Viva Madrid

I have this friend named Toni. He was born and raised in France from Spanish parents and came back home when he was a teenager. We sometimes have fun on him calling him Antoine (which is how he is called by his French friends). He is a very special person, different, traveller, a dreamer. We share our love for interesting and uncommon subjects, art, cinema,...  He and I remain single in a group of friends full of couples with children. Maybe because of all of this, we stay closer and keep in touch more often than we do with other friends. We also share a soft spot for artsy and representative postcards from any place we visit. He is the only one of those friends who always remembers to send me a few words on a card instead of calling me on the phone. Thanks to him, I started getting my first postcards from foreign lands a few years ago.

However, as a true bohemian artist (a photographer) Toni often forgets to sign his cards and never writes the date. I don't worry too much about that because his handwriting is so bad that I cannot mistake his postcards for another's. If I ever have to host a lottery or giveaway, scanning one of his texts and asking for a transcription would be the contest. Everytime I get a card from him I have a lot of fun. I sometimes need about 15 mins to understand what is written! It is part of the ritual.

He is not the tidiest person: his car is often full of all kinds of garbage, or what I think it should be garbage but it turns out to be useful stuff for something, his backpack contains many papers, notebooks, pens and -- well, you understand what I mean. I am afraid this pretty little postcard came so damaged not because of the post service but because it had been stored among his things for a while before he sent it. This is his most recent card -- I received it today. That tells me he is currently living in Madrid.

Viva Madrid
Viva Madrid

This is a tasca, a tavern located in the centre of Madrid. Viva Madrid is its name and they offer Wines (top left) and Meals (top right).  Above the doors we can read Jesus, this is delicious! (left) and The best in the world (right). The façade is decorated with 18th century style tiles, with the city's coat of arms and a view of Cibeles fountain on the central panel.
Viva Madrid
C/ Manuel Fernández y González, 7
28014 Madrid

Puerta de Alcalá
Puerta de Alcalá

The stamp is a class A (our "Forever") stamp showing the Puerta de Alcalá, a Neo-classical monumental gate in Madrid, matching the postcard theme: 18th century Madrid.

Postcard from: Madrid, Spain.
Received: March 2012.
Language:  Spanish.
Envelope: no.
Stamps: one Puerta de Alcalá class A stamp (2012).

Our Wonderful World Tuesday

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  1. What a nice story! And what a nice friend! I hope you cherish his friendship.

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    1. I will. It is hard to find someone as special as him.

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  2. What a great story and a great friend to have. A good friend who lives in Minnesota used to travel a lot for her job and would always send me cool postcards from wherever she was. We share the same tastes with quirky retro art, so it was always a pleasure to get a card from her. We don't send cards as often now (I am starting to send to her more now), but I enjoyed looking through all my old cards when I started postcrossing. Cool postcard--the scruffiness just adds to the personality of the card. I didn't realize that other countries had Forever stamps, too!

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    1. Well, I didn't know we had this kind of stamps until January when I went to the post office and they sold me these A class stamps instead of the ones with face value.
      You're right about the personality of this postcard. If it had come as good as new it wouldn't be Toni's!

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