From the USPS on October 29, 2025:
This 4-cent stamp follows the 2024 release of other low-denomination flower stamps: the 1-cent Fringed Tulip, 2-cent Daffodils, 3-cent Peonies, 5-cent Red Tulips and 10-cent Poppies and Coneflowers. Low-denomination stamps are available in panes of 20 and coils of 10,000. To create these images, photographer Harold Davis backlit the flowers on a lightbox and combined multiple photographic exposures, resulting in a luminous, transparent look. Ethel Kessler, an art director for USPS, designed these stamps.
More details will be posted below the line, with the most recent information at the top.
Updated February 3rd:
The Scott catalogue numbers for this issue are
- 6044 sheet
- 6045 coilUpdated January 8th:
Technical Specifications (sheet stamp):
Issue: Angel’s Trumpets Stamp
Item Number: 129500
Denomination & Type of Issue: Four-cent Denominated, Mail-use
Format: Pane of 20 (1 design)
Series: N/A
Issue Date & City: January 9, 2026, Kenosha, WI 53140
Art Director: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Designer: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Existing Photo: Harold Davis, Kenosha, WI
Modeler: Sandra Lane / Michelle Finn
Manufacturing Process: Offset, Microprint
Printer: Banknote Corporation of America
Press Type: Alprinta 74
Stamps per Pane: 20
Print Quantity: 7,000,000 stamps
Paper Type: Nonphosphored Type III
Adhesive Type: Pressure-sensitive
Stamp Orientation: Vertical
Image Area (w x h): 0.7300 x 0.8400 in. / 18.5420 x 21.3360 mm.
Stamp Size (w x h): 0.8700 x 0.9800 in. / 22.0980 x 24.8920 mm.
Pane Size (w x h): 5.3300 x 4.8800 in. / 135.3820 x 123.9520 mm.
Colors: PMS 7491 C, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black
Plate Size: 160 stamps per revolution
Plate Number: “B” followed by five (5) single digits
Marginal Markings:
Front: Plate numbers in four corners of pane
Back: © 2025 USPS • USPS logo • Two barcodes (129500) • Plate position diagram (8) • Promotional textTechnical Specifications (coil stamp):
Issue: Angel’s Trumpets Stamp
Item Number: 762900
Denomination & Type of Issue: Four-cent Denominated, Mail-use
Format: Coil of 10,000 (1 design)
Series: N/A
Issue Date & City: January 9, 2026, Kenosha, WI 53140
Art Director: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Designer: Ethel Kessler, Bethesda, MD
Existing Photo: Harold Davis, Kenosha, WI
Modeler: Sandra Lane / Michelle Finn
Manufacturing Process: Offset, Microprint
Printer: Banknote Corporation of America
Press Type: Alprinta 74
Stamps per Coil: 10,000
Print Quantity: 10,000,000 stamps
Paper Type: Nonphosphored Type III
Adhesive Type: Pressure-sensitive
Stamp Orientation: Vertical
Image Area (w x h): 0.7300 x 0.8400 in. / 18.5420 x 21.3360 mm.
Stamp Size (w x h): 0.8700 x 0.9800 in. / 22.0980 x 24.8920 mm.
Colors: PMS 7491 C, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black
Plate Size: 540 stamps per revolution
Plate Number: “B” followed by five (5) single digits
Coil Number Frequency: Plate number every 27th stamp below stamp imageUpdated December 15th:
There is only one first-day postmark for this issue:
Updated November 29th:
On January 9, 2026, in Kenosha, WI, the United States Postal Service® will issue the 4-
cent Angel’s Trumpets denominated stamp, in one design, in a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) pane of 20 (Item 129500) and a PSA coil of 10,000 stamps (Item 762900). This stamp will go on sale nationwide January 9, 2026, and must not be sold or canceled before the first-day-of-issue.In 2026, the Postal Service™ will issue the 4-cent Angel’s Trumpet, a new low-denomination definitive stamp. This stamp follows the 2024 release of other low-denomination flower stamps—the 1¢ Fringed Tulip, 2¢ Daffodils, 3¢ Peonies, 5¢ Red Tulips, and 10¢ Poppies and Coneflowers. The new stamp art features four peachy pink angel’s trumpets on a yellow-toned cream background. To create the image, the photographer backlit the flowers on a light box and combined multiple photographic exposures, resulting in a luminous, transparent look. Art director Ethel Kessler designed this stamp with an existing image by photographer Harold Davis.
- Item 129500, Angel’s Trumpets, 4 cents, Pane of 20 Stamps
- Item 762900, Angel’s Trumpets, 4 cents, Coil of 10,000 Stamps
No automatic distribution.
How to Order the First-Day-of-Issue Postmark:
Customers have 120 days to obtain the first-day-of-issue postmark by mail. Each cover must have sufficient postage to meet First-Class Mail requirements. 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 – Angel’s Trumpets StampUSPS Stamp Fulfillment Services
8300 NE Underground Drive, Suite 300
Kansas City, MO 64144-9900After 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 9, 2026.
Technical Details will appear in a future edition of the Postal Bulletin
Updated November 5th:
Linn’s Stamp News reports the first-day city for this stamp will be Kenosha, WI at the Midwest Stamp Dealers Association (MSDA) WI/IL Stateline Show. The release date is Friday, January 9.



I have especially enjoyed collecting odd-value definitives. I’m sure I will get this one (even though I don’t understand why we need it).
I remember as a child, drawn to stamps quite young, getting a kick out of incoming letters that had multiple and mixed stamps on the envelope. (Which in another era I might have indulged in on my own outgoing mail–just because I could). I get Forever but it is less fun.
NOV 27 Post Bull: ( Broadcast on the 26th Gobble Gobble ) Pn-20 129504, Cl-10K 762904, Strip-25 762903 (?) 9 Jan 2026 Kenoshe WI, FDoI cancel – just a 4-Bar…
I just called Kansas City. This is not a valid coil strip #. They will only sell a roll.
How can you buy a 4 cent stamp, when the government did away with pennies? That is a way to steal a penny every time a person buys one.
U.S. Post Offices aren’t supposed to sell single stamps. The pane of 20 is 80¢. The coil of 10,000 (which you won’t find in many post offices, is $400.) The only time I could see a customer buying a single stamp would be if he or she was mailing something and was 4 cents short. Chances are the window clerk then would slap a postage-meter label on the package before you could say, “I’d rather have a st— “