TRAVELLIVE MAGAZINE Travellive 01-2016 | Page 129

Further information: ü There is a postcard museum in France. You can get more information about millions of postcards from around the world that were sent in different periods of time. Address: Musäe de la Carte Postale, 4 avenue Tournelli 06600 Antibes - France. ü If you want to join the campaign of Ms. Cäline from Rocher des Lutins school, you can send a letter to 1 Rue des coles, 85330, Noirmoutier en l’ile France before July 2016. ü Apart from traditional paper, in Michigan (USA), thin wood is used to make postcards. At the same time, people living on tropical islands create their own postcards from coconut shells. ü In Europe, old postcards are displayed and sold in open markets at various prices depending on the original date of the stamp. museums, sometimes, you can still read old, tear-jerking postcards. “I’m fine. Sometimes, I’m allowed to play music which helps me feel less sorrow when I’m missing you. Wait for me, darling”, “Think of your future and find someone better than me, please” - the messages written on these postcards could have changed a girl’s entire life. Nowadays, postcards play a vital role in sharing stories about the sender’s journeys. On one side there is always a photo of a landscape and on the other side there is space for the sender to write down their experiences and feelings. Postcards never upset anyone. Despite having left France, I always remember the image of Mrs. Renäe bustling Nowadays, postcards play a vital role in sharing stories about the sender’s journeys. On one side there’s always a photo of a landscape and on the other side there is space for the sender to write down their experiences and feelings. Postcards never upset anyone. Even though the world has changed with rise and fall and many postcards have been sent among generations during the past 120 years, postcards have always been A6 (10.5 x 14.8 cm) sized rectangular pieces of cardboard. One interesting feature of postcards is that they are sent without being put into an envelope (but you still need a stamp, a name and an address of the sender and the receiver). Everyone, from the mailman to the fastidious housekeeper to the devoted father, can read the message on the postcard. Therefore, the content is less private and usually written in a positive manner so that everyone reading it has a reason to smile. about the kitchen where she could look onto the lane near her house. She waited for the mailman and whenever she could, she would slowly walk up to the window and pull up a cart containing some postcards. During the two main holidays (winter and summer), what she looked forward to the most were postcards sent by her children who resided somewhere in the world. Maybe they were at one of the destinations she and her husband visited or at a certain scenery she still wished to visit. The happiness these postcards have brought her is immeasurable as they let her know her children are thinking about her whenever they are on a journey. TRAVELLIVE 129