Prehistoric Animals (Netherlands 2023)

[from PostNL handouts] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Prehistoric Animals

Issue dates: 13 June 2023, 26 September 2023, 14 November 2023, 19 March 2024

On 13 June 2023, the first three stamp sheets in the new Prehistoric Animals series — the Fox whale, the woolly mammoth and the sabre-toothed cat — will be published. Each stamp sheet contains five stamps featuring the animals and their fossils.

The entire series comprises 12 stamp sheets. Each quarter, PostNL will publish three stamp sheets at a time. The denomination on these stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g with destinations in the Netherlands.

All 12 prehistoric animals featured on the stamps inhabited the area that is now the Netherlands. Their presence has been inferred from fossils found in Dutch soil, including in the North Sea, in the Eastern and Western Scheldt, along rivers and in quarries. The fossils predominantly comprise bones, skulls, jaws, teeth, molars and horns. Based on the shape of the fossils, palaeontologists can deduce how large the animals were and their other external features. Comparison with surviving related species also provides useful information.

Each stamp sheet includes five personal stamps in five different designs. Three stamps feature various images of the prehistoric animal in its natural habitat. The other two stamps feature fossils of the same animal, surrounded by drawn earth layers in which that fossil was found. The sheet edge features one of the animal photos in large. This photo runs underneath the stamps. Each stamp sheet has a base colour referring to the geological epoch in which the prehistoric animal existed. The timeline of all these epochs is shown vertically on the left-hand side of the stamp sheet, above the series title. The name of the prehistoric animal appears on each stamp and in the top right-hand corner of the sheet. The bottom right-hand corner features a short text about the species and its fossils.

After Velp-based studio026 was commissioned to design 12 stamp sheets about prehistoric animals, Anne Schaufeli and Huub de Lang first of all visited the Natural History Museum Rotterdam. “This museum has a great collection of fossils, mostly from Dutch soil,” Schaufeli said. “Bram Langeveld, the curator, had inspiring stores to tell. He told us about prehistoric animals that we didn’t even know existed.”

However, the Museum did not have visual material, so Schaufeli and de Lang turned to ManimalWorks, also in Rotterdam, which produces models of prehistoric animals based on scientific data and information from sources such as cave drawings.

ManimalWorks builds life-size reconstructions for educational purposes such as museums and scientific exhibitions, said Schaufeli. “It’s just amazing how life-like his animal models look. They’re so life like that you could just encounter them somewhere. Before the models go to the client, they are photographed in an environment that is as close as possible to their original habitat. These photos were used on the stamp sheets.”

The overall design concept is based on the stratification of the earth. “We wanted to show not just the animal and the fossil, but the connection between them as well,” said Schaufeli. “Our narrative is that by looking into the earth, you travel back in time.”

Technical Details:
Design: studio026, Velp
Animal models: ManimalWorks, Rotterdam
Stamp size: 30 x 40mm (wxh):
Sheet size: 170 x 122 mm (wxh)
Paper: Normal with phosphor print
Gum: Gummed
Printing technique: Offset
Printing colours: Cyan, magenta, yellow, black
Print run: 5,000 sheets per issue
Format: Sheet containing 5 personalised stamps in 5 different: designs

6 June 2023
Item number 830032 Prehistoric Animals, the Fox whale
Item number 830033 Prehistoric Animals, woolly mammoth
Item number 830034 Prehistoric Animals, sabre-toothed cat

26 September 2023
Item number 830035 Prehistoric Animals, Nothosaurus
Item number 830036 Prehistoric Animals, woolly rhinoceros
Item number 830037 Prehistoric Animals, aurochs

14 November 2023
Item number 830038 Prehistoric Animals, blunt-snouted dolphin
Item number 830039 Prehistoric Animals, mastodon
Item number 830040 Prehistoric Animals, great auk

19 March 2024
Item number 830041 Prehistoric Animals, large baleen whale
Item number 830042 Prehistoric Animals, giant beaver
Item number 830043 Prehistoric Animals, steppe bison

Note: PostNL does not sell directly to collectors in North America. Its website refers to a company called Nordfirm, which says it sells Dutch new issues at face value. The Virtual Stamp Club has no connection to this company.

Indigenous Leaders (Canada 2023)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions] [click on the name in the sub-headline to go to that person’s press release]
Canada Post to Pay Tribute to Indigenous Leaders with Second Stamp Set in Multi-Year Series
New stamps will honour lives and legacies of Nellie Cournoyea, George Manuel and Thelma Chalifoux

Issue date: 21 JuneOTTAWA – Canada Post will once again mark National Indigenous Peoples Day on June 21 by issuing a set of stamps honouring three Indigenous leaders.

Nellie Cournoyea, George Manuel and Thelma Chalifoux will each be featured on a stamp recognizing their dedication to advocate for the rights of the Inuit, First Nations and Métis communities they proudly served.

This stamp issue is the second in Canada Post’s multi-year Indigenous Leaders stamp series, launched last year. Each stamp will be unveiled at local events in Ulukhaktok, Northwest Territories, North Vancouver, British Columbia and St. Albert, Alberta.

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New stamp honours Nellie Cournoyea, the first Indigenous woman to lead a provincial or territorial government in Canada
Cournoyea fought for Indigenous self-determination while leading numerous organizations, including the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation and the Committee for Original Peoples’ Entitlement.

ULUKHAKTOK, Northwest Territories –Canada Post has unveiled a stamp honouring the life and work of Nellie Cournoyea, at a community event in Ulukhaktok.

Champion of her people – the Inuvialuit of Canada’s western Arctic – Nellie Cournoyea is known for the unwavering vision, work ethic and heart that have guided her fight for Indigenous self-determination and Inuit empowerment. She became the first Indigenous woman, and second woman, to head a provincial or territorial government in Canada, as Premier of the Northwest Territories (1991-95).

This stamp is one of three Indigenous Leaders stamps that will be released on June 21. The set is the second in Canada Post’s multi-year Indigenous Leaders series.

The life and legacy of Nellie Cournoyea
Nellie Cournoyea was born in Aklavik, Northwest Territories. Her father was a trapper and immigrant from Norway; her mother, an Inuvialuit (or Inupiaq) woman from Herschel Island, Yukon.

Cournoyea grew up living a traditional lifestyle, completing most of her education by correspondence courses sent to her family’s bush camp. She embarked on a career in radio and, later, as a land claims fieldworker.

As co-founder of the Committee for Original Peoples’ Entitlement, she helped negotiate the ground-breaking Inuvialuit Final Agreement, which included a land settlement of more than 90,000 square kilometres.

Cournoyea was elected to the legislature in 1979 and held many ministerial portfolios prior to her selection as Premier. She played a significant role in the discussions leading to the creation of Nunavut and, after leaving office, headed the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation for 20 years.

An Officer of the Order of Canada, Cournoyea is now in her 80s and remains active as chair of the Nutrition North Canada Advisory Board and vice-chair of the Tuktoyaktuk Community Corporation.

About the stamp
Cancelled in Aklavik, Northwest Territories (Cournoyea’s birthplace), the stamp features a photo of Cournoyea taken in 2022 by Peggy Jay. The Official First Day Cover and the inside of the booklet feature a photograph of Cournoyea taken in 1993 by Tessa Macintosh. That image is superimposed over a photograph taken at Trout Lake, Northwest Territories, by Robert Postma.
The cancellation mark, illustrated by Tania Willard, is a white (or Arctic) fox, one of the symbols on the Northwest Territories coat of arms.

About the Indigenous Leaders stamp series
Launched in 2022, the multi-year Indigenous Leaders stamp series highlights the contributions of modern-day First Nations, Inuit and Métis leaders. These extraordinary people dedicated their lives to preserving their cultures and improving the quality of life of the Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

The new stamps and collectibles will be available at canadapost.ca and postal outlets across Canada beginning June 21.

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New stamp pays tribute to First Nations political leader, author and champion of his people, George Manuel
Strong-willed and tireless in his dedication, Manuel lobbied for the inclusion of Indigenous and treaty rights in the Canadian Constitution.

NORTH VANCOUVER, British Columbia – In North Vancouver, Canada Post has unveiled a commemorative stamp honouring the life and legacy of George Manuel.

A member of the Neskonlith Indian Band of the Secwepemc Nation in British Columbia, Manuel (1921 89), was an author, astute political strategist and champion of Indigenous Peoples whom many credit with inspiring the modern Indigenous movement in Canada. During a political career that spanned four decades, Manuel dedicated himself to uniting Indigenous Peoples around the world at the local, regional, national and international levels.

This stamp is one of three Indigenous Leaders stamps that will be released on June 21. The set is the second in Canada Post’s multi-year Indigenous Leaders series.

George Manuel’s work and legacy
George Manuel served as National Chief of what is now the Assembly of First Nations from 1970 to 1976, and as the first president of both the World Council of Indigenous Peoples and the Union of British Columbia Indian Chiefs.

Manuel believed that Indigenous Peoples, at home and around the world, could achieve their goals if they united. He fought the Canadian government’s policies of assimilation and organized the Constitution Express, a movement that brought supporters from the west to Ottawa, and to the United Nations headquarters in New York, by train in 1980 – and to Europe in 1981 – to lobby for the inclusion of Indigenous rights in the patriated Canadian Constitution.

His efforts contributed to the recognition and affirmation of existing Indigenous and treaty rights in the Constitution Act, 1982.

Co-founder of the Center for World Indigenous Studies, Manuel was nominated three times for the Nobel Peace Prize. He died on November 15, 1989, in Kamloops, British Columbia.

About the stamp
Cancelled in Chase, B.C. (George Manuel’s birthplace), this stamp features a bold reinterpretation of a black and white image taken of Manuel in the 1970s. The multi-coloured designs, illustrated by Secwepemc artist Tania Willard, represent the “shining light” of Manuel’s message for international Indigenous rights, while the deep red ochre evokes the pictographs and other markings found on Secwepemc lands.

About the Indigenous Leaders stamp series
Launched in 2022, the multi-year Indigenous Leaders stamp series highlights the contributions of modern-day First Nations, Inuit and Métis leaders. These extraordinary people dedicated their lives to preserving their cultures and improving the quality of life of the Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

This year, on National Indigenous Peoples Day, Canada Post will issue stamps honouring Indigenous leaders Nellie Cournoyea, George Manuel and Thelma Chalifoux.

The new stamps and collectibles will be available at canadapost.ca and postal outlets across Canada beginning June 21.

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New stamp honours Métis leader Thelma Chalifoux, the first Indigenous woman appointed to the Senate of Canada
Chalifoux dedicated her life to advocating for social justice and women’s and Indigenous rights.

ST. ALBERT, Alberta – Canada Post has unveiled a new commemorative stamp honouring Métis activist and trailblazer, Thelma Chalifoux.

The first Indigenous woman appointed to the Senate of Canada, Chalifoux was a powerful force for social justice and women’s and Indigenous rights.

This stamp is one of three Indigenous Leaders stamps that will be released on June 21. The set is the second in Canada Post’s multi-year Indigenous Leaders series.

The life and legacy of Thelma Chalifoux
Born in Calgary, Alberta, Chalifoux (1929-2017) was known for her kind heart and boundless energy. She channelled the strength she gained from her own personal challenges to help others and speak up against discrimination.

After leaving an abusive husband and fighting to regain custody of her children – who, like many other Indigenous children, were forced into the child welfare system – she went back to school and became a fieldworker with Métis Association of Alberta, what is now the Métis Nation of Alberta.

Later working for the Association in Slave Lake, Alberta, Chalifoux co-founded the Slave Lake Native Friendship Centre, which provides a range of programs and services to urban Indigenous people. She also ran the community’s first safe house for women fleeing from domestic violence. A land claims negotiator from 1979 to 1982 (and again from 1996 to 1998), she was involved in constitutional talks in the early 1980s as part of a Métis delegation to Ottawa that helped to get First Nations, Métis and Inuit Peoples recognized as separate and distinct nations.

In 1997, Prime Minister Jean Chrétien appointed her to the Senate, making her the first Indigenous woman to become a senator. She fought tirelessly to improve the welfare of her people, particularly Métis women, and helped create provincial programs for Indigenous Peoples in the areas of housing, education and social assistance.

After retiring in 2004, Chalifoux went on to help found the Michif Cultural Institute (now Michif Cultural Connections) and the St. Albert’s Meadowview Centre for Women’s Health and Wellness, both in St. Albert. She also served as an Elder at the Nechi Institute: Centre of Indigenous Learning and was Métis Elder in Residence at the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. She died on September 22, 2017, at age 88.

About the stamp
Cancelled in Calgary, Alberta (Thelma Chalifoux’s birthplace), the stamp features a photo of Chalifoux from the Northern Alberta Institute of Technology. The background shows detail from The Celebration, a painting by Métis visual artist Christi Belcourt, and pays homage to Chalifoux’s love of flowers.

About the Indigenous Leaders stamp series
Launched in 2022, the multi-year Indigenous Leaders series highlights the contributions of First Nations, Inuit and Métis leaders. These extraordinary people dedicated their lives to preserving their cultures and improving the quality of life of the Indigenous Peoples in Canada.

This year, on National Indigenous Peoples Day, Canada Post will issue stamps in honour of Indigenous leaders Nellie Cournoyea, George Manuel and Thelma Chalifoux.

The new stamps and collectibles will be available at canadapost.ca and postal outlets across Canada beginning June 21.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Postes Canada rendra hommage à des dirigeants autochtones avec l’émission d’un deuxième jeu de timbres d’une série pluriannuelle
De nouveaux timbres souligneront la vie et l’héritage de Nellie Cournoyea, de George Manuel et de Thelma Chalifoux.

OTTAWA – Postes Canada soulignera une nouvelle fois la Journée nationale des peuples autochtones le 21 juin en émettant un jeu de timbres rendant hommage à deux dirigeantes et un dirigeant autochtones.

Nellie Cournoyea, George Manuel et Thelma Chalifoux seront en vedette sur des timbres individuels émis en reconnaissance de leur dévouement à la défense des droits des communautés inuit, métisses et des Premières Nations qu’ils ont fièrement servies.

Cette émission de timbres est la deuxième de la série pluriannuelle consacrée aux dirigeants autochtones, lancée l’an dernier par Postes Canada. Les vignettes seront dévoilées lors d’événements qui se tiendront à Ulukhaktok, dans les Territoires du Nord-Ouest, à North Vancouver, en Colombie-Britannique et à St. Albert, en Alberta.

Dévoilement du timbre consacré à Nellie Cournoyea : le 11 juin à 13 h 30 he (heure des Rocheuses), à Ulukhaktok (T.N.-O)
Née en 1940, Nellie Cournoyea consacre sa vie à la lutte pour l’autodétermination des Autochtones et l’émancipation des Inuit. Élue première ministre des Territoires du Nord-Ouest en 1991, elle devient la première femme autochtone à diriger un gouvernement provincial ou territorial au Canada. Elle joue un rôle clé dans les discussions menant à la création du Nunavut, puis prend la tête de l’Inuvialuit Regional Corporation pendant 20 ans après sa retraite de la politique. Officier de l’Ordre du Canada, elle est actuellement présidente du Conseil consultatif de Nutrition Nord Canada et vice-présidente de la Société communautaire de Tuktoyaktuk.

Dévoilement du timbre consacré à George Manuel : le 12 juin à 13 h (heure du Pacifique), à North Vancouver (C.-B.)
Leader politique des Premières Nations, George Manuel (1921-1989) est aussi défenseur des peuples autochtones et auteur. Au cours d’une carrière politique qui s’étend sur quatre décennies, il occupe de nombreux postes influents et travaille à améliorer les conditions sociales, économiques et politiques des Premières Nations au Canada. Ses efforts contribuent à l’inclusion des droits ancestraux et issus de traités des peuples autochtones dans la Constitution du Canada. Cofondateur du Center for World Indigenous Studies, George Manuel est proposé à trois reprises pour le prix Nobel de la paix et reçoit de nombreuses marques de reconnaissance pour son travail, y compris le titre d’Officier de l’Ordre du Canada.

Dévoilement du timbre consacré à Thelma Chalifoux : le 13 juin à 13 h (heure des Rocheuses), à St. Albert (Alb.)
Activiste métisse, Thelma Chalifoux (1929-2017) tire sa force de ses difficultés personnelles pour aider les autres et lutter contre la discrimination. Première femme autochtone nommée au Sénat du Canada en 1997, elle consacre sa vie à l’amélioration du bien-être de son peuple, en particulier des femmes métisses. Elle joue un rôle déterminant dans la création de nombreux programmes provinciaux pour le logement, l’éducation et l’aide sociale venant en aide aux peuples autochtones. Thelma Chalifoux travaille comme aînée en résidence au Northern Alberta Institute of Technology et participe également à la fondation du Michif Cultural Connections, un musée et un centre de ressources, à St. Albert.

Les timbres et les articles de collection seront en vente sur postescanada.ca et dans les comptoirs postaux partout au pays, dès le 21 juin

Experience Nature: De Wieden (Netherlands 2023)

[summarized from a PostNL press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Experience Nature: De Wieden

Issue date: 12 June

Appearance: sheet of ten stamps in ten different designs
Item number: 430761
Design: Frank Janse, Gouda
Photography: Buiten-BeeldThe stamp sheet about De Wieden is part of the multi-annual Experience Nature 2021-2023 series. In the series, four stamp sheets are issued every year, each comprising ten different stamps. The stamps feature images of plants and animals in unique Dutch nature reserves across the country. In 2023, it is the turn of the provinces of Flevoland, Friesland, Overijssel and Noord-Brabant.

The Experience Nature – De Wieden issue focuses on the peat bog of nature reserve De Wieden, located in the province of Overijssel. The stamp sheets issued earlier this year (2 January 2023) featured Marker Wadden in Flevoland and Strok en Skrins in Friesland (13 February 2023). On 24 August 2023, the last stamp sheet in the series will be issued, which will be about the Oisterwijkse Bossen en Vennen in North Brabant.

Peat bog De Wieden is an area that covers over 6,000 hectares [14,826 acres or 23 square miles] in the Kop van Overijssel. The nature reserve is part of the Weerribben-Wieden National Park. De Wieden is owned by Natuurmonumenten. Within the National Park, Natuurmonumenten works closely together with Staatsbosbeheer (the Forestry Commission), which owns the Weerribben.

De Wieden owes its name to its distinctive broad lakes (wieden or wijden), including the Belterwijde and the Beulakerwijde. The wetland character of De Wieden is the result of peat excavations, storms, and the flooding of the Zuiderzee in the 18th and 19th centuries.

The nature reserve can be visited by open tour boat from the visitor centre in Sint Jansklooster [about 110 kilometers or 68 miles east-northeast from Amsterdam] and other locations. There are also paths for walkers and cyclists through the greenery and along the water. In the middle of De Wieden, the water tower of Sint Jansklooster offers spectacular views.

The landscape gets its unique character from the combination of the large open waters of De Wieden with small pools and winding ditches and canals. As is the case in all peat bogs, open water, moorlands, floating mats, reed beds, fenlands, shrublands and swamp forests alternate. They are home to many rare plant species, including the meadow thistle, tawny sedge, devil’s bit, and slender cottongrass. The abundance of water makes De Wieden popular with large fish-eaters such as the cormorant, osprey, bittern and purple heron. Other unusual birds include the black tern, marsh harrier, barn owl and short-eared owl.

“Water is the dominant factor in De Wieden,” says ecologist Rosalie Martens, co-manager of the reserve. “Everything is done by boat around here. There is one farmer who still has small numbers of cattle grazing in De Wieden. So he ferries his animals across by boat.

“The nature reserve was man-made through the excavation of peat until 1940. The area requires intensive management, otherwise trees will take hold and the area will become forest again,” Martens added. “In my opinion, it is the most beautiful nature reserve in the Netherlands, where man and nature are in perfect harmony.”

The ten residents of this nature reserve featured on the Experience Nature – De Wieden stamps are the marsh harrier, small pearl-bordered fritillary, common hawthorn, fringed water-lily, English oak, water rail, blackthorn, barn owl, purple heron and oblong-leaved sundew. Each has its own stamp. The stamp sheet also features many more images of flora and fauna typical for this area. The following are shown as monochrome images in a separate graphic layer: oblong-leaved sundew (top right), barn owl (top left), western marsh harrier (just above centre), leaf of the black elder (left of centre and centre), leaf of the English oak (bottom left), small pearl-bordered fritillary (bottom centre) and blackberry (bottom right).

The nature reserves in the Experience Nature series were chosen in consultation with experts from the nature conservation organisation Natuurmonumenten. A number of considerations played a role in the selection of these diverse landscapes. Each area had to have plenty of interesting flora and fauna, for example. There had to be enough diversity, so every species could be represented: from plants, trees and mammals to insects, reptiles and amphibians.

“I also wanted to have a decent choice of beautiful images and it had to have a captivating story attached to it,” said series graphic designer Frank Janse. “The common factor of this issue about De Wieden is the wet, marshy nature of this nature reserve.”

“The large white barn owl at the top left is a real eye-catcher,” added Janse. “The centre features a white image of the marsh harrier. I selected a picture on which the harrier’s wings are almost in the same position as those of the water rail below.”

The Experience Nature – De Wieden mminisheets are available while stocks last at all PostNL sales outlets, the post office counter in Bruna shops and at www.postnl.nl/bijzondere-postzegels [in Dutch].

Technical Details:
Stamp size: 40 x 30mm
Sheet size: 122 x 170mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Glue: self-adhesive
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow and black
Print run: 285,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of 10 stamps in 10 different designs
Design: Frank Janse, Gouda
Photography: Buiten-Beeld
Printing company: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé B.V., Haarlem
Item number: 430761

Britain Celebrates “Warhammer” Game Series (UK 2023)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Royal Mail Celebrates the 40th Anniversary of “Warhammer” with 10 Special Stamps

  • Issue date: 8 June
  • Six stamps depict characters from the worlds of “Warhammer 40,000;” “Warhammer: Age of Sigmar” and “Warhammer: The Old World”
  • A further four stamps of the popular British miniatures wargame capture the unique visual style of Warhammer with iconic paintings and illustrations from the Warhammer archive
  • The stamps are available to pre-order now and go on general sale on 8 June 2023

Royal Mail has announced the launch of 10 Special Stamps being issued to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the internationally popular miniatures Hobby, Warhammer.

Six stamps in the main set depict characters from the worlds of “Warhammer – Space Marines” and Orks from “Warhammer 40,000”; Stormcast Eternals and Slaves to Darkness from “Warhammer Age of Sigmar”; and High Elves and Dwarfs from “Warhammer: The Old World”.The Miniature Sheet shows four stamps featuring iconic illustrations from the last 40 years of Warhammer – Crimson Fists Space Marines from the first edition of “Warhammer 40,000”; The Emperor of Mankind from “Warhammer: The Horus Heresy”; Yndrasta, the Celestial Spear from the current edition of “Warhammer: Age of Sigmar”; and The Battle for Skull Pass from “Warhammer: The Old World”.

The background to the miniature sheet is a classic piece of artwork depicting Harald Hammerstorm, a Chaos Champion whose origins can be traced back to the first edition of “Warhammer: The Game of Fantasy Battles”.

David Gold, Director of External Affairs and Policy, Royal Mail, said: “With millions of devotees across the globe, Warhammer is a creative, collaborative pursuit with a unique power to spark the imagination. We are delighted to be celebrating the 40th anniversary of this immersive tabletop wargame with a set of Special Stamps.”

Helen Smallridge, Global Head of Marketing at Games Workshop commented: “We’re delighted to be partnering with Royal Mail to mark the 40th anniversary of Warhammer. From humble beginnings, Warhammer has grown into a British institution and a global success, with our fantasy miniatures collected by millions around the world. We hope this new stamp range will be a treat for fans, and for those who have yet to discover our rich and fantastical worlds.”

First produced in 1983, by the budding miniature gaming company, Games Workshop, Warhammer quickly became the most successful table-top miniatures hobby in history. With models, paints and games designed and produced in-house its own magazine, White Dwarf, and a bespoke publishing imprint known as Black Library producing novels set in the Warhammer universes, Games Workshop has become a real independent success story.

The stamps are available to pre-order now at www.royalmail.com/warhammer, by telephone on 03457 641 641 and at 7,000 Post Office branches across the UK. A Presentation Pack including all 10 stamps in the set is priced at £18.10. The tamps go on general sale on 8 June 2023.


The products include FDCs with both the Tallents House and Lenton postmarks (£8.60), two “medal covers” (£19.99 each), framed stamps, postcards, sheets in various configurations, and “stamp ingots” for two of the series, “a silver-plated replica of the [Space Marines or Stormcast Eternals] stamp with the design reproduced in full colour” (£24.99).

2023-24 Duck Stamp (U.S. FWS 2023)

Technically, the “Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp.”

The earlier Fish & Wildlife Service press release follows this information from the Postal Service. The Scott catalogue numbers are
RW90 $25 Tundra Swans Hunting Permit Stamp, self-adhesive
RW90A souvenir sheet of 1

From the Postal Bulletin:
On June 23, 2023, in Memphis, TN, the U.S. Department of the Interior will issue the $25 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation stamp for the 2023–2024 waterfowl hunting season. The pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) stamp will go on sale nationwide June 23, 2023, and is valid through June 30, 2024.

No automatic distribution for the pane of one (336900)

The pane of 20 (337000) will only be sold by Stamp Fulfillment Services and by consignment by Amplex Corp.

Technical Specifications (Single-Stamp Pane):

Issue:-Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp
Item Number:-336900
Denomination & Type of Issue:-$25.00, Special
Format:-Pane of 1 (1 design)
Series:-Federal Duck
Issue Date & City:-June 23, 2023, Memphis, TN 38105
Art Director:-Suzanne Fellows, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Artist:-James Hautman
Modeler:-Joseph Sheeran
Manufacturing Process:-Offset, Flexographic, Microprint
Printer:-Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd (APU)
Press Type:-Muller A76
Stamps per Pane:-1
Print Quantity:-2,468,185 stamps
Paper Type:-Nonphosphored Type III
Adhesive Type:-Pressure-sensitive
Processed at:-Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd. (APU)
Colors:-Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Invisible Fluorescent
Stamp Orientation:-Horizontal
Image Area (w x h):-1.7188 x 1.2656 in. / 43.658 x 32.146 mm
Overall Size (w x h):-1.89 x 1.417 in. / 48.006 x 35.992 mm
Full Pane Size (w x h):-6.125 x 2.625 in. / 155.575 x 66.675 mm
Plate Size:-36 stamps per revolution
Plate Numbers:-N/A
Marginal Markings:
Front:-Selvage Text: 2023–2024 Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp • U.S Fish and Wildlife Service • 50th Anniversary of the Endangered Species Act • Informative text • Artist: James Hautman, Tundra Swans© • If applicable, sign your stamp.
Back:-Verso text • Ordering information • Barcode • U.S. Department of the Interior logo • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service logo

Technical Specifications (Pane of 20):

Issue:-Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp
Item Number:-337000
Denomination & Type of Issue:-$25.00, Special
Format:-Pane of 20 (1 design)
Series:-Federal Duck
Issue Date & City:-June 23, 2023, Memphis, TN 38105
Art Director:-Suzanne Fellows, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Artist:-James Hautman
Modeler:-Joseph Sheeran
Manufacturing Process:-Offset, Flexographic, Microprint
Printer:-Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd (APU)
Press Type:-Muller A76
Stamps per Pane:-20
Print Quantity:-53,600 stamps
Paper Type:-Nonphosphored Type III
Adhesive Type:-Pressure-sensitive
Processed at:-Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd. (APU)
Colors:-Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Invisible Fluorescent
Stamp Orientation:-Horizontal
Image Area (w x h):-1.7188 x 1.2656 in. / 43.658 x 32.146 mm
Overall Size (w x h):-1.89 x 1.417 in. / 48.006 x 35.992 mm
Full Pane Size (w x h):-8.25 x 8.25 in. / 209.55 x 209.55 mm
Plate Size:-180 stamps per revolution
Plate Numbers:-“P” followed by four (4) single digits
Marginal Markings:
Front:-Selvage Text: “Artist: James Hautman” (4 locations) • “Department of the Interior 20 x $25.00” (2 locations) • Image of Swans printed in Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Invisible Fluorescent • Plate number (4 corners)
Back:-Verso text behind each stamp • Four barcodes • Plate position (9)

[FWS press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Minnesota Artist Joseph Hautman Wins 2022 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest
Federal Duck Stamp Supports Wildlife ConservationJudges and Department of the Interior representatives show off the winner of this year’s duck stamp competition. Pictured are: (top row) Walter Rhodes, Suzanne Fellows, Jerome Ford, Jen Chin, Larry Mellinger; (bottom row) Sean Murtha, Marshall Johnson, Paul Schmidt, Richard Houk, Chris Nicolai

[from September 2022]

After two days of competition, Joseph Hautman of Plymouth, Minnesota, emerged as the winner of the 2022 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest with his painting of three tundra swans flying over a wetland. The announcement was made via live stream at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Headquarters in Falls Church, Virginia. This is his sixth win of the prestigious contest.

Hautman’s acrylic painting [on the right] will be made into the 2023-2024 Federal Migratory Bird Hunting and Conservation Stamp, or “Duck Stamp”, which will go on sale in late June 2023. The Service produces the Federal Duck Stamp, which sells for $25 and raises approximately $40 million in sales each year. These funds support critical conservation to protect wetland habitats in the National Wildlife Refuge System for the benefit of wildlife and the enjoyment of people.

Just this past week, the Migratory Bird Conservation Commission, chaired by Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, approved the allocation of nearly $105 million with grants through the North American Wetlands Conservation Act and funds from the Migratory Bird Conservation Fund. The fund is made up partly of Duck Stamp dollars, to support the acquisition of lands from willing sellers for the Refuge System. The new areas provide additional access to the public to some of the most spectacular places available for hunting, fishing, birdwatching, hiking, and other outdoor activities.

“The Duck Stamp Contest is one of my very favorite events every year!” said Service Director Martha Williams. “I am always impressed with the caliber of the art submitted, and each and every entry reminds us of the beauty of the natural world the Duck Stamp is designed to protect. I encourage everyone to buy a Duck Stamp as it makes a real impact in conserving wetlands habitats for waterfowl and many other wildlife species.”

Since it was first established in 1934, sales of the Federal Duck Stamp to hunters, bird watchers, outdoor enthusiasts, and collectors have raised more than $1.1 billion to conserve over 6 million acres of habitat for birds and other wildlife and provide countless opportunities for wildlife-oriented recreation on our public lands.

Waterfowl hunters age 16 and older are required to purchase and carry the current Federal Duck Stamp. Many non-hunters, including birdwatchers, conservationists, stamp collectors, and others also purchase the stamp in support of habitat conservation. Additionally, a current Federal Duck Stamp can be used for free admission to any national wildlife refuge that charges an entry fee.

In addition to Joseph Hautman, Frank Mittelstadt of Beaver Dam, Wisconsin, placed second with his acrylic painting of tundra swans, and Robert Hautman of Delano, Minnesota, took third place with his acrylic painting of an American wigeon.

Of 187 entries judged in this year’s competition, 54 entries made it to the final round of judging. Eligible species for this year’s Federal Duck Stamp Contest were the tundra (whistling) swan, mottled duck, American green-winged teal, American wigeon, and Barrow’s goldeneye. View the online gallery of the 2022 Federal Duck Stamp Art Contest entries.

The judges for this year’s Federal Duck Stamp Contest were: Sean Murtha, artist; Richard Houk, philatelist; Marshall Johnson, conservation partner; Paul Schmidt, conservation partner; and Christopher Nicolai, waterfowl biologist and conservation partner.

You can contribute to conservation and America’s great outdoors tradition by buying Federal Duck Stamps at many national wildlife refuges, sporting goods stores, and other retailers, through the U.S. Postal Service, or purchase online.

Space (with a stamp missing) (Netherlands 2023)

[from PostNL press materials] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Journey to The Moon

Date of issue: 21 April 2023

Format: sheet with nine stamps in different shapes
Item number: 430461
Design and illustrations: Lilian Vos, Vividblue

On 21 April 2023, PostNL issued the Journey to The Moon stamp sheet, dedicated to space. Travelling to and in space has always captured people’s imagination. This year a number of space flights have been planned once again. The Journey to The Moon stamp sheet features nine stamps with illustrations related to space. The 10th stamp featuring the moon is missing. The stamp with the moon is symbolised by the punched-out circle, and PostNL plans to issue it when man sets foot on the moon again around 2025. This tenth stamp will then complete the journey to the moon series. The denomination on the Journey to The Moon stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands. A sheet of nine stamps costs €9.09.

Ever since the development of the first telescopes more than 400 years ago, we have loved looking beyond what the human eye can see. Russian cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin was the first human in space in 1961, while the Russian Soyuz programme was launched in 1967. In 1969, the Americans put a human on the moon for the first time with Apollo 11. The Apollo programme was followed by the space shuttle programme. The ISS International Space Station has been the site of close international cooperation since 1998.

Space is now visited more than ever before. This year, for instance, the ESA European Space Agency will be launching the Juice space probe, which will map Jupiter’s largest moons. A number of commercial organisations will also be testing their latest rockets in 2023, including the New Glenn (Blue Origin) and the Starship (SpaceX). Later this year, NASA will send space probe Psyche to the asteroid of the same name between Mars and Jupiter. The moon will also get a visit in 2023, from Japanese, Russian and Indian unmanned lunar landers, among others.

The Artemis international space programme aims to land astronauts on the moon again by 2025. The programme consists of 3 missions: an unmanned test flight (late 2022), a mission during which astronauts circle the moon without landing (scheduled for 2024) and finally a lunar landing mission (scheduled for 2025).

The stamps feature illustrations of the following nine subjects:

  • the planet Saturn
  • Orion capsule, designed to carry astronauts
  • floating astronaut in spacesuit
  • satellite with solar panels
  • view of the Earth from the moon
  • SLS launch vehicle
  • Orion capsule during ‘splash down’ with parachutes
  • moonboot, a classic part of astronaut outfit
  • walking astronaut in spacesuit.

Three of the stamps are round, the shapes of the other six follow the outlines of the illustrations. The edge of each stamp is perforated with four teeth. The stamp with the moonboot has five additional teeth, as a nod to the sole of the shoe. The illustrations are printed in warm red, cornflower blue, soft yellow, silver and copper.

A Dream Come True
The stamp sheet was created by graphic designer Lilian Vos of Amsterdam-based agency Vividblue. It is her first stamp design, an assignment that fit her like a glove. ‘My father was a collector, especially of first-day envelopes. I remember endlessly admiring the pictures on stamps when I was little. Stamps and stamp designs also definitely played a role in my decision to study graphic design. At the academy’s open day in Maastricht, I had the opportunity to view a number of enlarged stamp designs. I wanted to do that too.’

To learn more about the subject, Vos visited the permanent Space Expo space exhibition in Noordwijk, which she called ‘very impressive.’ After seeing the enthusiasm by the astronauts and staff there, she decided to focus the stamp design mainly on the human aspect of space travel. ‘Noordwijk showed that the subject is still alive, among young and old alike, especially given the ongoing Artemis space programme,’ she said. ‘Mankind is taking trips to the moon again.’

PostNL asked Vos for an innovative design, and thus, the ‘hole’ for the tenth stamp. ‘This unique idea is designed to make people curious, and it’s something we haven’t seen on a stamp sheet before,’ Vos said.

The Journey to The Moon stamps are available while stocks last at the post office counter in Bruna shops and here [direct link; in Dutch]. The ‘1’ denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands. A sheet of nine stamps costs €9.09.

Technical Details:
Stamp sizes:

  • Saturn: 23.0 x 50.0 mm (h✖️w)
  • Orion capsule: 28.0 x 33.5mm (h✖️w):
  • floating astronaut: 31.8 mm diameter
  • satellite: 28.0 x 44.4mm (h✖️w)
  • Earth: 37.3 mm diameter
  • SLS launch vehicle: 45.4 x 33.4mm (h✖️w)
  • moon boot: 30.1 x 33.0mm (h✖️w)
  • Orion capsule with parachutes: 32.6 x 36.2mm (h✖️w)
  • walking astronaut: 31.8 mm diameter

Sheet size: 150 x 144mm (h✖️w)
Paper: normal with phosphor underprint
Glue: self-adhesive
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: magenta, yellow, black, blue and silver
Edition: 110,000 sheets
Format: sheet of nine stamps in nine different designs
Design and illustrations: Lilian Vos
Printing company: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé B.V., Haarlem
Item number: 430461

There is a set of two official FDCs for this issue:

TV Sitcom “Black Adder” (UK 2023)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Royal Mail Celebrates the 40th Anniversary of the Superlative Comedy “Blackadder” with 12 Special Stamps

Issue date: 17 May 2023

  • Eight stamps capture moments spanning four series of the classic British sitcom that first aired in 1983. A further four stamps depict Edmund Blackadder in his various guises over each of the four series of the classic sitcom
  • The stamps feature some of the show’s best-loved characters, played by familiar names including Tony Robinson, Hugh Laurie, Stephen Fry, Tim McInnerny, Miranda Richardson, Brian Blessed and the late Patsy Byrne
  • The stamps are available to pre-order now at www.royalmail.com/blackadder, by telephone on 03457 641 641 and at 7,000 Post Office branches across the UK. A Presentation Pack including all 12 stamps in the set is priced at £19.60. The stamps go on general sale on 17 May 2023

Royal Mail has announced the launch of 12 Special Stamps being issued to mark the 40th anniversary of the classic British sitcom “Blackadder.”

From the mists of medieval England to the court of Queen Elizabeth I, from the glamour of the Georgian era to the grim trenches of the First World War, the stamps pay tribute to one of the pillars of British comedy.

Launched in 1983 by writer Richard Curtis and star Rowan Atkinson – with the vital assistance of BBC producer John Lloyd and co-author Ben Elton – the series went on to win an International Emmy Award and is regularly named among the finest sitcoms of all time – while its scheming, amoral hero has become one of our most adored TV characters.

The eight stamps in the main set capture moments spanning four series of the classic British sitcom and feature some of the show’s best-loved characters, played by familiar names including Tony Robinson, Hugh Laurie, Stephen Fry, Tim McInnerny, Miranda Richardson, Brian Blessed, and the late Patsy Byrne.

In addition a further four stamps, presented in a miniature sheet, celebrate the main character, Edmund Blackadder, played by Rowan Atkinson, in his various guises over each of the four series of the classic sitcom.Blackadder co-creator, Richard Curtis, said: “We’re very amused and delighted. It’s a great relief for Blackadder to have his head on a stamp, instead of on a stake.”

John Lloyd, Producer, Blackadder, said: “The entire team behind Britain’s leading situation tragedy is deeply honoured by Royal Mail’s magnificent stamps of approval. In the words of General Sir Anthony Cecil Hogmanay Melchett, VC KCB; ‘Let’s give them a damn good licking!’”

David Gold, Director of External Affairs and Policy, Royal Mail, said: “The epic saga of Blackadder spans six centuries of British history and four decades of British television and is still loved and revered by audiences old and new. We are delighted to mark the 40th anniversary of Blackadder with a set of Special Stamps.”

The Black Adder
Penned by university friends Richard Curtis and Rowan Atkinson – who also starred as the title character, the devious Prince Edmund – The Black Adder was set in the 15th century during the fictional reign of King Richard IV, a time of poverty, plague, religious hysteria and bloody battles over the royal succession.

Blackadder II
Moving the action forward a century and with Ben Elton on scriptwriting duties alongside Richard Curtis, Blackadder II tracks the shifting fortunes of Lord Edmund Blackadder, an ambitious courtier to the giddy young Queen Elizabeth I with a bumbling retinue of blockheaded sidekicks.

Blackadder the Third
Set in the early 19th century during the Regency of the impressively trousered royal heir, Prince George, Blackadder the Third follows the adventures of crafty butler Mr E Blackadder, who spends his days tormenting his lice-infested minion Baldrick and cooking up cunning plans to improve his social standing.

Blackadder Goes Forth
The final series, Blackadder Goes Forth, takes us to the mud-swamped trenches of the First World War, where Captain Blackadder and his doomed cadre of fellow soldiers try every trick they can think of to evade the inevitable order to go ‘over the top’. The final scene is one of the most haunting and memorable endings in TV history.

The stamps are available to pre-order now at www.royalmail.com/blackadder, by telephone on 03457 641 641 and at 7,000 Post Office branches across the UK. A Presentation Pack including all 12 stamps in the set is priced at £19.60. The stamps go on general sale on 17 May 2023.

Coronation of King Charles III (Canada 2023)

Issue Date: 6 May, 2023

by Danforth Guy
Special to The Virtual Stamp Club

Canada now has a definitive stamp for the coronation of King Charles III, the monarch of 15 countries, including Canada. A recent poll showed 60% of Canadians do not wish to acknowledge him as king of this country (66% oppose his wife Camilla as “queen of Canada”). Nevertheless, the postal service appears to feel compelled to picture him on a stamp, even though no rule or law requires it.

The self-adhesive comes in a booklet of 10, denominated at the “P” (Permanent) rate, currently 92¢, which covers domestic mail up to 30g. The stamp names the monarch, a departure from most previous definitives that pictured a sovereign. The photo was taken by Alan Shawcross, apparently in London, UK, and apparently in 2007. (Click on this link to see the original photo.)

No Canadian has ever been honoured on a first-class definitive, just British monarchs. This issue continues that tradition.


Updated May 6:

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Canada Post issues first Canadian stamp featuring His Majesty King Charles III as Monarch
New definitive stamp continues more than 170 years of historic tradition

OTTAWA – Today, Canada Post unveiled Canada’s first definitive stamp featuring His Majesty King Charles III at the Canadian ceremony marking the Coronation of the new monarch, hosted by Canadian Heritage.This is the first time His Majesty King Charles III has appeared on the Canadian stamp.

The stamp continues Canada Post’s long-standing tradition of issuing definitive stamps depicting the Canadian sovereign, dating back more than 170 years. This tradition first begun in 1851 with a pre-Confederation stamp featuring Queen Victoria, the King’s great-great-great grandmother.

On September 8, 2022, His Majesty ascended the throne upon the passing of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II. The King has been the heir apparent since 1951, and was created Prince of Wales by Queen Elizabeth II when he was nine years old. Since His Majesty’s first official tour of Canada in 1970, he has returned numerous times with his most recent trip in 2022 as part of Queen Elizabeth II’s platinum jubilee celebrations.

The definitive stamp was designed by Paprika, and features a portrait of His Majesty King Charles III, then The Prince of Wales, by photographer Alan Shawcross. Printed by Lowe-Martin, the issue includes a booklet of 10 Permanent™ domestic rate stamps and an Official First Day Cover [below]. The Official First Day Cover features a photograph of His Majesty in Ottawa during the 2022 Royal Tour, when he was The Prince of Wales. The photo on the Official First Day Cover was taken by Canadian photographer Justin Tang. The cancel site is Ottawa, Ontario. The stamp will be issued on Monday, May 8, 2023. A definitive stamp is a postage stamp that is part of a regular issue of stamps, designed to serve the everyday needs and issued in indefinite quantities. A commemorative stamp celebrates a special place, event, person, theme or theme, often issued on a significant date. Unlike a definitive stamp which is reprinted for general usage, a commemorative stamp is printed in a limited quantities and is available until stamps run out.

The new stamp and collectibles will be available at canadapost.ca and postal outlets across Canada.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Postes Canada émet le premier timbre canadien à l’effigie de Sa Majesté le roi Charles III
Le nouveau timbre courant perpétue une tradition de plus de 170 ans

OTTAWA – Aujourd’hui, Postes Canada a dévoilé son tout premier timbre courant à l’effigie de Sa Majesté le roi Charles III à l’occasion de la cérémonie organisée par Patrimoine canadien en l’honneur du couronnement du nouveau monarque.

Cette émission perpétue une longue tradition de production de timbres courants présentant le souverain canadien, qui a commencé avant la confédération, en 1851, il y a plus de 170 ans, par une vignette consacrée à la reine Victoria, l’arrière-arrière-grand-mère du Roi.

Le 8 septembre 2022, Sa Majesté a accédé au trône après le décès de sa mère, la reine Elizabeth II. Héritier apparent depuis 1951, il a été fait prince de Galles par la Reine à l’âge de neuf ans. Après sa première visite officielle au Canada en 1970, Sa Majesté y est revenue à plusieurs reprises, notamment en 2022 dans le cadre des célébrations du jubilé de platine de la reine Elizabeth II.

Le timbre courant a été conçu par la maison Paprika et présente un portrait de Sa Majesté le roi Charles III, alors prince de Galles, réalisé par le photographe Alan Shawcross. Imprimée par Lowe-Martin, l’émission comprend un carnet de 10 timbres PermanentsMC au tarif du régime intérieur et un pli Premier Jour officiel. Le pli Premier Jour est orné d’une photo de Sa Majesté prise à Ottawa par le photographe canadien Justin Tang lors de la visite royale de 2022, alors qu’il était le prince de Galles. Le lieu d’oblitération est Ottawa, en Ontario. Le timbre sera émis le lundi 8 mai 2023. Un timbre courant fait partie d’une émission régulière. Produit en quantités indéfinies, il est conçu pour répondre aux besoins quotidiens. Un timbre commémoratif, souvent émis à une date significative, met en vedette un lieu, un événement, une personne ou un thème spécial. Contrairement au timbre courant, qui est réimprimé pour un usage général, un timbre commémoratif est produit en quantités limitées et offert jusqu’à épuisement des stocks.

Le timbre et les articles de collection seront en vente sur postescanada.ca et dans les comptoirs postaux partout au pays.

Typically Dutch: Cheese Markets (Netherlands 2023)

[from the PostNL press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Typically Dutch – Cheese Markets

Date of issue: 15 May 2023
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in six identical designs
Item number: 430662
Design: Adam Lane and Edwin van Praet, Total Design, Amsterdam

This issue is the fourth in the Typically Dutch series this year. The multi-annual series started in 2020 and, in 2023, will be dedicated to a variety of sights and attractions that are significant for and typical of the Netherlands. A sheet of ten stamps costs €6.06.

The Typically Dutch – Cheese Markets issue was designed by senior graphic designer Adam Lane and creative director Edwin van Praet from Total Design in Amsterdam. As part of this stamp series, stamps featuring museums (2 January), mills (13 February) and flower fields (20 March 2023) were published earlier this year. After the stamps about cheese markets, the last stamp sheet in this series – with as subject the Wadden mudflats – will follow later this year (14 August).

Cows, milk and cheese – a trinity that is inextricably linked to the Netherlands. The figures are impressive: our country produces 650 million kilos of cheese every year, two-thirds of which is sold abroad. This makes the Netherlands the world’s largest cheese exporter, with Gouda and Edam the most popular cheeses among foreign buyers.

The relationship between the Netherlands and cheese goes way back. Archaeological findings show that cheese was being made in our country even before the Common Era. In the Middle Ages, cheese production and trade conquered their central place in Dutch life. Cheese markets flourished and towns with weighing rights set up weigh houses to determine the weight of the cheeses.

Five cheese markets still operate in our country, all with roots in a distant past. They are in Alkmaar, Edam, Hoorn, Gouda and Woerden. In Gouda and Woerden, you will still find real trade; the other cheese markets are tourist attractions.

The fact that these markets are mainly situated in the western part of our country is due to the damp soil, which is most suitable for grazing and rearing cows and therefore for milk production and cheese making. Each cheese market has its own history and customs. Alkmaar, for instance, is best known for its cheese carriers, who carry cheeses on their characteristic barrows, and Edam was granted the permanent right to operate a cheese weighing house by Prince William I of Orange in 1573. The cheese market in Hoorn concentrates on the medieval Roode Steen square, where horse-drawn wagons take the cheeses and pick them up. In Gouda, the cheese market has been held at the Gouda Cheese Market, right in front of De Waag, for centuries, and in Woerden it has been held every Saturday morning since 1885, with traditional handjeklap (bartering by slapping hands) negotiations between the region’s cheese farmers and the market master.

Festivals like the cheese markets had been suggested in 2021 for earlier in the Typically Dutch series, but the COVID-19 pandemic had shut down nearly all such activities at that time.

The Design
The Typically Dutch – Cheese Markets stamp sheet features illustrations of large cheeses shaped like wagon wheels. Each stamp features four cheeses lying down and one cheese standing up. The cheeses fill the stamp up to the perforation edges. At the bottom of each stamp is the sorting hook, the year 2023, the country (Nederland) and the denomination (1), which covers items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands.

‘We looked for iconic shapes that best matched the sights we wanted to showcase. For cheese markets, it was logical to choose the iconic wagon wheels,’ said senior graphic designer Adam Lane of Total Design. ‘We tested other shapes too, including cheese balls and pieces of cheese, either flat or triangular. But the wagon wheel best suited the rectangular shape of the stamps.’

For Lane, the cheese market subject is his favourite in the Typically Dutch series this year. ‘I love cheese, you can never eat too much cheese,’ he said.

He admits the high stacks of cheese in the sheet margins [the right side is shown here] are a little exaggerated. ‘Of course, I realise that at real cheese markets they never stack them that high,” he said. ‘But at the market, I noticed that at the beginning of the day, the stacks are still neat, but at the end of the day, they’re a lot untidier — just like on the sheet edge.’

The Typically Dutch – Cheese Markets stamps are available while stocks last at the post office counter in Bruna shops and through the webshop. The stamps can also be ordered by phone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number +31 (0)88 868 99 00. The validity period is indefinite.

Technical Details:
Stamp size: 40 x 30mm:
Sheet size: 122 x 170mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Gum: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow and black
Print run: 75,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of 6 stamps in 6 identical designs
Design: Adam Lane and Edwin van Praet, Total Design, Amsterdam
Printer: Cartor Security Printers, Meaucé-La Loupe, France
Item number: 430662