Long before phones buzzed in our pockets and emails flooded our inboxes, there was the mighty postcard—short, sweet, and straight to the point. Need to tell your gran you made it to Oban? Postcard. Want to show off the view from Ben Nevis? Postcard. It was the original quick-fire message, stamped and sent with style, often arriving the next day thanks to a postal service so efficient it would make modern couriers blush.
Postcards were the social media, the emails, of their day—only with better handwriting and fewer cat memes. They captured holiday highlights, everyday hellos, and snippets of gossip, all squeezed into a few square inches. Some even got a little cheeky, depending on the sender (and how many whiskies they’d had).
Today, vintage postcards are more than charming relics—they’re little time machines. They show us what Scotland looked like back then, what people cared about, and how they stayed in touch before screens took over. And let’s be honest: “Wish you were here” will always sound better in ink.