About this postcard
Goðafoss sits on the Skjálfandafljót river in northeast Iceland, a horseshoe-shaped cascade roughly 30 metres wide and 12 metres tall. The name — Waterfall of the Gods — comes from the year 1000, when the chieftain Þorgeir Ljósvetningagoði threw his Norse idols into the falls after Iceland adopted Christianity at the Althing. The event marked a turning point in Icelandic history.
What makes Goðafoss remarkable is the colour of the water: a vivid turquoise, fed by glacial melt, catching the sky and throwing it back. The falls are wide enough to feel like a wall of water rather than a single drop — you stand at the edge and hear it before you see it. This postcard was photographed in stormy light, which is when the falls are at their most dramatic.
Every Postcard.is design is a real image from Iceland — a place whose landscapes
range from glaciers and waterfalls to volcanic deserts and midnight-sun coastlines.
We print each card on quality postcard stock, add your personal message, and post it
directly from Iceland with a genuine Icelandic stamp and postmark.