Shop the Collection

To help you bring a piece of your journey home, we've put together this collection of watercolor studies from our time in Cartagena Old Town, Colombia. These are our favorite ways to keep the spirit of the trip alive.

Original Series Decorative Magnet

A personal study of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Decorative Magnet
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

Original Series Gallery Canvas

This high-fidelity canvas is a beautiful way to anchor a room and keep your memories of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia fresh long after you've returned home.

Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Gallery Canvas detail
Add to Collection / $65

Original Series Hardboard Coaster

A personal study of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia, captured in high-fidelity watercolor and prepared for your collection.

Cartagena Old Town, Colombia | Colorful Old Town Street | Original Series Hardboard Coaster
Add to Collection / $18
Exclusive Series Artifact

The Spirit of the Land

Archival Note: Documented personally during our time in Cartagena Old Town, Colombia. While we leverage a global network of contributors to provide these high-fidelity visual artifacts, each selection is curated to reflect the specific, quiet frequencies we experienced on the ground. These textures serve as a formal study of the unhurried light and environmental character that defined our journey.

Cartagena Old Town, Colombia study No. 01
Cartagena Old Town, Colombia / 01 VIA / K
Golden afternoon light bathes Cartagena's walled old town in warmth, casting gentle shadows across the distinctive terracotta and mustard-colored rooftops that cascade toward the turquoise Caribbean. The cathedral's dome anchors the composition while the modern high-rises of the new city rise hazy in the distance, creating a striking contrast between preserved colonial charm and contemporary development. This moment captures the layered history of a place where centuries-old streets meet the sea and progress.
Cartagena Old Town, Colombia study No. 02
Cartagena Old Town, Colombia / 02 VIA / K
The soft, diffused light of early morning or late afternoon bathes the church facade in warm peachy tones, creating a serene and timeless atmosphere. Standing here would offer a sense of peaceful elevation above the bustling streets, with the gentle sea breeze and distant ocean horizon providing a contemplative escape. The juxtaposition of the ornate colonial architecture against the vibrant, mismatched rooflines below captures the layered history and living culture of this Caribbean port town.
Cartagena Old Town, Colombia study No. 03
Cartagena Old Town, Colombia / 03 VIA / Camila Melo
This iconic Cartagena townhouse exemplifies the vibrant colonial architecture that defines the UNESCO World Heritage site. The striking yellow ochre walls provide a bold backdrop to the ornate dark wooden door and complementary pink clay barrel tiles. The delicate texture of the weathered palm bark trunks, often overlooked in favor of the colorful walls, adds an authentic layer of age and character to this picturesque scene.

Where to wander

Archival Note: A curated field study of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia, prioritizing cultural relevance and archival merit. These locations have been meticulously researched and vetted to ensure they represent the most authentic atmosphere for your own expedition.

Local Cuisine Spotlight
This golden paella combines tender chicken, sweet peas, and briny olives in saffron-infused rice, creating layers of Spanish and Caribbean flavors. Fresh cilantro and a squeeze of lime brighten each forkful, while the rustling charm of Cartagena's colonial streets unfolds below. It's a dish that captures both the soul of tradition and the magic of dining in this enchanting Old Town.
Credits: THE PAINTED PASSPORT
Local cuisine study in Cartagena Old Town, Colombia

☕︎ Local Flavor

El Boliche Cevicheria

Rating: 5* | Price: $$ | Coordinates: 10.4239° N, 75.5497° W

This beloved local spot serves some of the freshest ceviche in the city, made with catch-of-the-day seafood and bright citrus leche de tigre. The portions are generous and the flavors are bold, tangy, and deeply satisfying on a warm Caribbean afternoon. Arrive early or expect a wait because locals and travelers alike line up eagerly for a table.

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La Vitrola

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 10.4249° N, 75.5503° W

A legendary Cartagena institution, La Vitrola combines elegant Caribbean cuisine with live Cuban music that fills the beautifully tiled dining room every evening. The red snapper in coconut sauce is a house signature that lives up to every bit of its excellent reputation. The atmosphere is romantic and electric, making it ideal for a special dinner during your stay.

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Alma Restaurant

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 10.4232° N, 75.5495° W

Located inside Hotel Casa San Agustín, Alma elevates traditional Colombian ingredients into sophisticated, beautifully plated dishes that feel both modern and deeply rooted in local culture. The tasting menu is a wonderful journey through regional flavors, paired thoughtfully with Colombian wines and spirits. The candlelit courtyard setting makes every meal here feel like a genuine occasion.

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Espíritu Santo

Rating: 4* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 10.4261° N, 75.5509° W

A stylish rooftop restaurant in the Getsemaní neighborhood serving creative Colombian fusion dishes with stunning views of the old city walls glowing in the evening light. The wood-fired octopus and passion fruit desserts are standout highlights that guests rave about long after their trip. The relaxed vibe and friendly staff make this a place you will want to linger for hours.

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🛌︎ Boutique Stays

Hotel Casa San Agustín

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 10.4231° N, 75.5494° W

A stunning colonial mansion blending original coral stone walls with refined modern luxury in the heart of the walled city. The pool courtyard feels like a secret garden, shaded by ancient trees and filled with the scent of tropical flowers. Service is genuinely attentive and the breakfast spread is lavish enough to fuel a full day of exploring.

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Bastión Luxury Hotel

Rating: 5* | Price: $$$$ | Coordinates: 10.4278° N, 75.5512° W

Set within a beautifully restored 16th-century fortress, this boutique hotel offers rooftop plunge pools with sweeping views over the old city ramparts. Rooms are spacious and decorated with rich local artwork that tells the story of Cartagena beautifully. The rooftop bar at sunset is an experience you will genuinely never forget.

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Hotel Quadrifolio

Rating: 4* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 10.4245° N, 75.5501° W

This intimate nine-room boutique hotel occupies a lovingly restored colonial home dripping with bougainvillea and old-world charm. Each room is individually decorated with antiques and vibrant textiles sourced from across Colombia. The owners are warm and knowledgeable, offering personalized tips that turn a good trip into a truly great one.

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Amarla Boutique Hotel

Rating: 4* | Price: $$$ | Coordinates: 10.4258° N, 75.5488° W

Tucked into a quiet street in the San Diego neighborhood, Amarla offers a peaceful retreat from the lively pace of the old town outside its doors. The interiors are fresh and contemporary while still honoring the colonial architecture with high ceilings and wide arched windows. A small rooftop terrace provides lovely city views perfect for an evening cocktail.

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📍︎ Field Study

Castillo San Felipe de Barajas

Rating: 5* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 10.4214° N, 75.5418° W

This imposing 17th-century Spanish fortress is one of the greatest military constructions in the Americas, built on a hill overlooking the city with a labyrinth of tunnels beneath it. Guided tours of the underground passages are fascinating and give real insight into the defensive genius of the original engineers. Visiting at late afternoon allows you to enjoy magical golden light across the stone battlements.

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Plaza de Bolívar

Rating: 5* | Price: Free | Coordinates: 10.4244° N, 75.5506° W

The grand central square of the old city is surrounded by some of the most important colonial buildings in Colombia, including the Palace of the Inquisition and the stunning Cathedral Basilica. Shaded by palms and cooled by Caribbean breezes, it is a wonderful place to sit, people-watch, and soak in the living history all around you. Street vendors selling fresh mango with lime and chili add a perfect sensory layer to the whole experience.

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Las Murallas (City Walls)

Rating: 5* | Price: Free | Coordinates: 10.4255° N, 75.5520° W

The 13 kilometers of coral and limestone walls encircling the old town are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and an extraordinary feat of colonial engineering built over more than 200 years. Walking along the top at sunset, with the Caribbean Sea shimmering on one side and the colorful rooftops glowing on the other, is one of the most memorable experiences in all of South America. Local vendors, musicians, and couples gather here each evening, creating a festive and deeply human atmosphere.

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Palacio de la Inquisición

Rating: 4* | Price: $ | Coordinates: 10.4243° N, 75.5505° W

This beautifully preserved baroque palace served as the headquarters of the Spanish Inquisition in northern South America from the 18th century onward and now houses a compelling historical museum. The exhibits are thorough and sobering, presenting pre-Columbian artifacts alongside the difficult history of colonialism and the Inquisition with thoughtful context. The ornate facade facing Plaza de Bolívar is among the most photographed architectural details in all of Cartagena.

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Typography

Archival Note: A formal technical study of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia, archiving the coordinates, elevation, and environmental data that define the region. This data serves as a vital record for our ongoing global field study, providing the technical foundation behind every atmospheric detail captured in our visual work.

Botanical and pigment specimen study for Cartagena Old Town, Colombia Colors of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia
Coordinates
10.4244° N, 75.5506° W — Historic walled city center, Plaza de Bolivar, Cartagena de Indias, Colombia
Historical Epoch
Founded by Spanish conquistador Pedro de Heredia in 1533, Cartagena became the principal port for Spanish gold leaving South America. Its walls and fortress were built to repel pirates, privateers, and rival empires across three centuries of colonial rule.
Elevation
0-15 m / 0-49 ft. Cartagena Old Town sits essentially at sea level on a Caribbean coastal peninsula, with no meaningful elevation change across the walled city.
Atmosphere
Aw, Tropical Savanna. Hot and humid year-round with a dry season from December to April. Temperatures hover around 30 to 32 degrees Celsius with consistent trade winds off the Caribbean.
Observation Hour
06:30. The hour after sunrise pours a honeyed gold across the terracotta rooftops and whitewashed walls before the heat builds. Shadows are long, soft, and deeply painterly at this time.
Primary Pigment
Burnt Sienna (#A0522D) and Cerulean Blue (#2A7BB0)
Best Time to Visit
December through March. The dry season brings lower humidity, cooler breezes, and reliably clear skies that make exploring the sun-drenched streets genuinely comfortable.
Avoid Visiting
October through November. Peak rainy season brings heavy afternoon downpours, elevated humidity, and the highest chance of tropical storm activity along the Caribbean coast.

The Local Tongue

Language is the invisible architecture of Cartagena Old Town, Colombia. These entries document the regional vocabulary—capturing the "texture" of local speech that standard translations often miss. Hand-curated expressions reflecting the specific spirit and daily rhythm of the region.
Archival study of Spanish cultural texture

via / JOMI WARRIOR

Primary Language Spanish
Regional Dialect Colombian Caribbean Spanish (Costeno)

Cachaco

Cachaco refers to someone from the Colombian interior, particularly Bogota, and on the coast it carries a gentle, teasing edge. In Cartagena a vendor might call out the word with a grin toward someone dressed too formally for the heat, marking the cultural divide between highland formality and coastal ease.

Porro

Porro is a traditional Colombian Caribbean musical form rooted in Indigenous and African rhythms, inseparable from the sound of Cartagena's festivals and street celebrations. Hearing a porro ensemble spill out of a courtyard at dusk, brass bright and percussion rolling underfoot, is one of the most distinctly Cartagenan sensory experiences a visitor can stumble into.

Mamagallismo

Mamagallismo describes the coastal Colombian art of playful mockery and irreverent humor used as a form of affection and social bonding. In Cartagena it shows up in the banter between shopkeepers and regulars, a teasing back-and-forth that sounds sharp to outsiders but signals warmth and familiarity among those who know the rhythm of it.

Wait! before you go...

Before you head over to Cartagena Old Town, Colombia, we wanted to share a few basic tips we picked up along the way. These notes cover the simple things—like how to get around or what to do about cash—so you can spend less time worrying and more time just enjoying the place.
🚲 Getting Around The walled city is almost entirely walkable and most visitors explore it on foot. Taxis and the yellow coco-taxis are the main options for reaching areas outside the walls, with rideshare apps like InDriver and Cabify also operating reliably in the city.
⚖️ Cash or Card Cards are accepted at most hotels, restaurants, and larger shops inside the walled city, but cash in Colombian pesos remains essential for street food, smaller vendors, and tipping. A roughly 40 to 60 split in favor of cash is a practical approach for daily spending in Cartagena Old Town.
☁️ Good to Know Carteganos operate on a relaxed coastal rhythm known locally as the pace of the coast, and timekeeping is genuinely flexible in social and service contexts. Visitors who arrive expecting punctuality at informal settings will find patience rewarded far more than frustration, and embracing the slower pace is part of experiencing the city authentically.
🏧 ATMs ATMs are available inside and around the walled city at several banks including Bancolombia, Davivienda, and BBVA, and most international cards work reliably. Withdrawal limits per transaction can be low by international standards, often around 300,000 to 400,000 pesos, so factoring in multiple withdrawals and potential foreign transaction fees is worth doing before arriving.
💳 Currency The Colombian Peso (COP) is the official currency, and prices inside the walled city are quoted in pesos with typical daily costs ranging from modest to quite high depending on accommodation and dining choices. US dollars are occasionally accepted at tourist-oriented businesses but the exchange rate offered informally is usually unfavorable compared to withdrawing pesos from an ATM.
🔌 Plugs Colombia uses Type A and Type B outlets at 110V, 60Hz. Visitors from North America will find their devices compatible without an adapter.
🛡️ Safety The walled city and Getsemani neighborhood are generally safe for tourists during the day, though petty theft and bag-snatching occur and visitors should keep valuables secure and avoid displaying expensive cameras or phones unnecessarily. At night, sticking to well-lit main streets and using reputable taxis or rideshare apps rather than walking in unfamiliar areas is strongly recommended.
✈️ Airports Rafael Nunez International Airport (CTG) serves Cartagena and sits just a few kilometers from the walled city, making it one of the most conveniently located airports relative to a historic city center in all of South America. Direct flights connect Cartagena to Bogota, Medellin, and several US cities including Miami, Fort Lauderdale, and New York, with the journey from airport to Old Town typically taking under 20 minutes by taxi.

Behind The Scenes

Nathan

Note from the Founder

Hey, did you know this fun fact about Cartagena Old Town, Colombia? Cartagena Old Town was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1984. Its city walls, begun in the late 16th century, stretch nearly 11 kilometers and took more than 200 years to complete, making them among the most formidable colonial fortifications in the Americas.
Thank you for exploring the Cartagena Old Town, Colombia series with us. We hope these notes have inspired you to add this incredible destination to your own passport—we are so glad you're here. — Nathan

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