Postcards

When my brother and I visited The Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Orlando we bought a pack of postcards and some postage at Hogsmeade and posted some postcards home. They have a little “Owl Post” booth where you can get your postcard stamped with an owl post stamp, and it’s a charming experience. We ended up with a few postcards left over, so we posted them from our Disney hotel. A few weeks after we got home the postcards arrived and made out day.

I was just at a Shalom Sebba exhibition at the Tel-Aviv Museum of Art and after my visit I went to the museum store and bought some postcards there. Later that evening I spent some time writing postcards for my family, with little sketches inspired by Sebba’s work:

I had no idea where I would post them, as most of the post boxes in my area have been removed, but I wanted to at least try to post them before my dad’s surgery this week. With today’s postal service sending them would be a bit like tossing a message in a bottle into the sea and hoping it would eventually arrive at its destination. Yet there’s something about not just the wonderful experience of receiving snail mail which I wanted to give to my family, but something particular about postcards that made me want make the effort to post these cards that I could more easily hand deliver myself.

More than letter postcards evoke some things to me – a break from routine, a holiday, exotic places, better days. There’s something creative about the selection you make, and they make me want to sketch in them, write in their margins, be creative in the tiny space I’m given to work with. The limited space, zero privacy and the need to withstand the elements at least somewhat makes them a creative challenge we rarely encounter in days where everyone is an instant message away.

Yet that’s what made them appeal to me, because more than anything postcards speak of hope, and these days I need all the hope I can get.

4 thoughts on “Postcards

  1. Pascal (peacockpens.com)'s avatar

    Pascal (peacockpens.com)

    The sending of postcards to family or friends for whatever reason has been completely taken over by mail and social media. Your family will be happy to receive them. The idea of ​​giving it a personal touch by sketching on it is wonderful. Best regards.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Daphna Kedmi's avatar

    Daphna Kedmi

    The word “postcard” itself has a beautiful “vintagy” sound. How lovely for your family. I saw the Sebba Exhibition this morning, and really enjoyed it. What a prolific and diverse artist he was. I had never even heard of him until now.

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Pamela Boxall's avatar

    Pamela Boxall

    I have a sister who loves postcards, both sending and receiving them. I have made a decision to post at least one item each week this year so I anticipate sending her a few postcards, even through she lives quite close to me and we see each other fairly often.

    Liked by 1 person

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