Australian Outback Postcards & Bookmarks
Postcards Sold Out
These Australian Outback postcards and bookmarks have sold out so it is no longer possible to place direct orders for them.
However hundreds of Fiona Lake's classic photos of the Australian bush are included in the unique coffee-table books 'A Million Acre Masterpiece' and 'Life as an Australian Horseman'. Order your personally signed copy of these unique books now.
Australian Bush Christmas cards and Australian Outback Greeting cards are also now available.
View Christmas cards and greeting cards »
Australian Outback Postcards
All postcards have an original outback photo on the front and most contain detailed information on the back, plus a map of Australia and a ‘ghosted’ image (taken from another original outback photo). Four different postcard producers in Queensland, the Northern Territory and Western Australia based the design on the back of their cards on the original artwork of the cards below, which commenced production in 1992. I guess some people consider copying to be the sincerest form of flattery, however don't confuse bodgy copies with the originals, show below:

Taking advantage of the shade — Victoria River Downs station, Northern Territory (PC501)

Crossing the Lynd River — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC502)

Spider Bore at sunset — Mount House station, Western Australia (PC503)

Toey mob leaving Plovers Bore — Mount House station, Western Australia (PC504)

Dinner at Windemere Lagoon — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC505)

Mob of Brahmans — Newcastle Waters Station, Northern Territory (PC506)

Saddles at Spinifex Bore — Victoria River Downs station, Northern Territory (PC507)

Yarding up at Turkey Lagoon — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC508)

Piccaninny daylight — Newcastle Waters Station, Northern Territory (PC509)

"Both sides of the fence" — Victoria River Downs station, Northern Territory (PC510)

Ready to head off — Mount House station, Western Australia (PC511)

"Saddled & started by sunrise" — Newcastle Waters Station, Northern Territory — (PC512)

Frog Hole — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC01)

Bungle Bungle Range — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC02)

Echidna Chasm — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC03)

The gorges — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia — (PC04)

The "beehive" domes — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC05)

Piccaninny Creek — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC06)

Heliwork helicopter near the Western Wall — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC07)

Gorge view through the helicopter — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC08)

Bungle Bungle Range — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC09)

Piccaninny Creek — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC10)

The Western Wall — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC11)

Echidna Chasm — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC12)

The "beehive" domes at sunrise — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC13)

Marine fossil museum — Richmond, Western Queensland (PC301)

Derby boabs — Western Australia (PC101)

Wyndham boab — Western Australia (PC102)

Derby boab — Western Australia (PC103)

Kimberley boab — Western Australia (PC104)

Corella in the pandanus at Shady Camp — Mary River, Northern Territory (PC201)

Sunset kookaburra at Carmor Plains — Mary River region, Northern Territory (PC202)

Waltzing Matilda Centre — Winton, western Queensland (PC601)

Yarding up at D31 — Brunette Downs Station, Northern Territory (PC550)

Mob of 2,500 walking to Number One yard — Newcastle Waters Station, Northern Territory (PC551)

The Western Wall — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC60)

Echidna Chasm — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC61)

The "Beehive" domes at sunrise — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC62)

The "beehive" domes — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC63)

Mini Palms — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC50)

Frog Hole — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC51)

Piccaninny Creek — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC52)

Kimberley Coast — Western Australia (PC251)

The gorges — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (PC53)

Spinifex circles — Turkey Creek, Western Australia (PC250)

Derby boab — Western Australia (PC150)

Kimberley boab — Western Australia (PC151)

Wyndham boab — Western Australia (PC152)

Mustering V Lagoons — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC580)

Crossing the Lynd River — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC581)

Yarding up at Turkey Lagoon — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC582)

Stockcamp supper at Windemere Lagoon — Gamboola/Wrotham Park station, Queensland (PC583)
Australian Outback Bookmarks

Waltzing Matilda Centre — Winton, western Queensland (BM01 (The words to "Waltzing Matilda" are printed on the back of this bookmark.)

Echidna Chasm — Purnululu National Park, Western Australia (BM02)

Purnululu National Park — Western Australia (BM03)

Northern Australian roads — Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australia (BM04)
Why produce postcards and bookmarks?
When I produced my first cards in 1992, the only outback postcards that you could buy on the 3,700 kilometre drive west from Townsville to Broome showed photos of either crocodiles (in captivity), town main streets (usually the post office) or fat hairy Hereford cattle in green rolling hills. These photos of green rolling hills were obviously taken more than 2,000 kilometres to the south.
There were one or two postcards available that were related to local agriculture - mostly photos of drovers with sheep or cattle, clearly taken from the seat of a passing car on the main highways. Tourists could have been forgiven for thinking northern Australia had become one big National Park, when in fact they were driving right through some of the largest cattle stations in the world.
There were no Purnululu National Park postcards available with accurate information or good quality photos either, so I produced some with the encouragement of the then Manager of the Turkey Creek Roadhouse. I’ve spent many weeks flying, driving and walking around the ‘Bungle Bungles’ taking photos, as it is an absolutely fabulous, intriguing place. It is unique.
Australian Bush Christmas cards and Australian Outback Greeting cards are now available. Many of the outback postcard & outback greeting card photos are included in the beautiful coffee-table books 'A Million Acre Masterpiece' & 'Life as an Australian Horseman'.