These postcards make the Chinese language to seem almost easy...
貝 Shell (bei4) Shells were once a form of currency |
Wine vessel Add 3 dots on the left to make the character for wine. |
Postcards sent by Lothar (Germany) and Heleen (the Netherlands).
貝 Shell (bei4) Shells were once a form of currency |
Wine vessel Add 3 dots on the left to make the character for wine. |
Manzanares el Real (Spain) I made some mail art with this one... |
Dunvegan Castle (Scotland) The postcard with this non-Royal-Mail stamp took ages to arrive! |
Castell Caernarfon (Wales), 1978 |
Eagle Tower and Queen Eleanor's Gate Castell Caernarfon (Wales) Stamps from 1969 Nice to have several stamps featuring the same place! |
Vajdahunyad Castle (Hungary) |
Henkenshage (the Netherlands) According to Wikipedia, not a real castle but a manor house. |
The Huntington Botanical Gardens (California) Biltmore Estate Gardens (North Carolina) Dumbarton Oaks Garden (District of Columbia) Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens (Ohio) Brooklyn Botanic Garden (New York) |
Norfolk Botanical Garden (Virginia) Winterthur Garden (Delaware) Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens (Maine) |
Norfolk Botanical Garden (Virginia) Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park (Florida) |
Chicago Botanic Garden (Illinois) Winterthur Garden (Delaware) |
Chicago Botanic Garden (Illinois Alfred B. Maclay Gardens State Park (Florida) |
Greetings from Self-Isolation Postcard sent by Bryon (the USA) |
Personnel soignant, merci / Thanks, healthcare workers Bilingual postmark from Canada |
Protect your loved ones. Download your nation's contact tracing app. Postmark from the UK |
Illustration by Dick Bruna |
Two Dutch Girls in Costume By Jos Brower, 1998 |
Some fishes and sea animals from around the world for today's topic in Sunday Stamps: Under the Sea.
Box Jellyfish Australia |
Lamprea marina Spain |
Sturgeon The UK |
Snoek / Esox lucius The Netherlands |
White Shark and Mako Shark The USA |
Finding Nemo The USA |
The Bugs Bunny stamps were issued by the USPS on July 2020. The 20-stamps sheet include 10 different designs, featuring 80-years-old Bugs Bunny in 10 classic costumes: as a barber, a baseball player, a soldier, a mermaid, etc.
I find the stamps funny and cheerful. Traditional stamps collectors, however, are no fans of this issue, or so I have read. For instance, here.
A case can be made that one Bugs Bunny stamp was enough. The 1997 32¢ stamp (Scott 3137) shown here filled that bill nicely, especially so because of the varieties that make the issue interesting.
And yet, July 27 of this year saw the release of not one but 10 new Bugs Bunny stamps.
While I don’t want to be in the running for curmudgeon of the year, 10 new Bugs Bunny stamps seem excessive to me. But this is a case of the United States Postal Service trying to tempt people into becoming stamp collectors, or at least trying to get the Bugs lovers to invest in a pane or two to keep as a collectable and never use as postage.