbox within 48 hours.