A street early last century really amazing
When we arrived in Almonte, whose name comes from the Arabic, I was surprised to see a village preserved as if we were in the late eighteenth/early nineteenth century, with handsome, dirt roads, old street lamps, carts, horses, runaway which hold the horses, enameled markings and pure white painted ceramics. On this street the beautiful building of the Brotherhood of Jerez de la Frontera stands out, with its tile of the Virgen del Rocio Ruiz painted by Antonio Muñoz in the 1950s. Also there's a Souvenir Shop, the home of Flamenco Fashion Charro Qubero at No. 19, which has a variety of prom dresses in different colors and multiple ruffles, jodhpurs, all kinds of saddlery and harnesses which highlight the art of working the various leather articles and horse fittings such as saddles, gear, leather boots, belts, hats and everything necessary for not only festivities but in the field where the working man is devoted to livestock, agriculture, etc.