Category: Postcards

Postcard-script!

I received two other interestingly-stamped postcards recently, but didn’t include them in yesterday’s post since they weren’t from Postcrossing.

The first was this:

Adam sent me this recently and as you can see it’s got all five of the recent Australian disaster relief stamps on it. And what stamps they are! Australia rarely issues shaped stamps and as best I know these are the only ever Australia-shaped ones. Here’s detail of the best one (and yes I agree with Adam):

Happily the card arrived intact and the stamps are in near perfect condition πŸ™‚

The other card I recently received was from Korea and featured these beautiful lunar new year stamps:

Look how cute they are! Both of them feature dazzling foil effects and they sparkle in the light! I was impressed by both the Australian and American year of the rat stamps but these Korean ones top both! Thanks to Jessica and her dad for sending me these!

Incidentally South Korea prints a lot of very pretty stamps and I always hope to get a card from there via Postcrossing but so far I haven’t been lucky enough. Maybe I’ll need to visit one day and send myself some…

Postcrossing Update

I’ve now been a member of Postcrossing for 15 months and I’m still loving it. I’ve sent 185 cards and received about 175. I can send up to thirteen at a time now, and every weekend dutifully write and send about five on average. Here’s the stats:

And the map (red is sent, blue received):

As you can see I’ve now received cards from Africa, but not yet Australia or South America. Or Antarctica, but I’m not holding my breath for that since there’s only one user (at a Dutch base).

The vast majority of cards I’ve received are standard tourist cards or cards featuring animals. But there’s also been a wonderful assortment of weird and wonderfully strange cards including some vintage ones. I’ve also now got two like these:

Each had lots of messages and signatures on the back. I think people get these at ‘meetups’ and the attendees sign every card in advance to be used in the future. Both of mine are from different Russian meetups. (Incidentally Postcrossing is very popular in Russia and the country even printed an official Postcrossing stamp!)

Here’s an unusual arrival:

The card was ruined! It had gotten wet, torn, folded and mangled in transit. I could barely read the message on the back! I’m astonished it made it!

As for the backs, some people write very little, some write about what they did that day, some write about their hobbies or family or their dreams. It’s always fun to see what they say. And then every now and then truly unique ones arrive like this:

Or this:

Yes, that’s a wax seal!

And of course I’m still loving the stamps. Postcrossers go out of their way to make the stamps interesting and they rarely disappoint:

These days the messages on the cards almost all reference the virus and it drives home that no matter where we live or what our situation our lives are all being profoundly affected. It’s also interesting to note the now common ‘stay safe’ phrase is being used by people all over the world and has become the standard sign off for most cards.

One (of many!) consequences of the virus is the availability of postcards. Luckily I restocked when we went to the Pez museum a few weeks back but of isolation continues for months I’ll certainly run out of cards to send. In anticipation of this I recently bought 200 high- quality cards on Amazon but I won’t tell you what they are since you may receive one yourself πŸ™‚

It’s good to see this service continuing even through a pandemic. More than ever in this era of social isolation it’s nice to have some contact even with people I’ll never actually meet.

Oops, We Did It Again Again!

B and I had postcard contests before (read about them here and here) and – after a long hiatus – it was time once again!

There were no set rules, just the usual who could produce the most impressive result. They were both mailed simultaneously to promote independence, and today they arrived.

Once again Bernard defied expectation and submitted not one but three cards. I found these in the mailbox today:

His card selection is clearly fantastic and has an animal theme; one lenticular, one artistic and one incredibly awesome! But the card itself is only half the entry… and here’s the backs:

An explosion of stickers! But what’s the theme? I’ve searched but came up empty. I like the clever reuse of the antique dog/koala card (note the writing under the stickers) and Pac-Man is always appropriate in any situation but I would have liked to see more of a purpose behind the use of these three cards. Plus – let’s be honest here – those printed stamps are worth nothing!

Had I used these particular cards, I may have themed the backs from the front, and decorated them with frog, dog/koala and dingo stickers (and stamps!) exclusively. Possibly I’d have watercoloured the animals and added a few lines of iambic pentameter as well. All good ideas for next years contest…

Which brings me to my entry:

The card itself – showing The 8th Doctor Who – comes from a postcard book AW gave me oodles ago that never fails to deliver just the right card for any occasion! I knew Bernard would treasure it, so I worked hard on the reverse:

It’s tempting to only direct your eye to the lenticular T-Rex stamp and gudetama caviar-sticker embellishments and ignore the 59 Vocaloid stickers I carefully attached with tweezers. But if I did you’d endlessly demand an explanation for that ‘hidden’ message: Hell Of Apes

All I’ll say for now is it was a working title for an Atari 2600 game I’m designing and B is planning on programming. If it ever gets made you can read about it here!

Bernard described my card as “a disturbing lattice of cartoon girls flanked by gibbering egg yolks”, which I think is fancy talk for…

I won πŸ™‚

(Oh, and I wonder if he found the UV ink message I wrote on my card?)