In an age of instant messages, video calls, and digital everything, there is something quietly powerful about a letter arriving through the letterbox. We've been thinking about why.
The weight of a physical object
A letter has weight. You can hold it, fold it, keep it. A notification disappears. A letter stays. Children who receive a letter from Father Christmas often keep it for years — tucked into a drawer, brought out each December, read again and again.
The ritual of the letterbox
There is something magical about the letterbox itself. The flap opens, something falls through, and suddenly the outside world has entered your home. For a child, the idea that Father Christmas has sent something through that same slot — the same one that brings birthday cards and parcels — is genuinely thrilling.
Handwriting and parchment
We print on premium aged parchment and use a handwritten-style address on the envelope. These details matter. They signal that this is not a mass-produced thing. It is something made, with care, for one specific child.
The postmark
Our letters are posted from Lapland, XM4 5HQ. The postmark is real. Children notice these things. They show their friends. They point to it and say: this came from where Father Christmas lives.
Make this Christmas truly magical
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