Fine Art

Many of the souvenir shops here sell beautiful souvenirs made of shells. The selection is exceeded only by the craftsmanship and it is tremendously difficult to select which ones to buy.

Bernard in particular would love these and I’m brainstorming how I’d get them home since they’re quite fragile.

Just when I think I’ve found the ultimate gift another design comes along. I don’t know who the artisans crafting these pieces are, but they’re masters of distilling the Floridian vacation experience down to a figurine made of shells.

Which one would you buy?

Universal

We’re in Florida and visited Universal Studios today, one of two Universal theme parks located here in Orlando. The theme is ‘movies’, and all the rides/attractions/restaurants/shops are based around films.

The ‘star of the show’ for us was the Harry Potter section of the park, which recreated ‘Diagon Alley’ from the films. It was extremely impressive and contained a mind-boggling ride that was half roller coaster and half 3D film.

I’ve been to many Disney parks and thought they had cornered the market on fantastic design and attractions but Harry Potter today opened my eyes. It was, in a word, amazing!

But it’s also only a part of a very large park, and over about 7.5 hrs today we rode almost every ride and saw most of what there was to see.

That shot was taken waiting in line for the Transformers ride which was maybe even slightly better than the HP one. The goggles are for the 3D component of the ride, which didn’t even make me sick! We also went on rides based on the ‘Mummy’ and ‘Fast & The Furious’ film series, and KLS rode a Jimmy Fallon NY-themed ride while I rode this:

While it was a hellish brain-shaker of a coaster I’d say it’s probably worth it, if only for the initial (17 story) vertical climb. They use metal detectors on every rider before you can get on just to make sure you don’t have items that could fall out of your pockets!

The Simpsons ride – a motion simulator ride utilizing a gargantuan imax 3D screen – was too much for me and I basically ignored the screen and focused on the wall to minimize motion sickness. This was only partially successful and had the ride continued for only a minute or so longer I may have revisited my lunch! KLS loved it though 🙂

The ET ride – 29 years old and the only ride remaining from when the park opened – was surreal and worth doing just because it’ll certainly close soon enough. You give your name at the start and an animatronic ET speaks it at the very end but I was too embarrassed to say my name was something like ‘Jesus’ or ‘Satan’ 🙂

That is KLS drinking frozen ‘butterbeer’, a butterscotch flavored concotion sold in the Harry Potter restaurant. She said it was even worth the $7!

It’s late and I just spent hours painting Dobby house elves on postcards so I’ll leave some of the remainder of the Universal Studios news for those. Suffice to say we had fun, and are already looking forward to the other Universal park – which has more rides! – in a couple of days.

Postcrossing Update

I’ve been using Postcrossing for five months now, and have sent and received just under 50 cards. Every time I find a new card in my PO Box it brings a smile to my face, and I’m enjoying the service even more than I thought I would.

I’ve received cards from 25 countries, although a third came from only three of them (Germany, Russia and China). I’ve sent cards to Australia and South America but not received any from either. I’ve neither sent nor received cards to Africa.

The cards themselves run the gamut from typical scenic shots to art, animals, seasonal or pop culture. Sometimes people don’t write much at all, sometimes they write a lot. Occasionally even the simplest messages bring a smile:

Most users are older women, but I did get a card from a child (complete with art!):

Some users are so experienced they have massively streamlined their work via stamps or stickers. Here’s an extreme example of a card featuring only printed stickers and no actual writing:

The variety of stamps is astonishing. Most users seem as interested in the stamps as the card themselves and take the extra effort to use interesting postage. I particularly like the unusually-shaped stamps that often come from EU countries.

Here’s an example of a card from Malaysia that included the non-postage parts from the stamp sheet. They are so big there wasn’t much space for anything else:

So of almost fifty cards which is my favorite? That’s a difficult question but I sat down and had a look and arrived at this one from Moscow:

It’s tiny – like a normal card cut in half! – and is styled to look like a Polaroid. I’ve never seen a card like this so it gets extra points for originality. Given how many I get from Russia I wonder how long before I get another tiny card?

(Of course the very best card in these five months is one I sent myself on which I drew an astonishing Freddy Mercury since the recipient mentioned she was a Queen superfan. She hasn’t received it yet…)

If you’re reading this and wondering when you’ll next have the fun of a postcard in your very own mailbox then the future looks bright! In only two days we’re off on a vacation, and you can look forward to my usual postcards in your mailbox very soon 🙂