La7Vidas Tequila Blanco + gift box + comic
96,19€
Tequila Blanco bottle 100% Agave 70 CL 40% vol + gift box + comic
The Authentic Essence of Mexico
In the vibrant heart of Los Altos de Jalisco, where the earth meets the blue sky and Mexico’s soul awakens to the thrilling melodies of Mariachi music, La 7 Vidas is born—not merely a spirit, but an experience to live, feel, and share.
Crafted with passion and mastery from distilled blue agave, La 7 Vidas is the perfect tribute to the extraordinary beauty and culture of a land that has fostered timeless traditions, where joy is a universal language and tequila its poetry.
The story of La 7 Vidas is also the story of a dream—that of Alma Beltrán, a young woman who dreamed of becoming a mariachi, expressing her soul through music. Her figure, vibrant and timeless, adorns the label of each bottle, symbolising determination and passion. It is a dream deeply rooted in the land that witnessed its birth, just like the spirit bearing her name.
Making this creation even more special is the hand of Maestro Milo Manara, who, inspired by a magical country, created two exclusive artworks to celebrate the rich heritage of an extraordinary people. With his unmistakable style, Maestro Manara takes us on a visual journey, revealing the culture, beauty, and emotions intertwined in every corner of this legendary land.
La 7 Vidas is more than a tequila: it is a tribute to a story of passion, tradition, and dreams that never cease to live.
Organoleptic Profile
La 7 Vidas Blanco is a tequila that shines like a Centenary diamond—sparkling and pure. Its distillation in a steel still enhances its clarity and brilliance, while the copper coil amplifies its luminosity, giving it a unique glow. Each sip is an explosion of freshness, with herbaceous notes that blend in perfect harmony. It carries the scent of freshly cut agave, and its flavour caresses the palate. At first, it strikes with a bold, intense impact—just like a Tony Montana one-liner. But then… it surprises you, revealing an unexpected softness and silkiness that wins you over instantly. La 7 Vidas Blanco is fresh, yet passionately intense. It’s delicate, yet daring.
La 7 Vidas is like a complicated relationship—intense, conflicted, but utterly intriguing. Because deep down, you already know what it can unleash… and that’s exactly why you love it and can’t get enough.
Technical Data Sheet
| Characteristics | Details |
|---|---|
| Type of Agave | Tequilana Weber Azul. Minimum maturation: 6 years |
| Production Region | Altos de Jalisco, México |
|
Distillery |
Destiladora Santa Virginia SA DE CV – Tepatitlán de Morelos, Jalisco, México |
| NOM | 1515 CRT Consejo Regulador del Tequila |
| Cooking Time | 96 hours in stone oven |
| Extraction | Mill roller |
| Fermentation | Slow, in open tanks |
| Distillation | Discontinuous, double. Steel still with copper coil rectification |
| Master Tequilero | Enrique Franco |
| Class | Tequila Blanco |
| Category | 100% de Agave azul |
| Alcohol content | 40% Alc. Vol |
| Capacity | 700 ML |
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Vladimir VOLEGOV
COD:Born in 1957 in Khabarovsk, in Russia’s Far East, he spent his childhood moving frequently, always supported by the attentive and loving presence of his mother. From a young age, painting was a profound necessity for him—the most natural way to observe, understand, and give form to the world. The care of his mother shaped in him a sensitivity toward the female universe, which would become the heart of his artistic vision.
Women—with their silent strength, tenderness, and wisdom—are an inexhaustible source of inspiration. Through them, he learned that delicacy and sensitivity are profound forms of strength.
During his artistic training, he encountered the great masters of classical painting: Repin and Serov marked his early steps, while Anders Zorn, John Singer Sargent, Giovanni Boldini, and Joaquín Sorolla helped define his language, rooted in the emotional truth of the portrait, the grace of gesture, and light as a carrier of feeling.
He has worked in various fields—from illustration to editorial and digital projects—without ever abandoning painting. Traveling through Europe and creating portraits on the streets of Barcelona, Berlin, and Vienna, he learned to quickly capture the emotional essence of people, refining his way of representing it.
The main themes of his artistic research are women and childhood: capturing intimate moments, he seeks to convey care, tenderness, and love, making emotion visible.
In the early 2000s, his work gained international visibility through collaborations with galleries in Europe and the United States, consolidating a contemporary romantic realism centered on the human figure.
Since 2006, he has lived in Spain, where the light and atmosphere naturally influence his painting. Here his research has become more personal, focused not on formal likeness but on emotional resonance: what remains when time seems to stop.
Today, he continues to work on private commissions and personal projects, faithful to an idea that has always guided him: painting must breathe life, emotion, and humanity. Every work is born as a gesture of admiration and gratitude for the inner beauty of the human being.
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Guido CREPAX
COD:Born in Milan in 1933 into an environment where art was part of everyday life, Guido Crepax grew up surrounded by music and aesthetic sensitivity: his father was the principal cellist at La Scala, and the rhythm of sound became for him the rhythm of the page. This inclination toward composition merged with the rigor of his degree in Architecture in 1958, which taught him to design not only spaces but also graphic panels.
Before turning to comics, Crepax refined his elegant style in advertising graphics, creating jazz record covers and campaigns for brands such as Shell and Campari. These experiences prepared him to bring modern aesthetics into his most famous works. In 1965, he introduced Valentina Rosselli on the pages of Linus, initially as a supporting character. Soon, however, Valentina became the absolute protagonist: a “living” woman, with an identity card, a career as a photographer, and a complex psyche. Not an archetype, but a character who ages alongside her creator, moving through Italian society of the 1960s and 1970s with independence and intensity. Creating Valentina meant breaking taboos, exploring female emancipation, and transforming eroticism into intellectual inquiry.
Crepax also revolutionized the language of comics, moving beyond the traditional grid. His storytelling took on cinematic rhythms, fragmenting action into minute details—a reflection in glasses, a gesture, a breath—expanding the perception of time. In this way, Valentina’s everyday life blends into a dreamlike dimension, making the reader a participant in her fragility and visions. Through her, Crepax fused fashion, literature, and psychoanalysis into a total art form, capable of capturing the anxieties of a society in flux.
Crepax remains an architect of desire, able to translate the aesthetics of the twentieth century into an eternal line, leaving behind a style icon that continues to engage with modernity.















