Eid (Canada 2023)

From Canada Post’s Details magazine:

Crafted nearly 700 years ago in medieval Iran, the elegant, hand-painted ceramic bowl on this year’s Eid stamp became part of the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) collection in 1909. Made during Ramadan – one of the holiest months in the Islamic calendar – it would likely have served many owners over the centuries as a vessel for foods eaten to break the fast each night.

The bowl has a special connection to the festival of Eid al-Fitr, which celebrates the end of Ramadan. Made of stonepaste – a hard material invented by Middle Eastern potters from a mixture of ground quartz, glass and clay – it is inscribed with a dated poem written for its owner.

“There’s a deep sense of humanity in this bowl that still rings true, especially with all the turmoil in the world today,” says Dr. Fahmida Suleman, Islamic World curator at the ROM. “The poem urges us to take a moment to forget our sorrows and be grateful for what we have – and wishes us protection and a bit of luck. Blues are auspicious in Islam, so even the colours the artist chose were meant to uplift the soul.”

Ranunculus (Canada 2023)

Canada Post’s day-of-issue (March 1) announcement
[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Annual Flower Stamp Issue Highlights Double-Flowered Ranunculus

OTTAWA – Canada Post’s latest stamp issue welcomes spring with the lavish, rose-like blossoms of the ranunculus. The stunning plant is a favourite of florists and gardeners and a popular choice for wedding bouquets, centrepieces and containers.

[Shown on the right: The booklet pane of 10 which includes small stickers.]

Ranunculus asiaticus, the variety pictured on this year’s flower issue, is also known as Persian buttercup. Native to southwestern Asia, southern Europe and northern Africa, the plant may have arrived in northern Europe during the Crusades but was not widely cultivated until the 17th century.

While the wild ranunculus is usually yellow, cultivated blooms can be orange, red, violet or pink. This two-stamp issue depicts Ranunculus asiaticusas a single flower and a bouquet, in many shades of pink.

Designed by Stéphane Huot, with images by Veronique Meignaud, the stamps are available in booklets of 10 and coils of 50, as well as collectible coil strips of 4 and 10 stamps. The Official First Day Cover is cancelled in Goderich, Ontario, considered one of the prettiest towns in Canada.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Une émission de timbres consacrée aux fleurs met en vedette des renoncules doubles

OTTAWA – La plus récente émission de timbres de Postes Canada annonce le printemps avec de somptueuses renoncules. Ces magnifiques fleurs semblables à des roses figurent parmi les fleurs préférées chez les fleuristes et dans les jardins, et elles sont populaires dans les bouquets de mariage, les centres de table et en vase.

Le Ranunculus asiaticus, la variété présentée sur les vignettes de cette année, est aussi appelée la renoncule des fleuristes. Originaire du sud-ouest de l’Asie, du sud de l’Europe et du nord de l’Afrique, la plante serait arrivée dans le nord de l’Europe pendant les croisades, mais n’est cultivée à grande échelle que depuis le XVIIe siècle.

Bien que la renoncule sauvage soit habituellement jaune, la fleur cultivée peut être orange, rouge, violette ou rose. Cette émission de deux timbres présente le Ranunculus asiaticus seul et en bouquet, dans une variété de teintes de rose.

Conçues par Stéphane Huot et ornées d’images de Veronique Meignaud, les vignettes sont offertes en carnets de 10, en rouleaux de 50, ainsi qu’en bandes de collection de 4 et 10 timbres provenant de rouleaux. Le pli Premier Jour officiel est oblitéré à Goderich, en Ontario, qui est considérée comme l’une des plus jolies villes canadiennes. From Canada Post’s Details magazine:

Once again, Canada Post welcomes spring with its annual flower issue. The 2023 stamps feature the lavish, rose-like blossoms of Ranunculus asiaticus, one of the many varieties of ranunculus that are a favourite of florists and gardeners and a popular choice for wedding bouquets, centrepieces and containers.

Native to southwestern Asia, southern Europe and northern Africa, Ranunculus asiaticus is also known as Persian buttercup. The name Ranunculus comes from the Latin words for “little frog,” since many species grow near streams – although the variety shown on the stamps is more partial to sunny hillsides and pastures. While the wild Ranunculus is usually yellow, cultivated blooms can be orange, red, violet or various shades of pink.

Designed by Stéphane Huot, with images by Veronique Meignaud, the stamps are available in booklets of 10 and coils of 50, as well as collectible coil strips of 4 and 10 stamps. The Official First Day Cover is cancelled in Goderich, Ontario, considered one of the prettiest towns in Canada.

Chloe Cooley (Canada 2023)

Hours after we posted Danforth’s story, Canada Post issued a press release confirming his story.]

By Danforth Guy

An enslaved woman who became a symbol of resistance to slavery and a catalyst to the abolition movement will be featured on Canada Post’s 2023 Black History stamp, to be issued January 30. Chloe Cooley’s violent protest to being sold by her Ontario owner to one in New York in 1793 led directly to a law restricting slavery in the province known as Upper Canada, at the time.

Cooley was forced into a boat in Queenston, Ontario, screaming and flailing. She was then bound and gagged, and could not escape her captors, who took her across the Niagara River to owners in New York.

The scene was witnessed on the Ontario shore by a free Black veteran of the American Revolution, Peter Martin, and by a white employee of Cooley’s Loyalist slave owner. They reported the disturbing scene to Lt.-Governor John Simcoe.

The law that resulted was a compromise, as many in the government were slave-owners, themselves. The 1793 Act did not free a single slave, but it did prohibit the importation of slaves, and freed the children of slaves at age 25. This eventually created a safe haven that made southern Ontario the ultimate destination on the Underground Railroad.

The first day issue location has not been announced, but it’s a good guess the postmark will read “Queenston, ON.” The self-adhesive stamp will be issued in a booklet of six at the first-class domestic rate (92¢), using the ‘P’ indicia.

Chloe Cooley was named a National Historic Person in 2022, and will eventually see a federal plaque in her honour. Meantime, the Ontario Heritage Trust erected this plaque [shown on the left; click to see a much larger version] in 2007 along the Niagara Parkway, near the site of her unwilling removal.

Note: There are no known pictures of Cooley.

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Black History Month Stamp Honours Chloe Cooley
Although unable to escape her own bondage, Cooley’s resistance helped forge a path to freedom for enslaved people in Upper Canada

NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, ON, Jan. 29, 2023 /CNW/ – Today, Canada Post unveiled a new Black History Month stamp honouring Chloe Cooley, who had a profound impact on the history of enslavement in Canada. Her act of resistance on the evening of March 14, 1793, ushered in legislation that would lead to the gradual abolition of enslavement in Upper Canada and provide a refuge for freedom-seekers from abroad.

Cooley was a young, Black enslaved woman who lived in Queenston, Upper Canada, in the late 18th century. Although enslavement in Upper Canada was on the rise at the time, attitudes toward it were shifting and the abolitionist movement was gaining momentum.

Rumours were growing that enslavement could soon be banned. Fear of losing their investments prompted some enslavers to sell what was legally considered their property. Among them were Sergeant Adam Vrooman, who enslaved Chloe Cooley.

On that chilly March evening, Vrooman abducted Cooley. He violently bound her and, with the assistance of two other men, dragged her to the shores of the Niagara River. But Cooley was defiant. [The booklet pane is shown below.]

She had been known to bravely challenge her enslavement in the ways that she could, such as leaving Vrooman’s property without permission and refusing to do some tasks. So, when her enslaver abducted her, she fought back hard, screaming and yelling for help as she struggled to get free. Her protests were so loud that they drew the attention of those nearby.

Ultimately, however, Cooley was overpowered and taken across the river to New York State, where she was sold.

Although history doesn’t tell us what happened to Cooley after that night, witnesses recounted what they saw to Lieutenant-Governor John Graves Simcoe, an avowed abolitionist. He was able to use their testimony to introduce new legislation. [The Official First Day Cover is shown below.]

On July 9, 1793, what became known as the Act to Limit Slavery in Upper Canada was passed.

Cooley herself did not benefit from the legislation, but it opened a pathway to freedom for others, as it set the stage for the gradual ending of enslavement in Upper Canada. It also created a legal refuge for those fleeing enslavement in other countries – helping to pave the way for at least 30,000 freedom-seeking Black Americans to make the dangerous journey north to Canada over the decades to come.

In 1833, enslavement was officially abolished throughout the British Empire, and the last remaining enslaved persons in Upper Canadawould finally be freed.

About the stamp
The Chloe Cooley stamp was designed by Lime Design and features the illustrative work of Rick Jacobsen. With no photographs of Chloe Cooley in existence, the illustration was painstakingly created through extensive consultation with experts in local and regional history, Black history and period fashion, as well as through the use of archival maps, paintings, illustrations and other documents. Printed by Lowe-Martin, the issue includes a booklet of six PermanentTM domestic rate stamps and an Official First Day Cover. The cancel site is Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, which includes Queenston.

The stamp and collectibles are available at canadapost.ca and postal outlets across Canada.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Un Timbre Du Mois De L’histoire Des Noirs En Hommage À Chloe Cooley
Bien qu’incapable d’échapper à son esclavage, Chloe Cooley a contribué par sa résistance à la mise en liberté des personnes asservies dans le Haut-Canada.

NIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, ON, le 29 janv. 2023 /CNW/ – Aujourd’hui, Postes Canada a dévoilé un nouveau timbre du Mois de l’histoire des Noirs en l’honneur de Chloe Cooley, qui a eu une grande incidence sur l’histoire de l’esclavage au Canada. Sa résistance le soir du 14 mars 1793 a contribué à l’adoption d’une loi qui allait mener à l’abolition graduelle de l’esclavage dans le Haut-Canada et offrir un refuge aux esclaves d’autres pays.

Chloe Cooley était une jeune femme noire asservie comme domestique à Queenston, dans le Haut-Canada, à la fin du XVIIIe siècle. Bien que l’esclavage dans le Haut-Canada gagnait en popularité à l’époque, l’attitude à l’égard de la pratique changeait et le mouvement abolitionniste prenait de l’ampleur.

Alors que commençaient à planer des rumeurs d’abolition, des maîtres craignaient de perdre ce qui était légalement considéré comme leur propriété. Le sergent Adam Vrooman, le maître de Chloe Cooley, était de ce nombre.

Un soir frisquet de mars, Adam Vrooman a enlevé la jeune femme, l’a violemment ligotée et, avec l’aide de deux hommes, l’a traînée sur les rives de la rivière Niagara. Mais Chloe Cooley s’est débattue.

Elle avait la réputation de lutter courageusement contre son esclavage de toutes les manières possibles, notamment en quittant la propriété d’Adam Vrooman sans permission et en refusant d’accomplir certaines tâches. Alors, quand son maître l’a enlevée, elle s’est débattue et a crié à l’aide pour tenter de se libérer. Ses protestations bruyantes ont été entendues dans les environs.

Malgré sa résistance, Chloe Cooley a été maîtrisée et transportée de force par bateau de l’autre côté de la rivière, dans l’État de New York, où elle a été vendue.

Bien qu’on ignore ce qui est arrivé à la jeune femme après cette soirée, des témoins ont raconté l’événement au lieutenant-gouverneur John Graves Simcoe, un fervent abolitionniste. Ce dernier s’est servi de ces témoignages pour déposer un projet de loi.

Le 9 juillet 1793, la mesure législative qui est devenue la loi visant à restreindre l’esclavage dans le Haut-Canada a été adoptée.

Si Chloe Cooley n’en a pas profité, la loi a ouvert la voie à la liberté pour d’autres en menant à l’abolition graduelle de l’esclavage dans le Haut-Canada. Elle a également créé un refuge légal pour les personnes qui fuyaient l’esclavage dans d’autres pays et a aidé au moins 30 000 Américains noirs en quête de liberté à faire le périlleux voyage vers le Canada au cours des décennies qui ont suivi.

En 1833, l’esclavage a été aboli officiellement à l’échelle de l’Empire britannique, et les derniers esclaves du Haut-Canada ont finalement été libérés.

À propos du timbre
Le timbre consacré à Chloe Cooley a été conçu par Lime Design et est orné d’une illustration de Rick Jacobsen. En l’absence de photos de la jeune femme, les images ont été créées avec soin à la suite de consultations approfondies avec des experts en histoire locale et régionale, en histoire des Noirs et en mode d’époque, ainsi qu’à l’aide de cartes historiques, de peintures, d’illustrations et d’autres documents d’archives. Imprimée par Lowe-Martin, l’émission comprend un carnet de six timbres PermanentsMC au tarif du régime intérieur et un pli Premier Jour officiel oblitéré à Niagara-on-the-Lake, en Ontario, où se trouve Queenston.

La vignette et les articles de collection sont en vente sur postescanada.ca et dans les comptoirs postaux partout au pays.

U.S. Museum Seeks Award Nominations

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
National Postal Museum Announces Nomination Process for Smithsonian Philatelic Achievement Award
Award To Recognize U.S. and International Philatelists

The Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum has announced the opening of the nominating process for the 2023 Smithsonian Philatelic Achievement Award (SPAA). The Smithsonian award will recognize philatelists from the U.S. and international philatelic communities. The nomination process is open Jan. 19 through March 1. Award winners will be honored at a museum-hosted gala event in Washington, D.C., Nov. 4.

The SPAA was established in 2002 to honor and celebrate living individuals for outstanding lifetime achievement in the field of philately. This achievement may include original research that significantly advances the understanding of philately, exceptional service to the philatelic community or sustained promotion of philately to the benefit of current and future collectors.

The SPAA medallion is a 3-inch, gold-plated bronze disc depicting a sunburst with eight straight and eight wavy rays. Derived from the family coat of arms of James Smithson, founding benefactor of the Smithsonian, the sunburst became the Institution’s official seal June 3, 1966, and is incorporated into the official flag flown by Smithsonian facilities and Smithsonian-sponsored expeditions throughout the world. As such, it is a universally recognized symbol of enlightenment and learning that links the Smithsonian’s history with its future. The medallion is suspended from a grosgrain neck ribbon in Smithsonian blue and yellow.

Eligibility criteria and information about the entry and judging processes can be found on the museum’s website. Award winners will be approved by the Smithsonian Board of Regents, consisting of the chief justice of the United States, the vice president of the United States, three members of the United States Senate, three members of the United States House of Representatives and nine citizens.

About the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum
The National Postal Museum is devoted to presenting the colorful and engaging history of the nation’s mail service and showcasing one of the largest and most comprehensive collections of stamps and philatelic material in the world. Through the preservation and interpretation of our postal and philatelic collections, the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum educates, challenges and inspires its audiences on the breadth of American experiences. It is located at 2 Massachusetts Ave. N.E., Washington, D.C., across from Union Station. The museum is open daily from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. (closed Dec. 25). For more information about the Smithsonian, call (202) 633-1000 or visit the museum website at www.postalmuseum.si.edu.

Chicago Suburb Chosen for Big Show In 2025

The American Philatelic Society Board of Directors has chosen Schaumburg, Illinois, as the site for Great American Stamp Show 2025. The dates are August 14-17, 2025. It is about 30 miles from the Chicago Loop but, more importantly, adjacent to O’Hare Airport.

The other city under consideration was Las Vegas.

The show hotel for the show will be the Renaissance Schaumburg Convention Center Hotel, a Marriott property directly connected to the convention center.

There will be no GASS in 2026: The APS Board approved skipping its own show that year and instead will hold its annual meeting at Boston 2026, the U.S. international show. Those dates are May 23-30, 2026. In 2016, when the U.S. “international” was held in New York City, the APS instead held its annual show, then called “StampShow,” in Portland, Oregon — the other side of the country, hoping to attract collectors who could not make the trip to the East Coast.

Exhibiting Picture Postcards Workshop Feb. 6-20

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
ATA Offers Exhibiting Picture Postcards Workshop, Feb 6-20

The American Topical Association will offer a three-session, how-to workshop on exhibiting picture postcards in February. The weekly workshop will be held consecutive Mondays on February 6, 13 and 20 beginning at 7 p.m. Eastern Time via Zoom.

The first workshop session, entitled “Why Postcards Matter,” covers a history of early 20th century postcards and why they are an important part of philately worthy of study.

Session number two, “Steps to Telling Your Story,” discusses non-philatelic story lines in the exhibiting process with details about fashioning the exhibit’s title and introduction. Tips for creating a plan for organizing the exhibit will also be presented in the second session.

Session three is called “Resources for Collecting and Documenting Your Postcards.” This session details documentation of picture postcard history and offers a look at resources for information to provide descriptions of the postcards selected for an exhibit. Tips for making observations about the postcards in the exhibit round out the final session.

Course participants will receive quick reference guides, a useful digital book on real photo postcards, and an extensive bibliography to assist in creating, researching and constructing a picture postcard exhibit.

American Topical Association PresidentWorkshop instructor is ATA President Dawn Hamman [left], a multi-award-winning postcard exhibitor who has earned gold and large gold awards for her postcard exhibits. Hamman’s winning exhibits include The Jewel City—Picture Postcards of the Panama Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco, 1915; The Life and Legacy of Abraham Lincoln; A Day at Ocean Beach; and He Built a Business Empire With Ostrich Feathers.

The workshop series costs $25 for ATA members and $45 for non-members. If non-member participants choose to join ATA at the time they register for the workshop, the cost for both the workshop and annual membership is $60 for US residents and $70 for international residents, which are discounted rates. Registration is quick and easy on the ATA website. Go to americantopical.org and click on the Events tab to find the workshop listing.

Jimmy Nelson – Ode to the Netherlands (Netherlands 2023)

[from the press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Jimmy Nelson – Ode to the Netherlands
Issue date: 25 January 2023

The series of four stamp sheets entitled “Jimmy Nelson – Ode to the Netherlands” feature portraits of women and girls in Dutch national and regional dress, photographed by Jimmy Nelson for his 2022 book Between the Sea and the Sky. The stamps were designed by graphic designer Larissa Rosvaenge of Jimmy Nelson Studio. The denomination on these stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands.

National and regional dress is location- and region-specific clothing that is subject to unwritten rules that are known and clear to those who wear it locally. Most Dutch regional dress can be traced back to earlier civic fashions, especially from the 17th and 19th centuries. In some places, elements of that fashion were maintained while the general fashion changed. Many variations emerged throughout the years. In many areas of the Netherlands, regional costume has disappeared; in others, the disappearance is taking longer than predicted.

  • Ode to the Netherlands I (item 830011) features the dress of Veluwe, Huizen, Schouwen-Duiveland, Volendam, Rijssen
  • Ode to the Netherlands II (item 830012) features Walcheren, Friesland, Leeuwarden, Scheveningen, Arnemuiden
  • Ode to the Netherlands III ((item 830013) features Spakenburg, Marken, Urk, Zaanstreek, Kampereiland
  • Ode to the Netherlands IV (item 830014) features Hindeloopen, Staphorst, Katwijk, Enkhuizen, Axel

In the book, British-Dutch artist Jimmy Nelson [right] portrays 20 Dutch communities in traditional and regional dress in their own environment. The 528-page book features intimate photographic portraits and iconic landscapes, captured with an analogue plate camera. The detailed nature of the images, with plenty of contrast and depth, harks back to the work of the Dutch master painters of the 17th century.

The Jimmy Nelson – Ode to the Netherlands stamps were designed by Larissa Rosvaenge [left], who is responsible for all designs as a graphic designer within the Jimmy Nelson Studio team. She also designed the book Between the Sea and the Sky from which the photos featured on the stamps were taken.

The Between the Sea and the Sky project was created during the COVID pandemic, when travelling to faraway places, where Nelson usually takes his photographs, was not possible. “As a creative company, we are always looking for human connection,” Nelson explains. “Thanks to the COVID measures, we discovered that there is actually a great wealth of cultural heritage within the Netherlands, a heritage that creates connections within the conscious community, also through storytelling and experiencing a collective past together. As a creative studio, we consider beauty to be an important factor. We are not anthropologists or regional dress experts, but we delved deep into the subject and presented it in the most beautiful and balanced way possible, both in the book, in the accompanying exhibition and now also on the stamps.”

In selecting the photos, designer Rosvaenge sought balance.

“Balanced ages, for example: the youngest person portrayed on the stamps is 3 years old, the oldest well into their 80s,” she said. “But also balance in where people came from, what colours predominated in the pictures and what viewing directions there were. Moreover, we tried to avoid repetition as much as possible.”

A colour scheme that reflects the seasons emerged almost spontaneously, Rosvaenge added.

“We ended up with stamp sheets on which white predominated in winter, light colours emerged in spring, stronger colours appeared in summer and darker shades surfaced in autumn.”

Nelson says technology played an important part in these pictures.

“I shoot in natural light with an analogue plate camera, with a wide aperture and a slow shutter speed. This requires people to sit still for a long period of time, and you can see that in the intensity of their facial expressions.”

Rosvaenge says the designs have multiple layers.

“All sorts of things are going on, and you will have to look several times to get through those layers,” the designer said. “That is why I would love it if people bought two of each stamp sheet: one to keep, the other for sending mail. Preferably for love letters, of course.”

Sale & Validity
The Jimmy Nelson – Ode to the Netherlands stamps are available while stocks last at www.postnl.nl/collect and can be ordered by telephone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number +31 (0)88 868 99 00. The validity period is indefinite.

Technical Details
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 and black
Print run: 4 x 10,000 sheets
Appearance: four sheets of five personal stamps in five different : designs
Design: Larissa Rosvaenge
Photography: Jimmy Nelson
Printing company: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé B.V., Haarlem

Typically Dutch: Museums (Netherlands 2023)

[press release; translated by Google] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Iconic Shapes Dominate the Typically Dutch – Museums Stamps

The first stamp sheetlet of 2023 in the ‘Typisch Nederlands’ series from PostNL was issued on January 2nd. The six stamps are dedicated to the many high-quality museums in our country. This year’s series “Typically Dutch” is devoted to various sights that are important and typical of the Netherlands.

The design of “Typically Dutch – Museums” is the work of senior graphic designer Adam Lane and creative director Edwin van Praet, of Total Design from Amsterdam. In the series, stamp sheets will appear later this year with the subject of windmills (February 13), flower fields (March 20), cheese markets (March 20) and Wadden Sea (August 14).

Hundreds of Museums, Millions of Visitors
The Netherlands is a real museum country. With many hundreds of museums that attract many millions of visitors. The oldest museum in our country is the Teylers Museum in Haarlem (from 1784). The Rijksmuseum Amsterdam (from 1885) attracts the most visitors every year.

Iconic Shapes
The stamps of the “Typically Dutch – Museums” stamp sheet feature picture frames and vases in various sizes. The iconic shapes are grouped in a tight pattern across the stamps. The design language is as simple and geometric as possible, but still recognizable, according to graphic designer Adam Lane. “In this way we have succeeded in designing stamps with powerful images within the pattern game. The loose stamp shows a strong design, while the story behind the theme remains legible.”

Content Aspects
It is not only the form that dominates on the stamp sheet, there is also a substantive aspect to the choice of design concept with icons and patterns. Creative director Edwin van Praet: “This applies to all stamp sheets that will be issued this year in the Typically Dutch series. Whichever museum you visit, a pattern has always been deliberately chosen for how, for example, paintings hang on the wall. When it comes to collecting art, museums naturally also follow a fixed pattern to build up their collection.”Availability
The stamp sheet “Typically Dutch – Museums” has six stamps in six equal designs, with the value indication Nederland 1, intended for mail up to and including 20 grams with a destination within the Netherlands.

The “Typically Dutch – Museums” stamps are available as long as stocks last at the post office in the Bruna stores and via the webshop [direct link]. The stamps can also be ordered by telephone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number 088 868 99 00. The price per sheet of 10 stamps is € 10.10. The stamps are valid indefinitely.

[VSC Note: The link to first day covers (“Eerstedagenveloppen”) is here.]

Experience Nature: Marker Wadden (Netherlands 2023)

[press release, translated via Google Translate] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New nature on new stamps: full attention for the Marker Wadden

Between 2016 and 2021, five islands have been constructed in the Markermeer; the Marker Wadden. Representatives of the flora and fauna of this new nature reserve feature on the latest stamp sheetlet that PostNL has issued January 2 in the series “Experience Nature.”

[According to Wikipedia, “the Marker Wadden is an artificial archipelago under development in the Markermeer, a lake in the Netherlands.”]

The following ten inhabitants of this area play the leading role on the stamps “Experience Nature – Marker Wadden”: mute swan [right], bulrush, spoonbill, marram grass, little plover, bearded man, common tern, smelt, grasshopper warbler and sea buckthorn. All photos are included in a graphic layer of overlapping circles of different sizes, which break through the boundaries of the perforations.

Island 6 and 7
With the construction of the Marker Wadden, the initiators in the Markermeer want to promote nature restoration and improve bird abundance. The project is still ongoing, islands 6 and 7 will be completed this year. A visit to the Marker Wadden is already possible via a fixed ferry service, with departures from April to October from Lelystad.

Friesland, Overijssel and North Brabant
With the series “Experience nature’, PostNL draws attention to various nature areas in our country. After this first issue, three more stamp sheets will follow this year: about Skrok and Skrins in Friesland (February 13, 2023), the Wieden in Overijssel (June 12, 2023) and the Oisterwijkse Bossen en Vennen in North Brabant (August 24, 2023).

Close to the hearts
Natuurmonumenten manages the Marker Wadden. Roel Posthoorn, project director at the foundation, is proud of ‘his’ area. “The essence of Marker Wadden for me is that it was born from the feeling of desire. In nature management we are often busy looking for solutions to problems. But this is something we want, we desire. Something that is close to people’s hearts. That is why they are very welcome.”

Landscape variation
The stamp sheet Experience nature – Marker Wadden is a design by graphic designer Frank Janse from Gouda. “The common factor of this issue about Marker Wadden is the new nature that man has created here. There is a lot of variation in the landscape, with parts that are regularly flooded. This way you attract different species, mainly fish and birds, that feel at home where water and land meet.”

Availability
The stamp sheet “Experience Nature – Marker Wadden” has ten stamps in ten different designs, with the value indication Nederland 1, intended for mail up to and including 20 grams with a destination within the Netherlands.

The “Experience Nature – Marker Wadden” stamps are available while stocks last at all PostNL sales points, the post office in the Bruna stores and via shop.postnl.nl/webshop/collect-club/postzegeluitgiften/bdn-marker-wadden-10-vel-nl1 [direct link. The stamps can also be ordered by telephone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number 088 868 99 00. The price per sheet of 10 stamps is € 10.10. The stamps are valid indefinitely. [VSC Note: The link to first day covers (“Eerstedagenveloppen”) is here. There are two for this issue, shown above and below.]

Iron Maiden (UK 2023)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Royal Mail Honours Rock Legends Iron Maiden with a Set of 12 Special Stamps

Issue date: 12 January 2023

  • Royal Mail has revealed images of 12 stamps being issued as a tribute to one of the most revered and influential bands of all time – Iron Maiden
  • Eight of the stamps will feature images of some of their legendary performances over the years
  • A further four stamps, presented in a miniature sheet, pays homage to the band’s long-serving mascot and pop-cultural icon in his own right, Eddie
  • The band has amassed over 100 million record sales, almost 2,500 live performances across 64 countries, 17 studio albums and has recently finished their Legacy Of The Beast World Tour where they played to over 3,000,000 fans
  • Royal Mail collaborated closely with the band members and Phantom Music Management Ltd on the stamp issue
  • Iron Maiden become only the fifth music group to feature in a dedicated stamp issue – following on from The Beatles in 2007, Pink Floyd in 2016, Queen in 2020, and the Rolling Stones in 2022
  • The band will be back on the road in 2023 with their brand new The Future Past tour, with dates across the UK and Europe
  • The stamps and a range of collectible products are available  at www.royalmail.com/ironmaiden and by phone on +44 (0)3457 641 641
  • The Presentation Pack containing all 12 stamps is priced at £17.70

Royal Mail has revealed images of 12 new Special Stamps celebrating one of the most legendary rock bands of all time, Iron Maiden.

The main stamp set celebrates Iron Maiden’s live performances, featuring a selection of photos from their world-wide tours across the years, internationally and at home – and feature all current members of the band.

Images range from the 1980s until 2018 and show:

  • Steve Harris in Vancouver, June 2010
  • Bruce Dickinson at Hammersmith, Odeon, London, May 1983
  • Dave Murray, Adrian Smith and Steve Harris in Pamplona, September 1988
  • Nicko McBrain in Quito, March 2009
  • Dave Murray, Bruce Dickinson and Janick Gers in Rio de Janeiro, January 2001
  • Adrian Smith and Steve Harris in Helsinki, May 2018
  • Iron Maiden at Twickenham Stadium, London, July 2008
  • Bruce Dickinson sword fighting with Eddie in Birmingham, August 2018

A further four stamps pay homage to the band’s long-serving mascot and pop-cultural icon in his own right, Eddie, with his own miniature sheet. The stamps show four notorious Eddie artworks, including the latest addition featuring Eddie as a samurai warrior from the recent Senjutsu album.Shown on the stamps are:

    • ‘Iron Maiden’ Eddie: The stare that started it all. Born in 1980 – on the cover of the band’s debut album
    • ‘The Trooper’ Eddie: The unforgettable artwork for one of Iron Maiden’s greatest hit singles and, more recently, the logo for their award-winning beer
    • ‘Aces High’ Eddie: Reimagined as a fighter pilot for a song honouring the RAF servicemen who defended Britain during the Second World War
    • ‘Senjutsu’ Eddie: Samurais, feudal Japan and flashing blades inspired this katana-wielding warrior, from the band’s most recent album

    The backdrop of the miniature sheet is taken from Iron Maiden’s first official live album, Live After Death (1985).

    Founded in east London in the mid-1970s by songwriter and bassist Steve Harris, Iron Maiden’s decades-spanning career has made them one of the most revered and influential bands of all time. With over 100 million record sales, almost 2,500 live performances across 64 countries and 17 studio albums – including their latest, Senjutsu, released in 2021 – Iron Maiden have remained fearlessly creative and dedicated to their legions of fans for almost half a century.

    Iron Maiden founder member and bassist Steve Harris comments: “We were all absolutely astounded – in a good way! – when we heard first about the commemorative project, and equally pretty much speechless when we saw the stamps for the very first time. They look superb and I think they really capture the essence and energy of Maiden. We’re all very proud that Royal Mail has chosen to honour the band’s legacy like this and we know our fans will feel the same way,”

    Iron Maiden manager, Rod Smallwood adds: “As a band who have never played by anyone else’s rules for over 40 years, it’s very gratifying to see them honoured in their home country in this way. We’re proud to show how these six band members are still appealing to more and more fans every year with their music and their legendary shows – which I think these stamps really capture well. It’s also fantastic that Eddie has been honoured too – it’s incredible to think that Her Majesty, may she rest in peace, saw these and lent her iconic silhouette to them too.”

    David Gold, Director of External Public Affairs & Policy, Royal Mail, said: “Few bands in the history of rock music can be called bona fide rock legends – but Iron Maiden are just that – and more. With legions of devoted fans of all ages and from every corner of the globe, not only have they changed the way rock music sounds, but they have also changed the way it looks. We fully expect their fans will love these stamps as much as we do.”

    Royal Mail collaborated closely with the band members and Phantom Music Management Ltd on the stamp issue.

    The band will be back on the road in 2023 with their brand new, The Future Past tour, with dates across the UK and Europe.

    The stamps are now on general sale from 12 January 2023 with a Presentation Pack containing all 12 stamps priced at £17.70. They may be ordered at www.royalmail.com/ironmaiden and by phone on 03457 641 641.

VSC Notes: The “special products” include

  • A “highly collectible keepsake featuring platinum-layered Eddie Stamp Sheet stamps packaged in an Iron Maiden flight case” [shown here]. It is currently “out of stock” but when it is available, the price is £199.99.
  • A special edition version of the Iron Maiden stamp set “plated in pure 24 carat gold with colourised and embossed detailing.” This one is in-stock and only £149.99.
  • Various fan and collector sheets (£7.50 to £12.40), a press sheet, postcards, and “full sheets” (48 stamps) and “half sheets” (24), with either the four first-class designs or four £1.85 designs
  • The only first day covers offered are two silver-plated “medal” covers at £19.99 each.