National Parks (UK 2021)

[press release]
Royal Mail Reveals its First Stamp Issue of 2021, a Celebration of the Beauty of the UK’s National Parks

  • The stamps go on sale 14 January
  • The stamps mark 70 years since the first National Parks were founded in the UK
  • Today there are 15 National Parks covering 10% of the land area of England, Scotland and Wales
  • The stamp set features 10 of the 15 National Parks:
    • Peak District
    • Lake District
    • Snowdonia
    • Dartmoor
    • North York Moors
    • The Broads
    • New Forest
    • South Downs
    • Pembrokeshire Coast
    • Loch Lomond and The Trossachs
    • Our National Parks contain some of the UK’s most popular landscapes, thousands of ancient monuments and almost a third of our internationally important wildlife sites
    • Royal Mail worked with the National Parks on choosing a selection of images to celebrate the anniversary
    • The stamps will be available on general sale on 14 January 2021. They will be available at www.royalmail.com/nationalparks, by phone on 03457 641 641 and 7,000 Post Offices across the UK

Royal Mail has revealed images of the first Special Stamps issue of 2021, celebrating the 70th anniversary of the founding of Britain’s first National Parks.

Featuring some of the most UK’s most popular and visited landscapes, the stamp set features 10 of the 15 National Parks:

  • Peak District (founded 1951)
  • Lake District (1951)
  • Snowdonia (1951)
  • Dartmoor (1951)
  • North York Moors (1952)
  • The Broads (1989)
  • New Forest (2005)
  • South Downs (2010)
  • Pembrokeshire Coast (1952)
  • Loch Lomond and The Trossachs (2002)

The UK’s National Parks cover a breathtaking range of natural environments: from cold tundra to temperate rainforest, from gigantic sea cliffs to rolling chalk hills, from razor-sharp mountains to marshy wetlands. They are also places where people have lived, worked, worshipped, farmed and traded for centuries, in ways that have shaped — and been shaped by — the surrounding environment. These landscapes are 15 unique combinations of human culture and natural history.

The National Parks were created as the outcome of decades of public effort to open up the countryside to ordinary people. 2021 marks the 70th anniversary of the founding of the UK’s first four National Parks: the Peak District, the Lake District, Dartmoor and Snowdonia. The National Parks are the nation’s ‘breathing spaces’, free for everyone to enjoy regardless of age, background or income.

Today, most of us take for granted the ability to freely enjoy these landscapes, but it was not always so. In the 19th century, the Industrial Revolution turned Britain into the world’s first predominantly urban nation, but people in towns and cities held on to visions of a ‘green and pleasant land’ and found ways of keeping links to the landscapes around them alive through hiking, cycling, rambling and climbing. In the 1870s, the limited access ordinary people had to the countryside gave rise to the ‘right to roam’ movement. The 1932 mass trespass on Kinder Scout in the Peak District proved to be instrumental, galvanising public opinion after five of the young leaders were given prison sentences. The UK’s National Parks, created in the same post-war rebuilding effort as the NHS, are one of the great legacies of this movement. Fittingly, the first to be founded, in 1951, was the Peak District National Park. For all their diversity, the National Parks have one thing in common: they belong to all of us.

Philip Parker, Royal Mail, said: “Ten spectacular National Parks have been captured in stunning photographs that reflect their diversity and splendour. We are proud to be able to share the beauty of these parks on stamps at a time when so many of us have had our travel restricted.”
The stamps will be on sale from 14 January and will be available at www.royalmail.com/nationalparks, by phone on 03457 641 641 and in 7,000 Post Offices across the UK.

Stamp-by-stamp:
Dartmoor National Park
Dartmoor is a world of high moorland, open space and huge skies. Here is a place to roam for miles across high and wild expanses punctuated with spectacular granite outcrops, called tors, which stand proud of the landscape like castles. But although the world of humans can feel far away indeed, this once-forested landscape is strewn with remains from 12,000 years of habitation, agriculture and industry. Visitors to the park are bound to encounter Neolithic stone circles, Bronze Age burial mounds and Iron Age hill forts. Dartmoor’s uplands are still farmed in the same ways they have been for centuries.

New Forest National Park
The New Forest is actually very old: it was created as a hunting forest almost a millennium ago by William the Conqueror, and centuries of use for grazing, timber and fuel have produced a landscape that is more of a mosaic of heathland, open pasture and ancient woodland dotted with mires and streams. Much of this area is not enclosed, meaning that ponies, donkeys and cattle owned by local people called Commoners roam freely. The National Park also has 42km of coastline, with spectacular views across to the Isle of Wight. The New Forest is a wonderful haven for wildlife and people alike.

Lake District National Park
William Wordsworth described the Lake District as “a sort of national property”. This could apply to all of the UK’s National Parks, but few can lay claim to as many hearts as this one. The ingredients of the landscape — a UNESCO World Heritage Site — include volcanic uproar 450 million years ago, the sculpting power of Ice Age glaciers and the much more recent handiwork of sheep farmers. For centuries now, the area has seduced visitors with the gentle pastoral ambience of its villages and valleys, the splendour of its lakes and the ruggedly sublime beauty of its fells. The obsession of the English Romantics with the Lake District helped crystallise the appeal of this iconic landscape.

Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park
Bejewelled with emerald islands, fringed with beautiful wooded shores and surrounded by grand hills and mountains, Loch Lomond is where the Scottish Highlands ‘begin’. This National Park encloses 21 Munros (Scottish mountains above 3,000ft, or 914.4m) and includes some of the most popular mountains in Scotland, such as Ben Lomond — ‘Glasgow’s mountain’ — and the Cobbler, with a magnificent crown of rock on its summit. The Trossachs have been described as ‘the Highlands in miniature’, a compact and picturesque cluster of hills, lochs and pine forests. A network of water buses links points across Loch Lomond and Loch Katrine, providing a convenient way to explore the park by joining up foot and bike trails.

Snowdonia National Park
The mountain that gives the Snowdonia National Park its name is its star attraction. Wales’s highest mountain — Yr Wyddfa in Welsh — is a complex massif of bristling ridges and pyramid-shaped summits, inhabited by agile mountain goats and the elusive Snowdon beetle. With almost half a million visitors a year, Snowdon ranks as one of the busiest mountains in the world, but hikers also flock to the Glyderau, with its pulse-racing scrambles, and the awesome Cader Idris. Legend holds that if you sleep on the slopes of the latter, you will die, go insane or turn into a poet. Numerous attractions such as surf parks, zip wires and underground adventures pull in thrill-seekers from far and wide.

North York Moors National Park
Endless seas of bright-purple moorland, steam trains puffing through sinuous valleys, sun-dappled waterfalls in lush woodland, the smell of fish and chips wafting through fishing villages in coastal coves…the North York Moors National Park has a timeless and idyllic feel, particularly in summer, with its retro-seeming villages and heritage railways — famously used as filming locations for Heartbeat and Harry Potter — evoking the atmosphere of a bygone era. Walking, cycling and sightseeing are the order of the day here, either in the valleys and moorland of the National Park’s interior or on its spectacular coastline — a sweep of high cliffs, hidden coves and rocky beaches, some of which are studded with Jurassic fossils and dinosaur footprints.

South Downs National Park
The South Downs National Park is the UK’s youngest, created in 2010. As well as incorporating the rolling chalk hills and white coastal cliffs of the South Downs themselves, it includes the wooded patchwork of the western Weald. Lying between London and the south coast, this is no remote wilderness, but walking through the landscape of gentle hills, ancient woods, sunken lanes and vineyards (vine-growing in this part of England dates back to at least Norman times) is a much-needed antidote to city stresses. This is also the easiest National Park to explore by public transport; the whole South Downs Way can be split into sections and accessed by bus and train.

Peak District National Park
The Peak District is really two landscapes in one: the high moorland and Millstone Grit escarpments of the Dark Peak and the sleepy villages and lush limestone gorges of the White Peak. Its location at the heart of industrial England ensured that it was the crucible of the ‘right to roam’ movement. For workers from Manchester, the Potteries or the steel cities and wool towns of Yorkshire, the big boggy moors, peaceful valleys and climbing crags were the closest source of natural beauty and adventure. It is fitting that, in 1951, it became the first region in the UK to be granted National Park status. Today, around 20 million people live within an hour’s drive.

Pembrokeshire Coast National Park
Pastel-coloured fishing villages hunkered in turquoise bays; long lines of surf rolling up to broad, white beaches; rugged cliffs, sea stacks, rock arches, bird colonies… This is the only UK National Park created primarily for the beauty of its coast — a spectacular Atlantic-battered shoreline. It is an exhilarating place to hike, surf, climb, go coasteering or ride out on a boat trip to the offshore islands and spot puffins, dolphins and seals. The hills and headlands are also dotted with stunning Neolithic burial chambers such as Pentre Ifan, Carreg Samson and Carreg Coetan Arthur, with huge slabs of rock balanced on top of each other at extraordinary angles.

Broads National Park
All of the UK’s National Parks are shaped by the hand of humanity in some way, but few as fundamentally as this one: the collection of lakes known as the Broads was formed by medieval peat diggings, later flooded as sea levels rose. Today, it is a labyrinth of over 200km of navigable waterways, criss-crossing a sleepy landscape dotted with picturesque pubs and villages — an idyllic water world to explore by boat. A vibrant wetland habitat, the park is home to a quarter of the UK’s rarest wildlife species. Otters dive around the riverbanks, the surreal boom of bitterns reverberates for miles and vast flocks of birds soar over the marshes.

Philatelic Products:
Product name / Code / PriceStamp set AS6700 £8.50
Presentation Pack AP484 £9.40
First Day Cover Stamps AF468 £10.85
Stamp Souvenir AW177 £10.85
First Day Envelope AE423 £0.30
Postcards AQ300 £4.50
Framed Stamps N3245 £29.99
Retail Stamp Book UB440 £5.10

Technical Specifications:
Feature: Type/Detail
Number of stamps: 10
Value of Stamps: 10 x 1st
(2 rows of Horizonal 5)
Design: Studio Mean
Acknowledgements: Dartmoor National Park © Andrew Ray/Getty Images; New Forest National Park © Photokes/Alamy Stock Photo; Lake District
National Park © Pablo Fernandez/Alamy Stock Photo; Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park © Richard Burdon/Alamy Stock Photo; Snowdonia National Park © Andrew Ray/500px/Getty
Images; North York Moors National Park © Stephen Street/Alamy Stock Photo; South Downs National Park © Peter Cripps/Alamy Stock Photo; Peak District National Park © RA Kearton/Getty
Images; Pembrokeshire Coast National Park © Gareth Spiller/EyeEm/Getty Images; Broads National Park © Chris Herring; a special thank-you to National Parks UK
Stamp Format: Over-square landscape
Stamp Size: 36.5mm (w) x 34.7mm (h)
Printer: International Security Printers
Print Process: Lithography
Perforations: 14.0 x 14.5
Phosphor: Bars as appropriate
Gum: PVA

Lunar New Year Wrap-Up (Canada 2021)

Rather than a single Year of the Ox stamp, Canada Post is producing a look back at its Lunar New Year series, from 2009 to 2020. These were issued January 15th.

However, as of January 25th, two of the Lunar New Year products are sold out: “We are sold out of the Lunar New Year Cycle pane of 12 stamps and the framed uncut press sheet that were offered through mail order and our online store,” Canada Post spokeswoman Valérie Chartrand told The Virtual Stamp Club. “Customers in Canada can find limited quantities in some post offices. Due to popularity and high demand, we expect other products available through mail order to be sold out soon.”

Following are the English and French versions of the day-of-issue press release (accompanied by a detail of just the Ox international-rate souvenir sheet from the uncut press sheet), and a video.

[press release]
Festive Lunar New Year series wraps up with a flourish
Special collectible issue features all 24 stamp designs from the last 12 years

OTTAWA – As spectacular as the celebration itself, a special set of Lunar New Year stamps was issued today, ushering in the Year of the Ox with a retrospective collection of all 24 colourful stamp designs from the past 12 years.

Orchestrated with this special finale in mind, the second Lunar New Year series, which ran from 2009 to 2020, followed on the heels of the popular first series, which appeared from 1997 to 2008. One of China’s liveliest and most anticipated festivals, Lunar New Year is celebrated in many countries around the world, including Canada, which is home to nearly two million people of Chinese descent.

About Lunar New Year
Lunar New Year celebrations mark the beginning of the new year in the Chinese lunar calendar. The calendar follows the 12-year cycle of the Chinese zodiac in which each year is represented by an animal. According to one legend, the order of the animals was determined by how they placed in a race called by the Jade Emperor. The first to cross the finish line was Rat, followed by Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Ram, Monkey, Rooster, Dog and, finally, Pig.

About the Stamps
Designed by Paprika, this collectible, wrap-up issue features all 24 of the original stamp designs – one Permanent™ domestic rate stamp and one international stamp rate from each year – from the 2009 to 2020 Lunar New Year series. Sharing standardized elements, such as size, palette, perforations and special effects, the stamps feature creative portrayals of the 12 Chinese zodiac animals, as imagined by the many designers who contributed to the series.

Printed by Lowe-Martin and Gravure Choquet, the issue includes a booklet of 12 Permanent domestic rate stamps based on the designs previously denominated at the international rate, a pane based on the 12 original Permanent designs, and an uncut press sheet based on the 12 original international rate souvenir sheet designs, as well as framed products.

Given the high demand for this stamp issue and limited quantities available at post offices, we encourage our customers to order online at canadapost.ca/shop. [en Francais]
La série haute en couleur sur la Nouvelle Année lunaire s’offre une finale éclatante
Une émission spéciale à collectionner regroupe l’ensemble des 24 timbres des 12 dernières années

OTTAWA – Aussi spectaculaire que la célébration elle-même, un jeu de timbres spécial sur la Nouvelle Année lunaire a été émis aujourd’hui pour lancer l’année du Buffle avec une collection rétrospective regroupant l’ensemble des 24 timbres hauts en couleur des 12 dernières années.

Orchestrée avec cette grande finale en tête, la deuxième série de la Nouvelle Année lunaire, qui a eu lieu de 2009 à 2020, faisait suite à la première série parue de 1997 à 2008. La Nouvelle Année lunaire, un des festivals les plus animés et les plus attendus en Chine, est célébrée dans plusieurs pays du monde, y compris le Canada, où vivent près de deux millions de personnes d’origine chinoise.

À propos de la Nouvelle Année lunaire
Les célébrations de la Nouvelle Année lunaire marquent le début de la nouvelle année dans le calendrier lunaire chinois. Le calendrier suit le cycle de 12 ans du zodiaque chinois dans lequel chaque année est représentée par un animal. Selon la légende, l’ordre des animaux a été déterminé en fonction de leur ordre d’arrivée dans une course qu’avait organisée l’Empereur de Jade. Le premier à franchir la ligne d’arrivée a été le rat, suivi du buffle, du tigre, du lièvre, du dragon, du serpent, du cheval, du bélier, du singe, du coq, du chien et, finalement, du cochon.

À propos des timbres
Conçue par Paprika, cette dernière émission à collectionner contient l’ensemble de 24 timbres originaux, dont un timbre PermanentMC au tarif du régime intérieur et un timbre au tarif du régime international pour chaque année de la série sur la Nouvelle Année lunaire parue de 2009 à 2020. Les timbres, qui partagent certaines caractéristiques comme la taille, la palette de couleurs, les perforations et les effets spéciaux, illustrent avec originalité les 12 animaux du zodiaque chinois tels qu’imaginés par les nombreux designers qui ont contribué à la série.

Imprimée par Lowe-Martin et Gravure Choquet, l’émission comprend un carnet de 12 timbres PermanentsMC du régime intérieur tirés des motifs qui portaient à l’origine le tarif du régime international, un feuillet composé des 12 motifs des timbres Permanents originaux et une planche non coupée des 12 motifs tirés des blocs-feuillets au tarif du régime international originaux, ainsi que les produits encadrés.

Étant donné la popularité de cette émission et les quantités limitées offertes dans les bureaux de poste, nous recommandons aux clients de passer une commande en ligne à postescanada.ca/magasiner.

A video from Canada Post:

From earlier:

The 2 international-rate souvenir sheets will be offered in an uncut press sheet: Each of the souvenir sheets will represent the current international rate of $2.71.

A booklet of 12 domestic-rate stamps will feature the designs previously used for the international rates: And a pane of 12 domestic-rate stamps will use the domestic-rate designs from 2009-2020.These stamps will be water-activated (“lick ‘n stick”).

Canada Post will also offer several framed products.

 

USPS Consolidates Houston Space Postmarks

From the December 17th Postal Bulletin:

All Houston, TX Post Offices receive hundreds of requests each month for the four postmarks popularly known as the “Space” postmarks, These Post Offices are now consolidating the canceling process to one Post Office so they can better serve their customers.

The new mailing address for all Houston, TX Space postmark requests has been changed to:

Space Postmark Request
c/o Postmaster
Sam Houston Station
Attn: Mr. Kenneth Cooper
1500 Hadley Street
Houston, TX 77002-9998

AFDCS Members Get Free Online Interests Registry

[press release]
AFDCS Offers Members Free Online Collecting Interests Registry

The American First Day Cover Society, the world’s largest not-for-profit FDC organization, is now offering its members a way to find other members with similar collecting interests and to seek out wanted items.

With the new “Member Connect” benefit, members may submit their collecting interests in a secure area of the AFDCS.org website, accessible only to other members. There is no charge for the service. Commercial ads and cachetmaker ads are not permitted in Member Connect entries. (Separate ads on the website may be purchased.)

An individual’s Member Connect entry may include any topic of general philatelic or FDC interest, or can be used to seek specific items (such as “want ZIP block on FDC for Sc. 1306”). There is a limit of 25 words per listing, and one listing per member. Members can submit changes or delete their listings at any time.

Member Connect can be found in the Members Area of the website, accessed via the “Member Login” button on the homepage. AFDCS members who do not already have access to this area can request it by sending their names and membership numbers via email to webmaster@afdcs.org.

In that same area, members can download copies of First Days, a full-color magazine published six times a year by the AFDCS. The organization also publishes handbooks, catalogues and a free directory of current cachetmakers, cosponsors an annual stamp show, and otherwise promotes first day cover collecting.

For more information on the AFDCS, visit www.afdcs.org or write to the AFDCS, PO Box 246, Colonial Beach, VA 22443-0246, or via e-mail at afdcs@afdcs.org

Chicago Club Offers Digitized Handbooks

[press release]
CCC Digitized Philatelic Handbooks Availability

Since 1968, the Collectors Club of Chicago, has published 34 original research specialized philatelic handbooks, compendia, and anthologies. As the handbooks are issued in limited editions, the published handbooks are available only from libraries, or whenever private philatelic literature libraries receive copies through private treaty or auction.

The CCC maintains the copyrights for the handbooks, and has completed a digitization program that allows about 30 of the publications to be available for the Good of Philately for downloading at a nominal cost by the collector or dealer (https://www.collectorsclubchicago.org/handbooks-available-for-download/). The titles are diverse, ranging from specialized United States collecting areas, to esoteric foreign subjects.

The CCC actively solicits for publication all manuscripts reflecting original philatelic research, regardless of the subject matter, or their perceived esoteric content. Complete details for potential authors are available on www.collectorsclubchicago.org.

AFDCS Elects 6 To Board

Members of the American First Day Cover Society, the largest not-for-profit organization in the world specifically for FDC collectors, have elected six people to its Board of Directors. The 279 ballots cast this year was much larger than usual, more than double the number in 2019.

The four candidates receiving the most votes will serve four-year terms beginning January 1, 2021:

  • Foster Miller 227
  • Gary Denis 161
  • Mark Thompson 140
  • Kris McIntosh 130

Two candidates will complete the unexpired terms of Tom Peluso (two more years) and Doug Kelsey (one more year), and take office immediately:

  • Tamsie Goyer 126 (through 2022)
  • Michael Lake 117 (through 2021)

Three other candidates were not elected:

    • D.A. Lux 93
    • Ron Klimley 65
    • A.Francis Kohut 39

There was one write-in vote, for Eric Wile.

Miller, Denis and Thompson are incumbents and are respectively Membership Chair, Education Chair and Treasurer. McIntosh is a retired high school history teacher who splits her time in several Western states. Goyer lives in Oklahoma but flies to Southern California for meetings of the AFDCS chapter there. Lake lives in Connecticut and works for ESPN Sports; he joined the AFDCS as a junior. Board chairman Cynthia Scott and President Lloyd de Vries thanked Elections Committee chair Otto Thamasett and committee members Neal Parr and Jack Ginsburg, all members of the Robert C. Graebner Chapter of the AFDCS, for their work in counting the ballots in this year’s election, and the Nominating Committee chaired by Michael Litvak for recruiting the candidates.

Four seats on the AFDCS Board of Directors are elected each year for three-year terms, beginning Jan. 1. In addition to the 12 elected directors, the president, the editor of the official journal First Days, and the general counsel serve on the board ex officio, if not elected to the board in their own right.

The current board, plus directors who will be seated on Jan. 1, will now vote for the elected officers (president, executive vice president, first vice president, recording secretary, treasurer) and a chairman of the board, to serve one-year terms.

AFDCS directors are not compensated nor reimbursed for their travel expenses.

For more information on the AFDCS, visit www.afdcs.org or write to the AFDCS, PO Box 246, Colonial Beach, VA 22443-0246, or via e-mail at afdcs@afdcs.org.

August Wilson (U.S. 2021)

[press release]
Postal Service Announces 44th Black Heritage Stamp,
Honoring Legendary Playwright August Wilson

WASHINGTON, DC — Award-winning playwright August Wilson is receiving one of the nation’s highest honors when he takes center stage on a Forever stamp.

The stamp will be dedicated Jan. 28 on the Postal Service Facebook and Twitter pages. For more information, visit usps.com/blackheritage-augustwilson.

One of America’s greatest playwrights, Wilson is hailed as a trailblazer for helping to bring nonmusical African American drama to the forefront of American theater.

Wilson collected innumerable accolades for his work, including seven New York Drama Critics’ Circle Awards; a Tony Award, for 1987’s “Fences”; and two Pulitzer Prizes, for “Fences” and 1990’s “The Piano Lesson.”

The Wikipedia entry on him is here. A Broadway theater in New York is also named after him. Only 41 theaters are designated as “Broadway theaters.”

Wilson was born in Pittsburgh, Pa., which will be the stamp’s first-day city.

[More information will be added to this page below the line, as we get it, with the most-recent first.]


Updated January 25th:
The USPS is selling two versions of the press sheet for this issue, with die cuts (480006) and without (480008). Both are $66.

Updated January 13th:
[press release]
Playwright August Wilson Takes Center Stage on U.S. Postal Service Commemorative Forever Stamp

WHAT: The U.S. Postal Service will honor August Wilson with a commemorative Forever stamp in the Black Heritage series.

News of the stamp is being shared with hashtags #AugustWilsonForever and #BlackHeritageStamps.

WHO: Dr. Joshua D. Colin, vice president, Delivery Operations, U.S. Postal Service
Constanza Romero, trustee of the August Wilson Trust and widow of August Wilson
Sakina Ansari, daughter of August Wilson

WHEN: Thursday, Jan. 28, 2021, at 11:30 a.m. EST

WHERE: The virtual stamp event will be hosted on the U.S. Postal Service Facebook and Twitter pages. For more information, visit usps.com/blackheritage-augustwilson.

BACKGROUND: The 44th stamp in the Black Heritage series honors playwright August Wilson (1945-2005), who brought fresh perspectives and previously unheard voices to the American stage.

Between 1982 and 2005, Wilson wrote his acclaimed American Century Cycle. This series of 10 plays includes nine set in Pittsburgh’s Hill District, the neighborhood where Wilson grew up. With one play for each decade of the 20th century, including such well-known works as “Fences,” “The Piano Lesson” and “Joe Turner’s Come and Gone,” the American Century Cycle plays have been praised for being emotionally powerful but not sentimental, and for demonstrating Wilson’s ear for African American storytelling traditions.

The only play in the cycle not set in Pittsburgh, “Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom,” chronicles a tense 1927 recording session in Chicago that reveals truths about the exploitation of African American musicians and the tenuous nature of African American success. The film adaptation of the play was released on Netflix last month.

Wilson was one of only a handful of American playwrights to receive the Pulitzer Prize more than once. Today, he is hailed as a trailblazer for helping to bring nonmusical African American drama to the forefront of American theater.

The new Forever stamp features an oil painting of Wilson based on a 2005 photograph. Behind him, a picket fence alludes to the title “Fences.”

Art director Ethel Kessler designed this stamp with art by Tim O’Brien.

It is being issued as a Forever stamp, which will always be equal in value to the current First-Class Mail 1-ounce price.

Updated January 6th:
Here are the first-day postmarks for this issue:The Digital Color Postmark measures 2.70″ x 1.19″The B&W pictorial postmark measures 2.62″ x .63″ The special postmark, for use by other post offices, measures 2.71″ x .94″

Updated December 31st from the Postal Bulletin:

On January 28, 2021, in Pittsburgh, PA, the United States Postal Service® will issue the August Wilson stamp (Forever® priced at the First-Class Mail® rate) in one design, in a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) pane of 20 stamps (Item 480000). This stamp will go on sale nationwide January 28, 2021, and must not be sold or canceled before the first-day-of-issue.

The 44th stamp in the Black Heritage® series honors playwright August Wilson (1945–2005), who brought fresh perspectives and previously unheard voices to the American stage. This stamp features an oil painting of Wilson based on a 2005 photograph. Behind Wilson, a picket fence alludes to the title of Fences, one of his best-known plays. Art director Ethel Kessler designed the stamp with art by Tim O’Brien.

There will be an automatic distribution for Item 480000, August Wilson

A special dedication postmark is available for local post offices.

How to Order the First-Day-of-Issue Postmark:
Customers have 120 days to obtain the first-day-of-issue postmark by mail. They may purchase new stamps at their local Post Office™ or at The Postal Store® website at usps.com/shop. They must affix the stamps to envelopes of their choice, address the envelopes (to themselves or others), and place them in a larger envelope addressed to:

FDOI – August Wilson Stamp
USPS Stamp Fulfillment Services
8300 NE Underground Drive, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64144-9900

After applying the first-day-of-issue postmark, the Postal Service will return the envelopes through the mail. There is no charge for the postmark up to a quantity of 50. There is a 5-cent charge for each additional postmark over 50. All orders must be postmarked by May 28, 2021.

Technical Specifications:

Issue: August Wilson Stamp
Item Number: 480000
Denomination & Type of Issue: First-Class Mail Forever
Format: Pane of 20 (1 design)
Series: Black Heritage
Issue Date & City: January 28, 2021, Pittsburgh, PA 15290
Art Director: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Designer: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Artist: Tim O’Brien, Brooklyn, NY
Modeler: Joseph Sheeran
Manufacturing Process: Offset, Microprint
Printer: Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd. (APU)
Press Type: Muller A76
Stamps per Pane: 20
Print Quantity: 45,000,000 stamps
Paper Type: Nonphosphored Type III, Block Tag
Adhesive Type: Pressure-sensitive
Colors: Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, PMS 4029 C Beige
Stamp Orientation: Vertical
Image Area (w x h): 0.84 x 1.42 in./21.336 x 36.068 mm
Overall size (w x h): 0.98 x 1.56 in./24.892 x 39.624 mm
Full Pane Size (w x h): 6.00 x 8.50 in./152.40 x 215.90 mm
Press Sheet Size (w x h): 12.00 x 25.75 in./ 304.80 x 654.05 mm
Plate Size: 240 stamps per revolution
Plate Number: “P” followed by five (5) single digits in two corners
Marginal Markings:
Front: Header: BLACK HERITAGE, Celebrating August Wilson, 44TH IN A SERIES
Plate number in two (2) corners
Back: ©2020 USPS • USPS Logo • Two barcodes (480000) • Plate position diagram (6) • Promotional text

U.S. Scott Catalogue Update (December 2020)

5525 (55¢) Christmas- Our Lady of Guápulo
a. Convertible booklet pane of 20

5530 (55¢) Hanukkah

5531 (55¢) Kwanzaa

5532 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Two Deer
5533 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Cardinal
5534 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Snowy Morning at Sunrise
5535 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Red Barn with Wreath
5536 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Barred Owl
5537 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Blue Jay
5538 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Mackenzie Barn, Woodstock, Vermont
5539 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Rabbit
5540 (55¢) Winter Scenes – After the Snowfall
5541 (55¢) Winter Scenes – Mike and Burt, the Belgian Draft Horses
a. Block of 10, #5532-5541
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 2 each #5532-5541

5542 (55¢) Drug Free USA

2021 Priority Mail Flat-Rate Envelope

Nothing has been announced, but if past practice holds, a stamped flat-rate envelopes featuring the same design as the new Priority Mail stamp will be issued for this rate on Sunday, January 24, 2021, the date the rate goes into effect. There will not be a first day ceremony and in-person cancellations will be hard to obtain.

Updated January 6th:
The Virtual Stamp Club has confirmed this issue. The item numbers are:

  • 233205 Packet of 5
  • 233210 Packet of 10
  • 233225 Packet of 25
  • 233216 First Day Cover Cancelled envelope

New 2021 Priority Mail Express Stamp

Nothing has been announced, but if past practice holds, a new  large-format stamp featuring a National Park or natural wonder will be issued for this rate on Sunday, January 24, 2021, the date the rate goes into effect. There will not be a first day ceremony and in-person cancellations will be hard to obtain.

Updated December 26th:

Since the Express Mail flat rate charge is not changing, Linn’s Stamp News does not expect a new stamp to be issued. This listing has been removed from the VSC’s 2021 U.S. Stamp Program.