And still more Alices form John (the UK)!
Envelope made of a page or a magazine (or is it wrapping paper?). At first sight, it seemed that the sender had written on the envelope, but it is the design itself. The back:
Two postcards of Alice (among others) inside:
(John asked me if I can name all the characters on the postcard. Could you?)
By the way, the envelope arrived inside a plastic bag, with the apologies of Royal Mail. I think everything was ok, but they put the back because the stamp sheet was a bit unstuck.
Envelope made of a page or a magazine (or is it wrapping paper?). At first sight, it seemed that the sender had written on the envelope, but it is the design itself. The back:
Two postcards of Alice (among others) inside:
Lewis Carroll's original hand-stitched postage stamp case, now held in the Macmillan archive. |
Endpaper from the first Macmillan Children's edition of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, in 1927 |
By the way, the envelope arrived inside a plastic bag, with the apologies of Royal Mail. I think everything was ok, but they put the back because the stamp sheet was a bit unstuck.
I think you are right - you already have an Alice mail call going even though you yourself didn't call for it.
ReplyDeleteI just finished reading 'Alice' by Christina Henry. A dark fantasy version of what happens to Alice and other characters afterwards. Has a great (creepy) cover.
I looked for that cover on Google. It is a bit scary, isn't it?
DeleteN'hi ha per caure de cul!
ReplyDelete:D
Delete