vintage and contemporary postcards and stamps from around the world


19 February 2026

town squares

This Estonian Town Hall Square has been a marketplace since the middle ages.  It looks like it might just be setting up, or closing down, in this image.  The building on the far left is the town hall and on top of the spire is a weather vane that has been there since 1530.

Below is another town square, this time in Lithuania.  Kaunas is the second largest city in that country and was a temporary capital during the interwar period.  The building in the centre is the town hall. The rivers are the Nemunis and Neris.

and, to round out the Baltic states,  Riga. With another public square in the middle left.  The buildings of the Town Hall Square were all rebuilt as everything was destroyed during WWII.

Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia with northern European cities for Thursday Postcard Hunt

17 February 2026

year of the horse

in celebration of the Lunar New Year, a trio of running horses sculpted by Joe Fafard

Gong Xi Fa Cai (Mandarin) or Gong Hei Fat Choi (Cantonese)

15 February 2026

C

I was looking through my fishes for a carp and came across this 'csuka', which translates to pike in English.  Below, is a 'ponty' which translates to carp in English.

also known as 'Chambak', on the left is a magnolia and at bottom a thistle with the pretty name of Carline

14 February 2026

12 February 2026

bern

a city with mountains

The taller spire, on the far right, is the Munster, and the shorter one in the middle with the green top is the Church of St Peter and Paul (I think). The bridge in the foreground may be the Kornhausbrucke.

a southern European city for Thursday Postcard Hunt 

11 February 2026

casa loma

Possibly, in a totally unscientific poll, this is the most popular building to appear on postcards from Toronto
A 98 room mansion, considered North America's only true castle, a city owned landmark in the middle of Toronto
It is now a museum and event centre
I wrote more about it on my previous blog many years ago which you can read here (and see more postcards)


10 February 2026

queen's park

Here is a bird's eye view of Queen's Park with the Ontario Legislative Assembly building, which is always known also as Queen's Park (as is the government)

The statue is of Sir John A MacDonald, Canada's first Prime Minister.  It has only recently been free of the hoarding that covered it in 2020 after it was vandalized in the wave of protests over the residential schools history.

You will have noticed that all of my parliament building postcards are vintage, some more so than others.  These next two are more recent.  It is not the most popular Toronto landmark to feature on a postcard, which is a shame.

I find it a beautiful old building (and the one I am most familiar with) and the asymmetry is pleasing to my eye. It is a Richardsonian Romanesque style (my favourite) built between 1886 and 1909.

What you can't tell from these, is that there are hundreds of gargoyles and grotesques and other faces (some, even, of the stonemasons who carved them!)

And so ends this tour of the parliament buildings since I don't have any from the three territories, and seem to be missing two provinces: Nova Scotia and Alberta. 

Tomorrow, I'll show what is the most popular building on a Toronto postcard.


09 February 2026

parlement


Home to the National Assembly of Quebec in Quebec City. A second empire style building built between 1877 and 1886.
This may be a favourite card - embossed!

08 February 2026

birds and bees

 

Seeing a bullfinch signifies good luck, new beginnings, love and divine messages
Seeing a male and female bullfinch side by side is indeed divine
sidenote:  Eurasian bullfinches don't make it as far as Canada, except for one who was found, with great excitement, in November '25 up in Yukon.

a western honey bee  from East Germany (1990) 
apis mellifica is actually made from the honey bee (apis mellifera) and is used to treat bee stings

05 February 2026

merlion

Every city should have an official mascot.
 Singapore has this mythical creature sculpted by Ling Nam Seng in 1972.  It's fish-like body symbolizes Singapore's origins as a fishing village, it's head represents the orginal name of Singapura, which is Sanskrit for lion city.

An Asian city for Thursday Postcard Hunt

04 February 2026

province house

It hurts my brain a little to be going back and forth across the country like this, not to mention all the differing names on the cards...

Next up is the Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island, known as Province House.  It is currently closed for conservation work.  It is the second oldest legislative building (1847).  Sadly, I haven't been able to determine when the fountain disappeared.

Again, older, hand painted cards have made the building redder than in real life.  Also, the trees are nice, but they do obscure the building somewhat.

03 February 2026

confederation building

I didn't think I had a card of the Newfoundland and Labrador House of Assembly, known as the Confederation Building, but here we are.  This is the closest view I found of the building built in 1960 (with an extension built in 1991) overlooking the capital city of St John's.  It is the most modern of the parliament buildings and the province only became a part of Canada in 1949.

02 February 2026

snow moon

February (and January) is often the snowiest months of the year ... and that has proved true here this past week! 

bonus parliament postcard.  this is the granddaddy of the Parliament Buildings as seen from the back with the gorgeous Library of Parliament taking centre stage.  The library survived the 1916 fire (120 years ago on Feb 3rd) that destroyed the rest of the Centre Block building when the library clerk ordered the iron doors to be shut so the fire couldn't spread into the room.  In spite of WWI going on, the Centre Block was rebuilt and reopened in 1920.

01 February 2026

aries

I have been saving these stamps for the next year of the ram - so 2027 - even though they aren't technically lunar new year stamps.

They were worth .59¢ when issued in 2011,  now they are worth $1.24

I do appreciate the colour bars on the selvedge in the shape of the ram's horns.

With this alphabet round, I am going to go with stamps related to flora and fauna.  Some may be rather tangentially related.