ATA Announces Warm Up To Topicals Virtual Programs

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
ATA’s Warm Up to Topicals Free Presentation Series Announced

Did you know that postcards played an outsized role in ensuring the existence of the United States Postal Service? That’s one of the many mysteries to be discovered when the American Topical Association presents its annual Warm Up to Topicals series of free philatelic programs on Zoom from January 16 to March 26.

ATA will offer seven presentations in this year’s winter philatelic roundup. Other topics include enhancing your collecting experience through social media, history of anti-Jewish behavior in America, a preview of the Boston 2026 World Expo, and more.

All programs are free and do not require ATA membership to attend. The 2024 presentations are:

How Picture Postcards Saved the U.S. Postal Department
With Dawn Hamman
Tuesday, January 16, 7 p.m. Eastern

Energize Your Stamp Club, Part II
With Todd Gantzer and Michele Bresso
Tuesday, January 23, 7 p.m. Eastern

Touring from the Dalmatian Coast to Budapest via the Stamps of Eastern Europe
With Alan and Diane Bauer
Tuesday, January 30, 7 p.m. Eastern

Boston 2026 World Expo Highlights
With Yamil Kouri
Tuesday, February 6, 7 p.m. Eastern

Discrimination Never Takes a Vacation
With Gregg Philipson
Tuesday, February 20, 7 p.m. Eastern

Enhance Your Hobby Experience with Social Media
With Jeff Hayward
Tuesday, March 19, 7 p.m. Eastern

Meet the Todidae Family from the Greater Antilles
With Felix L. Perez-Folch, Jr.
Tuesday, March 26, 7 p.m. Eastern

Attendance of ATA Zoom presentations requires online registration. To complete the quick and easy online registration process, go to this page. Click on the title of the desired presentation, then click “Register” to attend. For each event, you’ll be taken to a form asking for your contact information including an email address. ATA will immediately send you the presentation’s zoom link in a confirmation email.

Plan to attend them all and expand your knowledge of our philatelic world.

Three New Members Join AFDCS Board

Members of the American First Day Cover Society have elected three new members to the organization’s Board of Directors: Jeff Hayward of New York, Patrick Morgan of Missouri and Eric Wile of North Carolina. Also elected was incumbent Foster Miller of Maryland. The four candidates were unopposed.

The vote totals were:

Foster Miller
Eric Wile
Jeffrey Hayward
Patrick Morgan
209
203
200
194

In addition, Chris Calle, Mark Gereb, Michael R. Rosenthal, Catherine O’Conner, Walter George, D.A. Lux and Lisa Foster each received one write-in vote. Jack Ginsburg of the AFDCS’ Robert C. Graebner Chapter was acting chair of the Election Committee, filling in for chairman Otto Thamasett who was recovering from surgery. Filling out the committee were Roy Souther and, replacing Otto, Neal Parr. The committee received 217 ballots, of which one was disqualified.

Miller has been on the Board since 1997 and is also Chair of the Membership and Sales Departments of the AFDCS. A new member of the AFDCS, Morgan has written articles for both First Days and Topical Time, and is active in his local stamp club. Hayward, a Life Member, works in Information Technology and is active in the American Topical Association. Wile is also active in a local stamp club, has written many times for First Days, and is a cachetmaker.

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 board meets in person at least once a year and as needed via the internet.

AFDCS directors are not compensated for serving on the board nor reimbursed for their travel expenses.

For more information on the AFDCS, visit www.afdcs.org or write to the AFDCS, PO Box 27, Greer, SC 29652-0027, or via e-mail at afdcs@afdcs.org.

Typically Dutch: Cows (Netherlands 2024)

[from PostNL press materials and other sources] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Typically Dutch – Cows

Date of issue: 2 January 2024
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in six identical designs
Item number: 440163
Design: Adam Lane, Edwin van Praet and Huub van Veenhuijzen from Total Design, Amsterdam

On 2 January 2024, PostNL will issue the Typically Dutch – Cows stamp sheet. This issue is the first in the Typically Dutch series this year. The multi-year series was launched in 2020 and the 2024 edition is dedicated to the animals that we know best and that are closest to us. The six identical postage stamps will be marked ‘Nederland 1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands. A sheet of ten stamps costs €6.54 [currently US$7.21].

Typically Dutch – Cows was designed by Senior Graphic Designer Adam Lane, Executive Creative Director Edwin van Praet and Concept Director Huub van Veenhuijzen from Total Design in Amsterdam. They used artificial intelligence to create a design featuring figurines in the shape of Delftware pottery. Later on this year, the Typically Dutch series will continue with the following subjects: dogs (12 February), horses (25 March), songbirds (13 May) and cats (12 August).

Cows: Cattle have long been kept by humans as pets – probably for over 10,000 years. Long-term domestication and breeding programmes have resulted in many different breeds. Cattle are descended from the aurochs, a wild bovine that became extinct in the Middle Ages. For humans, cattle farming is now one of the main sources of meat, milk and leather. Cattle terminology is as follows: a female bovine is called a cow, a male bovine is called a bull, a young bovine is called a cow calf or bull calf, a yearling is a one-year-old bovine and a heifer is a cow that has calved for the first time. Around 3.8 million cattle are registered in the Netherlands, including 1.6 million dairy cows (2022 CBS figures). The average dairy farm has 110 dairy cows and 58 female young livestock.

Delftware: The history of Delftware is closely linked to that of Chinese porcelain. Delft was one of the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oost-Indische Compagnie in Dutch)’s trading posts, with warehouses where large stocks of this porcelain were stored. Delft potters developed a type of tin-glazed earthenware that could be compared to Chinese porcelain in terms of shape, shine and decoration. Delftware became very popular within a short time and experienced its heyday between 1650 and 1750, when it had around 100 pottery factories. Today, only a few factories still produce Delftware in the traditional way, including De Koninklijke Porceleyne Fles and Heinen Delfts Blauw. The traditional paintwork can be recognised by the mark on the underside of the product.

Artificial intelligence: AI relates to learning computing systems that are capable of extrapolating large amounts of data and algorithms, making decisions and choices, and coming up with interpretations. The developments in artificial intelligence are coming thick and fast. It is used in numerous applications, from face recognition on smartphones and self-driving cars to smart thermostats and deep fakes – digitally manipulated images, sounds and texts. Within AI there is a separate discipline called generative art, which is when a computer algorithm creates an original work of art or design.

Design: The stamps on the sheet depict two cows standing near each other, potrayed as figurines made from shiny Delftware pottery. The image of the two cows was created using MidJourney, an AI programme, which creates images based on textual descriptions.

Typically Dutch – Cows was designed by Total Design, an Amsterdam-based design agency which has been responsible for the Typically Dutch series since 2020. For the 2024 series, PostNL asked Total Design to elaborate on the Delftware theme by combining photography and illustration. Delftware did, in fact, end up on the stamps, albeit with a contemporary twist.

The designers “wanted to see whether we could go further than using images of vases, plates and figurines,” said Graphic Designer Adam Lane. “We were looking to create a modern twist, and that’s when we came up with the concept of working with artificial intelligence. Our AI expertise gave us some ideas, but we wanted to explore properly how it would work.”

Around 25 designers participated in a brainstorming session. “In small teams, we used the AI programme MidJourney to combine typically Dutch subjects with different decoration styles. Delftware proved to work the best, as other Dutch decorative styles were simply too unfamiliar within AI,” said Lane. “The results were magnificent – dreamlike, often surreal images of a wide variety of subjects. From ice skates, cheeses and board games such as goose game to Dutch interiors and garments… you name it. By the end of the evening, the portrait of a dog suddenly cropped up. We decided that was an interesting option and we wanted to go in that direction. Why not produce a series on the animals that are close to the hearts of the Dutch people?”

By the same token, the designers considered some lesser-known breeds of cattle, but MidJourney didn’t recognize them. Instead, they took red-pied and black-pied cattle and made blue-pied cattle.

Technical Details:
Postage stamp dimensions: 30 x 40 mm
Sheet size: 170 x 122 mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Glue: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow and black
Print run: 75,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in identical designs
Design: Adam Lane, Edwin van Praet and Huub van Veenhuijzen from Total Design, Amsterdam
Printing company: Cartor Security Printers, Meaucé-La Loupe, France
Item number: 440163

ATA Launches 2024 My One-Page Exhibit Program

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
ATA Launches Year Four of My One-Page Exhibit
By Michele M. Bresso and Thomas W. Broadhead [left]

The American Topical Association announces the opening of year four of its successful virtual exhibiting program, My One-Page Exhibit, starting next month and running through February 15, 2024. The exhibit program is free to enter and open to all. ATA membership is not required to participate.

Rather than offering judging or popularity votes, the program focuses on expression, storytelling and sharing. Exhibits are submitted as PDF file uploads on the ATA website during the submission period.

The previous three years’ entries realized hundreds of exhibits from countries around the globe. Many entries were submitted by ATA members giving the global philatelic family a glimpse of our topical and other philatelic interests. Submissions included exhibits from the United States, Australia, Canada, Germany, India, Peru, Austria, Italy, Columbia, Germany, and more. Exhibitors ranged from novice youths to international large gold recipients.

Literally a single page, either 8.5” x 11” or 11” x 17” in size, the exhibit represents an accessible way for newcomers to philatelic exhibiting to become engaged in this aspect of the hobby. For experienced one- and multi-frame competitive exhibitors, the My One-Page Exhibit Program provides a place to explore new themes and topics and share important stories.

Last year’s exhibits displayed in 13 categories on the ATA website including animals, arts, culture, health and safety, nature, philately, plans, postal history, science and technology, sports, transportation, U.S. history, and world history. Exhibits are not limited to these categories, and new categories are added as needed to accommodate the exhibits received.

For example, in the science and technology category in 2023, exhibits shared the story of how a thunderstorm develops [right], a look at wristwatches, and a survey of women astronomers on stamps [below]. Narratives developed by exhibits can be serious, questioning, comic, and everything in between. Every exhibit offers an opportunity for viewers to be introduced to or learn more about a topic, according to ATA Executive Director Jennifer Miller.

“Our hope is that the philatelic world will learn from the exhibits and that one-page novice exhibitors will be inspired by the examples to refine their exhibit pages,” Miller said. “Just as important, we hope all exhibitors will consider expanding the scope of their future exhibits for both traditional and virtual exhibiting.”

My One-Page Exhibit is an opportunity for experienced exhibitors not only to create and share interesting items from their collections that may be outliers from their exhibits but also to take an active role in promoting exhibiting to those who want to try exhibiting for the first time.

“We would like every local stamp club and topical interest group to engage in the ATA My One-page Exhibit Program and submit an entry this year,” Miller said.

The 2024 My One-Page Exhibit Program opens for entry submission on December 15, 2023 and closes on February 15, 2024. Exhibits will be submitted on the ATA website – americantopical.org. Exhibit instructions and requirements are posted on the ATA exhibit page. Exhibits in the 2024 program will be available for viewing on the ATA website by April 1, 2024 and will remain online throughout the year. Visit americantopical.org for updates and details.

ATA Offers Free Mistletoe Checklist

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Free ATA Holiday Stamp Checklist Now Available To All

What’s green, leafy and a happy holiday tradition? It’s the American Topical Association’s annual free stamp checklist of mistletoe on stamps! The 2023 free checklist identifies 22 stamps containing mistletoe issued by 15 countries from Australia to Yugoslavia.

Similar to the more than 1,600 topical checklists ATA makes available to its members, this year’s free checklist includes each stamp’s country of origin, date issued, denomination, Scott number, and a description of the stamp.

“ATA Checklists are offered in 48 categories including Aviation, Inventors, Nature, Space, and World Landmarks,” said Jennifer Miller, ATA executive director. “Access to purchasing our many checklists is available only to ATA members, but we enjoy making one specially curated list each year to share with all philatelists. The mistletoe topic won this year’s honors.”

Mistletoe holds a place in multiple cultures including Norse culture, where the plant was a sign of love and peace. In 18th century England, mistletoe became an oft-hung Christmas decoration with a twist: a catalyst for kissing a special someone who might be standing beneath the plant. Today, this semi-parasitic plant is studied by scientists for its medicinal properties to treat anxiety, according to a paper in the National Library of Medicine’s National Center for Biotechnology Information.

Explore more about mistletoe by downloading your free mistletoe PDF checklist. Go to the ATA website at americantopical.org or click here to take you to the free checklist page.

Healthful balm, holiday aphrodisiac or philatelists’ tool—no matter what you think of mistletoe, ATA’s free mistletoe checklist is sure to bring joy to your holiday season.

Nature: Birds on Bonaire (Netherlands 2024)

[from PostNL press material] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Experience Nature – Birds on Bonaire

Date of issue: 2 January 2024
Format: sheet of ten stamps in ten different designs, marked with ‘1’, the denomination for post weighing up to and including 20g with destinations in the Netherlands
Item number: 440161
Design: Frank Janse, Gouda
Photography: Dreamstime and Wikimedia Commons (Charles J. Sharp, Mike’s Birds, Stephen J. Jones, Steve Wilson, Wolfartist)

On 2 January 2024, PostNL will issue the Experience Nature – Birds on Bonaire issue: a sheet of ten stamps in ten different designs. The denomination on these stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g with destinations in the Netherlands. A sheet of ten stamps costs €10.90 [currently US$12.00). The sheet is part of the 2024-2026 Experience Nature series dedicated to the Caribbean Netherlands. Four sheets of 10 stamps will be issued each year.

The stamps depict plants and animals found in this part of the Netherlands. With thousands of species of plants and animals, the islands in this area have a biodiversity that is unprecedented by Dutch standards. 2024 will consecutively focus on the birds, butterflies, underwater life and flora on the island of Bonaire.

The stamps on this sheet are:

  • the crested caracara
  • red-footed booby
  • mangrove warbler
  • southern lapwing
  • Venezuelan troupial
  • Caribbean flamingo
  • red ibis
  • yellow-shouldered amazon
  • magnificent frigatebird, and
  • ruby-topaz hummingbird.

Just like Sint Eustatius and Saba, the island of Bonaire holds a separate status within the Netherlands. The collective name for these three islands is the Caribbean Netherlands. Alongside the countries of Aruba, Curaçao and Sint Maarten, they form the Caribbean part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Bonaire spans almost 29,000 hectares [about 112,000 square miles], and is home to around 24,000 people, most of whom speak Papiamentu as their first language. The main sources of income are tourism and salt extraction, and the island is a popular destination for diving holidays and cruise ships.

Bonaire is home to over 200 different bird species: breeding birds, winter visitors as well as regular visitors and wanderers. The Caribbean flamingo is Bonaire’s national symbol. Its image and colours recur everywhere, right down to the name of the reddish-pink coloured Flamingo Airport. The yellow-shouldered amazon is also synonymous with Bonaire. Bonaire is one of the few places on earth where this unique species of parrot is found.

Design
The Experience Nature – Birds on Bonaire stamp sheet was designed by graphic designer Frank Janse from Gouda. On the sheet, each bird is depicted in its natural environment on its own stamp. All bird photos are incorporated in a graphic layer with circle shapes that are also visible on the sheet edge. Some images also continue onto the adjacent stamp and onto the sheet edge. In several places on the stamp sheet, the designer has added graphics derived from symbols on old topographical maps. These symbols can indicate landscape forms, contour lines, plantings, soil structures and watercourses.

At first, Janse only wanted to use photographs taken in Bonaire but “I quickly abandoned that idea. There were simply too few photos, he said. “Lots birds had been photographed in other places, so I used those photos too.” The photos were edited, blurring some of the backgrounds, and “I avoided using an image of a bird with a tree or bush visible in the background that is not found on Bonaire.”

The design also features an additional transparent layer featuring monochrome images (both white and in colour) of flora and fauna that are typical of this area. The monochrome images are almost abstract cross the perforations and connect the stamps to each other and to the sheet edge. The following plants and animals are depicted: red ibis and ceroid cactus (top left), melon cactus and yellow-shouldered amazon (top right), mangrove warbler (middle left), magnificent frigatebird (bottom right) and common lantana (bottom right and centre).

Although Janse has never been to Bonaire, he is a bird enthusiast and so he is familiar with many of the species featured on the stamps. “As a child, I found the magnificent frigatebird extremely interesting. It’s huge bird that can stay in the air for months without landing. It stands pontifically on the stamp in the left-hand corner, with its red breast puffed out and its large beak. The crested caracara is just as interesting. This falcon species is an incredibly opportunistic beast; it eats just about anything, and preferably steals food from other animals. It’s a real predator. And, of course, the hummingbird had to fly onto the stamp. It’s a clever photo that’s been taken with a very good camera. Its stance really catches your eye – it’s as if it is turning a corner mid-air.”

Other Dutch stamps designed by Janse include 2017′ bird species of the Netherlands, the Experience Nature series from 2018 to 2023, and, also in 2023, he designed the personal stamps Holland America Line’s 150th anniversary, Girl with a Pearl Earring and Inauguration of Queen Juliana, containing 24 -carat gold.

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

Canada’s 2024 Stamp Program

The pre-2024 overview story is here.

Updated November 28th. These subjects and dates are not all confirmed and represent our best information at this time.

Date
Jan 29
March 1
March 14
March 28
April 2
April 15
April 29
May 6
May 10
June 21
July 24
September 11
September 27
October 10
October 14
October 28
November 4
November 14
November 27
TBA
Subject
Mary Ann Shadd (Black History)
Wildflowers
Solar Eclipse
Eid
Royal Canadian Air Force envelope
Endangered Frogs
Canada Post Community Foundation (semi-postal)
“From Far and Wide” New definitives
Graphic Novelists
Indigenous Leaders
Norman Jewison
Sarah McLachlan
Truth & Reconciliation
MuchMusic / MusiquePlus
Diwali
Remembrance Day (WWI)
Christmas (Nativity, Gingerbread Houses)
Hanukkah
French-Canadian Authors
Alanis Morissette (not confirmed)
Scott #
3412
3413-7
3418
3419

3420-2
B35
3423, 3424-45
3446-9
3450, 3451-3
3454








For all Canadian new issues:[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Canada Post announces 2024 stamp program
Lineup includes Canada Post’s first stamp featuring a solar eclipse,
just in time for historic event

OTTAWA – Canada Post announced today a 2024 stamp lineup that shines a light on truth and reconciliation, the natural world, accomplished Canadians, a rare space sighting, and much more. Here are highlights of the 2024 lineup:

  • Remembering Mary Ann Shadd (right), an influential abolitionist and the first Black woman to publish a newspaper in North America, to be issued ahead of Black History Month.
  • The always-popular annual Flowers series returns in March, this year starring a pair of regional wildflowers.
  • Canada Post’s first stamp featuring a total solar eclipse, just in time for a historic event on April 8, 2024.
  • A new stamp series showcasing Canadian graphic novelists will be issued in May.
  • In July, Canada Post will continue its tradition of featuring wildlife on stamps with endangered frogs.

Still to be announced are additional stamps honouring great Canadians and popular culture icons.

These are some of the popular annual stamp series that will be released in more detail throughout the next year:

  • A fundraising stamp for the Canada Post Community Foundation supporting children and youth across the country.
  • The third issue in a series honouring Indigenous leaders.
  • New stamps recognizing and bringing awareness to truth and reconciliation, ahead of the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation on September 30, 2024.
  • Special stamps celebrating the holidays, including Eid, Diwali, Hanukkah and Christmas.
  • The Remembrance Day issue showcases an unheralded part of Canada’s role during the First World War.

Canada Post is proud to be one of Canada’s storytellers. The annual stamp program showcases the people, places and moments that shape our country. The independent Stamp Advisory Committee recommends the subjects for the program and relies on thoughtful input from groups and individuals to choose subjects that are meaningful to all Canadians.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Postes Canada annonce son programme de timbres-poste de 2024
La liste comprend la première vignette canadienne consacrée à une éclipse solaire, lancée juste à temps pour le phénomène historique.

OTTAWA – Postes Canada a annoncé aujourd’hui son programme de timbres-poste de 2024, qui comptera entre autres parmi ses sujets la vérité et la réconciliation, la nature, des figures canadiennes et un phénomène astronomique rare. En voici un aperçu :

  • Un timbre rendant hommage à Mary Ann Shadd [droite], abolitionniste influente et première femme noire à publier un journal en Amérique du Nord, sera émis en vue du Mois de l’histoire des Noirs.
  • La série annuelle consacrée aux fleurs, toujours très prisée, reviendra en mars et mettra en vedette deux fleurs sauvages régionales.
  • La première vignette canadienne consacrée à une éclipse solaire totale sera lancée juste à temps pour le phénomène historique le 8 avril 2024.
  • Une nouvelle série de timbres présentant des artistes de romans graphiques du Canada sera émise en mai.
  • En juillet, Postes Canada poursuivra sa tradition d’émettre des timbres sur la faune avec des vignettes sur les grenouilles.

D’autres timbres rendant hommage à des figures canadiennes et des icônes culturelles seront annoncés plus tard.

Voici quelques-unes des séries de timbres annuelles populaires qui feront l’objet d’une annonce plus détaillée au cours de l’année :

  • Le timbre philanthropique de la Fondation communautaire de Postes Canada, qui vient en aide aux enfants et aux jeunes partout au pays;
  • Le troisième volet d’une série consacrée aux dirigeants autochtones;
  • De nouveaux timbres soulignant la vérité et la réconciliation avant la Journée nationale de la vérité et de la réconciliation le 30 septembre 2024;
  • Des vignettes spéciales célébrant diverses fêtes, y compris l’Aïd, Diwali, Hanoukka et Noël;
  • L’émission du jour du Souvenir, qui met de l’avant une facette méconnue du rôle du Canada durant la Première Guerre mondiale.

Postes Canada est fière de contribuer à raconter le Canada. Son programme de timbres-poste met en vedette les gens, les lieux et les moments qui façonnent notre pays. Le Comité consultatif sur les timbres-poste, qui travaille de façon indépendante, recommande les sujets du programme en s’appuyant sur la contribution réfléchie de groupes et de particuliers afin de choisir des sujets significatifs pour l’ensemble de la population.

USPS Announces First Days for GASS 2024

[APS press release]
The APS is excited to announce that the United States Postal Service will once again host two first day ceremonies at the Great American Stamp Show, issuing both Pinback Buttons and Autumn Colors at GASS 2024 in Hartford.

The ceremony for Pinback Buttons, a fun and whimsical issue featuring designs from 10 different artists, will take place on Thursday, August 15, and the ceremony for Autumn Colors will take place on Friday, August 16 (one day closer to fall!).

Bobb-Semple Confirmed at USPS Stamp Services

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
USPS Announces New Director of Stamp Services

WASHINGTON, DC — The U.S. Postal Service announced today that Lisa Bobb-Semple has been appointed to the role of director of Stamp Services, reporting to Sheila Holman, vice president, marketing.

Bobb-Semple is a 19-year veteran of the Postal Service and the appointment is effective immediately. She is shown on the left speaking at an American First Day Cover Society seminar at Great American Stamp Show 2023 in August.

As acting director since June 2023, Bobb-Semple has been responsible for the oversight of all aspects of Stamp Services at USPS headquarters, Stamp Fulfillment Services in Kansas City, MO, and the Stamp Distribution Center in Dulles, VA. She has successfully set direction and provided oversight for all aspects of the Postal Service’s stamp program.

“During her acting role, Lisa has successfully set the direction for and provided oversight for all aspects of the Postal Service’s stamp program, which celebrates the people, events and cultural milestones that are unique to the history of our great nation,” said Steven Monteith, chief customer and marketing officer and executive vice president.

Bobb-Semple joined the Postal Service in 2004 as an advertising specialist. She is an experienced marketing, sales and strategic planning leader, driving marketing strategies, advertising execution and lead generation programs. She has led high-profile marketing programs throughout her career, including product sampling initiatives, executing social selling programs and implementing the first sales enablement platform for USPS sales. She has held positions in Sales Strategy and Communications, Sales Outreach, Brand Marketing, Product Management, Product Innovation and Government Relations.

Bobb-Semple received a bachelor’s degree in organizational dynamics from the University of Pennsylvania, and her master’s Degree from the University of Virginia, Darden Graduate School of Business. She is also a graduate of the USPS Advanced Leadership Program.

ATA: Energize Your Club (Zoom Program)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Energize Your Stamp Club with Todd Gantzer

Thursday, December 7, 2023, 7:00 p.m. Eastern

Could your stamp club use some new ideas and energy? Would you like to appeal more to modern collectors and a younger generation? Join us for a Zoom session with Todd Gantzer.

Todd’s presentation includes a brief history of his entry into the philatelic world, followed by some thoughts and suggestions on how to modernize your club and make it more accessible and appealing. This is a unique program of interest to EVERY stamp club in the country. Come and learn how to charge your club with new energy for 2024! You won’t want to miss this!

Todd lives in the Boston area with his wife and 2 dogs. He is dedicated to helping philately evolve into a more accessible hobby that everyone can enjoy. Todd is the president of the Greater Boston Philatelic Society. His personal collection includes squirrels, Straits Settlements and Modern Singapore.