Florida Everglades (Priority Mail) (U.S. 2023)

This issue was announced by the USPS on December 13th:

Spanning some 2 million acres in southern Florida, from Lake Okeechobee to Florida Bay, the Everglades is one of the largest wetlands in the world and the most significant breeding ground for tropical wading birds in North America. This new Priority Mail stamp celebrates the Florida Everglades with stamp art that shows a sawgrass marsh as seen at sunset from the edge of a cypress dome. Designed by art director Greg Breeding, the stamp showcases a digital illustration by Dan Cosgrove. The Florida Everglades Priority Mail stamp will be issued in Homestead, FL, on Jan. 22 without a ceremony.

We will post additional information as we get it below the line, with the most recent information at the top.


Updated March 7th:
The Scott catalogue number for this issue is 5751

Updated December 29th:
Here are the first-day postmarks for this issue:The Digital Color Postmark measures 2.98″ x 1.27″ The only B&W postmark available for this issue is the FDOI “Killer Bars” one.

 Updated November 30th:
This stamp will be issued Sunday, January 22, in Homestead, FL, without a ceremony. Homestead’s post office is not open on Sundays.

Art of the Skateboard (U.S. 2023)

This issue was announced by the USPS on December 13th:

The bold artwork on a skateboard deck is often as eye-catching and individualistic as a skater’s most breathtaking moves. These four stamps celebrate the Art of the Skateboard with vibrant designs that capture skateboarding’s excitement. Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamp issuance using photographs of skateboards created by artist Crystal Worl, an Alaskan whose blue and indigo salmon formline design expresses her Tlingit/Athabascan heritage; self-taught artist William James Taylor Jr. of Virginia, who created an energetic red and orange graphic abstraction; Di’Orr Greenwood of Arizona who represents her Navajo culture with a turquoise-inlaid skateboard that features eagle feathers and colors of the rising or setting sun and Colombian-born, Washington, DC-raised muralist MazPaz (Federico Frum), who painted a stylized jaguar.

We will post additional information as we get it below the line, with the most recent information at the top.


Updated May 1st:
Here are the Scott catalogue numbers for this issue:

5763 Tlingit Athabascan Salmon Design by Crystal Worl
a. Imperforate
5764 Abstract Design by William James Taylor
a. Imperforate
5765 Navajo Design by Di’Orr Greenwood
a. Imperforate
5766 Jaguar Design by MasPaz (Frederico Frum)
a. Imperforate
b. Horiz. or vert. strip of 4, #5763-5766
c. Imperforate horiz. or vert. strip of 4, #5763a-5766a

Updated February 23rd:
Here are the first-day postmarks for this issue:The Digital Color Postmark for this issue measures 2.61″ x 1.50″The Pictorial Postmark measures 2.36″ x 1.22″

From the Postal Bulletin:
On March 24, 2023, in Phoenix, AZ, the United States Postal Service® will issue the Art of the Skateboard stamps (Forever® priced at the First-Class Mail® rate) in four designs, in a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) pane of 20 stamps (Item 483400). These stamps will go on sale nationwide March 24, 2023, and must not be sold or canceled before the first-day-of-issue. The Art of the Skateboard commemorative pane of 20 stamps must not be split and the stamps must not be sold individually.

With four new stamps, the Postal Service celebrates the “Art of the Skateboard.” The bold designs featured on the pane of 20 stamps capture the excitement of skateboarding and reflect the diverse creators of these artistic decks:

  • A blue and indigo salmon design expresses one artist’s Tlingit/Athabascan heritage.
  • A striking red and orange graphic abstraction by a self-taught Virginia artist energizes another skateboard.
  • Another represents Navajo culture, featuring a turquoise-inlaid skateboard that displays eagle feathers and the colors of the rising or setting sun.
  • A design featuring a stylized jaguar painted in black, white, and gold is by a Colombian-born, Washington, DC-raised muralist.

Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamp issuance, using photographs of skateboards created for these stamps by, respectively, Crystal Worl, William James Taylor Junior, Di’Orr Greenwood, and MasPaz (Frederico Frum).

Item 483400, Pane of 20: 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. They may purchase new stamps at their local Post Office™ or at The Postal Store® website at store.usps.com/store/home. 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 – Art of the Skateboard Stamps
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 July 24, 2023.

Technical Specifications:

Issue: Art of the Skateboard Stamps
Item Number: 483400
Denomination & Type of Issue: First-Class Mail Forever
Format: Pane of 20 (4 designs)
Series: N/A
Issue Date & City: March 24, 2023, Phoenix, AZ 85026
Art Director: Antonio Alcalá, Alexandria, VA
Designer: Antonio Alcalá, Alexandria, VA
Artist: Crystal Worl
Artist: William James Taylor Junior
Artist: Di’Orr Greenwood
Artist: MasPaz (Frederico Frum)
Modeler: Sandra Lane / Michelle Finn
Manufacturing Process: Offset
Printer: Banknote Corporation of America
Press Type: Gallus RCS
Stamps per Pane: 20
Print Quantity: 18,000,000 stamps
Paper Type: Phosphor Tagged Paper, Block
Adhesive Type: Pressure-sensitive
Colors: Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black, Cool Gray 5C, Pantone 7688C, Pantone 172C, Pantone 715C, Pantone 7684C
Stamp Orientation: Horizontal
Image Area (w x h): 1.42 x 0.84 in / 36.068 x 21.336 mm
Overall Size (w x h): 1.56 x 0.98 in / 39.624 x 24.892 mm
Full Pane Size (w x h): 7.24 x 5.92 in / 183.896 x 150.368 mm
Press Sheets Size (w x h): 21.72 x 11.84 in./ 551.688 x 300.736 mm
Plate Size: 120 stamps per revolution
Plate Number: “B” followed by nine (9) single digits
Marginal Markings:
Front: Plate number in four corners of the pane
Back: ©2022 USPS • USPS logo • Two barcodes (483400) • Plate position diagram (6) • Promotional text

Updated February 7th as predicted here a month ago:
[ceremony details] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
USPS Skateboard Stamps To Debut at PHXAM 2023

What: The U.S. Postal Service will hold a dedication ceremony for four new stamps celebrating the Art of the Skateboard at Cowtown’s 21st annual Phoenix Am contest.

The first-day-of-issue event is free and open to the public. News of the stamp is being shared with the hashtag #ArtoftheSkateboardStamps.

Who: The Honorable William Zollars, member, USPS Board of Governors

When: Friday, March 24, 2023, at 11 a.m. MST

Where: Desert West Skate Plaza
6602 W. Encanto Blvd.
Phoenix, AZ 85035

RSVP: Dedication ceremony attendees are encouraged to rsvp at: usps.com/artoftheskateboard.

Background: Fiercely independent and often rebellious, the skateboarding subculture crackles with raw creative energy. The bold artwork emblazoned on a skateboard deck is often as eye-catching and individualistic as a skater’s most breathtaking moves.

These four stamps celebrate the Art of the Skateboard with vibrant designs that capture skateboarding’s excitement and reflect the diversity and influences of the four artists whose work is featured:

Crystal Worl, an Alaskan artist used a blue and indigo salmon formline design to express her Tlingit/Athabascan heritage.

William James Taylor Jr, a self-taught Virginia artist created an energetic red and orange graphic abstraction.

Federico “MasPaz” Frum, a Colombian-born, Washington, D.C.-raised muralist painted a stylized jaguar.

Di’Orr Greenwood, of Arizona represented her Navajo culture with a turquoise-inlaid skateboard that features eagle feathers and colors of the rising or setting sun.

Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamp issuance, using photographs of skateboards created for these stamps.

The Art of the Skateboard stamps are denominated as Forever stamps and will always be equal in value to the current First-Class Mail 1-ounce price.

Updated January 10th:
These stamps will be issued Friday, March 24, in Phoenix. The “welcome” events for PHXAM (some sort of skateboard competition) begin on that date at the Desert West Skateboard Plaza. The PHXAM website never actually tells what the event is or what the acronyms stand for.

John Lewis (U.S. 2023)

This issue was announced by the USPS on December 13th:

This stamp celebrates the life and legacy of civil rights leader and U.S. Rep. John Lewis (1940-2020) of Georgia. Devoted to equality and justice for all Americans, Lewis spent more than 30 years in Congress steadfastly defending and building on key civil rights gains that he had helped achieve in the 1960s. Even in the face of hatred and violence, as well as some 45 arrests, Lewis remained resolute in his commitment to what he liked to call “good trouble.” The stamp features a photograph of Lewis taken by Marco Grob on assignment for the Aug. 26, 2013, issue of Time magazine. The selvage showcases a photograph of Lewis taken by Steve Schapiro in 1963 outside a workshop about nonviolent protest in Clarksdale, MS. Derry Noyes served as art director for this project.

We will post additional information as we get it below the line, with the most recent information at the top.


Updated September 5th:
The Scott catalogue number for this issue is 5801.

Updated June 22nd:
[press advisory] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Postal Service Honors Congressman John Lewis on New Forever Stamp

What: The U.S. Postal Service will commemorate the life and legacy of Congressman, John Lewis (1940-2020), a key figure in some of the most pivotal moments of the Civil Rights Movement.

The first-day-of-issue event for the John Lewis Forever stamp is free and open to the public. News of the stamp is being shared with the hashtag #JohnLewisStamp.

Who: The Honorable Ronald A. Stroman, governor, U.S. Postal Service

When: Friday, July 21, 2023, at noon EDT

Where:
Morehouse College
Martin Luther King Jr. International Chapel
830 Westview Drive SW
Atlanta, GA 30314

RSVP: Dedication ceremony attendees are encouraged to rsvp at: usps.com/johnlewis

Background: The stamp features a photograph of Lewis taken by Marco Grob on assignment for the Aug. 26, 2013, issue of Time magazine. Lewis’s name is at the bottom of the stamp. The words “USA” and “Forever” appear in the stamp’s top left corner. Derry Noyes, an art director for USPS, designed the stamp.

Devoted to equality and justice for all Americans, Lewis spent more than 30 years in Congress steadfastly defending and building on key civil rights gains that he helped achieve in the 1960s. Lewis was a staunch and unwavering believer in and advocate for nonviolent protests. The recipient of more than 50 honorary degrees, he was called a “saint” by Time magazine and “the conscience of the Congress,” by his colleagues.

Lewis was the face of the Nashville Student Movement, chairman of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, an original Freedom Rider, and one of the keynote speakers at the 1963 March on Washington. He served as executive director of the Voter Education Project; as associate director of ACTION, the federal volunteer agency that oversaw the Peace Corps and VISTA; and as a member of the Atlanta City Council. He was also the best-selling author of several books, including the March comic book series and the inspiring autobiography, Walking With the Wind.

Elected to represent Georgia in the U.S. House of Representatives in 1986, Lewis garnered the support needed to pass the Civil Rights Act of 1991, sponsored the legislation that created the 54-mile-long Selma-to-Montgomery National Historic Trail, and worked for more than a decade to establish the National Museum of African American History and Culture on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, by President Barack Obama.

Throughout his life, Lewis remained resolute in his commitment to what he liked to call “good trouble,” even in the face of hatred and violence.

Updated June 15th:
From the Postal Bulletin:

On July 21, 2023, in Atlanta, GA, the United States Postal Service® will issue the John Lewis stamp (Forever® priced at the First-Class Mail® rate) in one design, in a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) pane of 15 stamps (Item 483200). This stamp will go on sale nationwide July 21, 2023, and must not be sold or canceled before the first-day-of-issue.

With this stamp, the Postal Service™ celebrates the life and legacy of civil rights leader and congressman John Lewis (1940–2020). Devoted to equality and justice for all Americans, Lewis spent more than 30 years in Congress steadfastly defending and building on key civil rights gains that he had helped achieve in the 1960s. The stamp features a photograph of Lewis taken by Marco Grob on assignment for the August 26, 2013, issue of Time magazine. The selvage showcases a photograph of Lewis taken by Steve Schapiro in 1963 outside a workshop about non-violent protest in Clarksdale, MS. Art director Derry Noyes designed the stamp and selvage.

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. They may purchase new stamps at their local Post Office™ or at The Postal Store® website at store.usps.com/store/home. 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 – John Lewis 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 November 21, 2023.

Technical Specifications:

Issue:-John Lewis Stamp
Item Number:-483200
Denomination & Type of Issue:-First-Class Mail Forever
Format:-Pane of 15 (1 design)
Series:-N/A
Issue Date & City:-July 21, 2023, Atlanta, GA 30304
Art Director:-Derry Noyes, Washington, DC
Designer:-Derry Noyes, Washington, DC
Existing Photo (stamp):-Marco Grob
Existing Photo (selvage):-Steve Schapiro
Modeler:-Joseph Sheeran
Manufacturing Process:-Offset, Microprint
Printer:-Ashton Potter (USA) Ltd (APU)
Press Type:-Muller A76
Stamps per Pane:-15
Print Quantity:-30,000,000 stamps
Paper Type:-Nonphosphored Type III, Block Tagged
Adhesive Type:-Pressure-sensitive
Colors:-Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Pantone 7543C
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):-6.50 x 8.45 in. / 165.10 x 214.63 mm
Press Sheets Size (w x h):-19.50 x 25.725 in. / 495.30 x 653.415 mm
Plate Size:-135 stamps per revolution
Plate Number:-“P” followed by five (5) single digits in two corners
Marginal Markings:
Front:-Header: John Lewis 1940-2020 • Plate number in bottom 2 corners
Back:-©2022 USPS • USPS logo • Two barcodes (483200) • Plate position diagram (9) • Promotional text

Here are the first-day postmarks for this issue: The Digital Color Postmark measures 2.67″ x 1.25″ The pictorial postmark measures 2.13″ x 1.22″

Updated March 14th:
The issue date is July 21st in Atlanta, GA.

U.S. Adds 7 Issues for 2023

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
U.S. Postal Service Reveals Additional Stamps for 2023
Civil Rights Leader John Lewis, Art of the Skateboard and Florida Everglades Are Featured

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Postal Service announced seven new stamp subjects for 2023.

This group, along with the stamps announced in October, is a partial list, with more to be revealed in the weeks and months ahead. All stamp designs are preliminary and subject to change.

John Lewis
This stamp celebrates the life and legacy of civil rights leader and U.S. Rep. John Lewis (1940-2020) of Georgia. Devoted to equality and justice for all Americans, Lewis spent more than 30 years in Congress steadfastly defending and building on key civil rights gains that he had helped achieve in the 1960s. Even in the face of hatred and violence, as well as some 45 arrests, Lewis remained resolute in his commitment to what he liked to call “good trouble.” The stamp features a photograph of Lewis taken by Marco Grob on assignment for the Aug. 26, 2013, issue of Time magazine. The selvage showcases a photograph of Lewis taken by Steve Schapiro in 1963 outside a workshop about nonviolent protest in Clarksdale, MS. Derry Noyes served as art director for this project.

Art of the SkateboardThe bold artwork on a skateboard deck is often as eye-catching and individualistic as a skater’s most breathtaking moves. These four stamps celebrate the Art of the Skateboard with vibrant designs that capture skateboarding’s excitement. Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamp issuance using photographs of skateboards created by artist Crystal Worl, an Alaskan whose blue and indigo salmon formline design expresses her Tlingit/Athabascan heritage; self-taught artist William James Taylor Jr. of Virginia, who created an energetic red and orange graphic abstraction; Di’Orr Greenwood of Arizona who represents her Navajo culture with a turquoise-inlaid skateboard that features eagle feathers and colors of the rising or setting sun and Colombian-born, Washington, DC-raised muralist MazPaz (Federico Frum), who painted a stylized jaguar.

Florida Everglades (Priority Mail)
Spanning some 2 million acres in southern Florida, from Lake Okeechobee to Florida Bay, the Everglades is one of the largest wetlands in the world and the most significant breeding ground for tropical wading birds in North America. This new Priority Mail stamp celebrates the Florida Everglades with stamp art that shows a sawgrass marsh as seen at sunset from the edge of a cypress dome. Designed by art director Greg Breeding, the stamp showcases a digital illustration by Dan Cosgrove. The Florida Everglades Priority Mail stamp will be issued in Homestead, FL, on Jan. 22 without a ceremony.

Tomie dePaola
This stamp honors prolific children’s book author and illustrator Tomie dePaola (1934-2020), whose extraordinarily varied body of work encompasses folktales and legends, informational books, religious and holiday stories, and touching autobiographical tales. The stamp art features a detail from the cover of “Strega Nona” (1975), the Caldecott Honor winning first book in the series. Set in southern Italy, the gently humorous story focuses on Strega Nona, “Grandma Witch,” who uses magic to help with matters of the heart and to cure her neighbors’ ills. Art director Derry Noyes designed the stamp with Tomie dePaola’s original art.

Northern Cardinal (Stamped Envelope)
The Northern Cardinal stamped envelope showcases one of the most beloved and popular songbirds native to North America. The art features a male cardinal, immediately recognizable by its crimson-colored feathers and black facial markings. Art director Antonio Alcalá designed the stamped envelope with Kandis Vermeer Phillips’s highly realistic illustration.

Bridges (Presorted First-Class Mail)
Four new Presorted First-Class Mail stamps will be available for purchase by bulk mail users in coils of 3,000 and 10,000. The stamps feature existing photographs of four different bridges that range from modern to historic, pedestrian to car-carrying, but all are important landmarks in their communities. They are the Arrigoni Bridge in Middletown, CT; the Bob Kerrey Pedestrian Bridge in Omaha, NE; the Skydance Bridge in Oklahoma City; and the Iowa-Illinois Memorial Bridge in Bettendorf, IA, and Moline, IL. Art director Ethel Kessler designed the stamps with existing photographs.

Life Magnified
These stamps reveal life on Earth like many have never seen it. Twenty stamps feature 20 different images taken with microscopes and highly specialized photographic techniques that capture details of life undetectable by the human eye. The images show the phenomena of life in exquisitely fine detail. While stunning on their own as works of art, these images also hold scientific significance. Art director Derry Noyes designed the stamps using existing photographs.

Postal Products
Customers may purchase stamps and other philatelic products through the Postal Store at usps.com/shopstamps, by calling 844-737-7826, by mail through USA Philatelic or at Post Office locations nationwide.

Mick and Mike Join AFDCS Board

[press release]
Zais and Moticha Join AFDCS Board

The Board of Directors has two new members: Mike Moticha and Mick Zais. They were running unopposed, along with incumbents Jim Tatum and Lloyd de Vries. The vote totals were:

Lloyd de Vries 236
Michael Moticha 234
Jim Tatum 233
Mick Zais 224

In addition, Fred Collins, Mark Gereb, Michael Rosenthal and David Lorms each received

Michael Moticha and Mick Zais

one write-in vote. The Election Committee chaired by Otto Thamasett (with Jack Ginsburg and Roy Souther) received 245 ballots, of which four were disqualified.

Tatum, who lives in Oregon, was first elected to the board in 2020, de Vries, of New Jersey, in 1986. Moticha is a long-time active member of the Claude C. Ries Chapter (Southern California) and is part of the AFDCS Auction Committee. Zais is a former president of the American Philatelic Society who resigned that post in 2018 to become U.S. Deputy Secretary of Education and later Acting Secretary of Education. He currently lives in South Carolina.

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.

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 246, Colonial Beach, VA 22443-0246, or via e-mail at afdcs@afdcs.org.

Early Information about U.S. Big Summer Show

The site for Great American Stamp Show 2023 — Cleveland’s Huntington Convention Center — has self-cleaning escalator hand-rails! Do you need another reason to go?

If so, here’s other new information about the show:

There is now information on the APS website: https://stamps.org/great-american-stamp-show

The show hotel is the Westin Cleveland Downtown, at $139/night. Use the link off the website or “AP1” (that’s a one) or ask for the American Philatelic Society room block.

The Westin is two block from the convention center. All guests will get free WiFi. The parking is valet parking at $42 a night. (A 20% discount may be available; APS is checking.)

Everything at the convention center is cashless. Use debit or credit cards.

The convention center has water bottle filling stations.

The meeting rooms are right outside the bourse area. You may not get a chance to use those escalators!

The U.S. Postal Service will have two first-days at the show.

On the website, you can already request meeting times for your organizations and sign up to volunteer.

Vandalism Delays AFDCS Auction Lots

From AFDCS Auctions chair John White:

With apologies, the pre-packaging and sending of final invoices for Auction 95 has been delayed due to vandalism in the county I live in – Moore County. Unknown parties shot-up multiple power sub-stations throughout the county, leaving over 40,000 people without power. The outage is estimated to extend to Thursday December 8th.

As many of you know, I am a full-time Firefighter/EMT with Aberdeen Fire/Rescue. I was on duty when the incident occurred. We were busy all night running calls of various nature, and assisting law enforcement with traffic control. Today I am at my part-time station, and will be back at Aberdeen tomorrow (Monday).

The lots have already been separated out by the winning bidders. As soon as power is restored, I will be able to get back to the task and get the invoices out to everyone.

According to The New York Times, the local sheriff “said that the attack appeared targeted, but did not provide further details on a motive or suspect.” A state senator called it a “terrible act, and it appears to be intentional, willful and malicious.”

Some of the damaged equipment will need to be replaced completely, and the outages could last until Thursday for some power customers.

U.S. Scott Catalogue Update (December 2022)

5727 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Camellia
5728 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Winter Aconite
5729 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Crocuses
5730 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Hellebore
5731 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Winterberry
5732 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Pansies
5733 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Plum Blossoms
5734 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Grape Hyacinths
5735 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Daffodils
5736 (60¢) Snowy Beauty – Ranunculus
a. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 2 each #5727-5736

5737 (60¢) Kwanzaa

5738 (60¢) Women Cryptologists of World War II
a. Imperforate

5739 (60¢) Hanukkah

U.S. Scott Catalogue Update (November 2022)

5721 (60¢) Christmas – Virgin and Child
a. Convertible booklet pane of 20

5722 (60¢) Christmas – Elf and Teddy Bear
5723 (60¢) Christmas – Elf Tying Ribbon
5724 (60¢) Christmas – Elf with Toy Car
5725 (60¢) Christmas – Elf with Rocket
a. Block of 4, #5722-5725
b. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5722-5725

5726 Peanuts Characters pane of 20, 2 each # 5726a-5726j
a. (60¢) Charlie Brown
b. (60¢) Lucy
c. (60¢) Franklin
d. (60¢) Sally
e. (60¢) Pigpen
f. (60¢) Linus
g. (60¢) Snoopy and Woodstock
h. (60¢) Schroeder
i. (60¢) Peppermint Patty
j. (60¢) Marcie
k. As #5726, imperforate
l. As #5726a, imperforate
m. As #5726b, imperforate
n. As #5726c, imperforate
o. As #5726d, imperforate
p. As #5726e, imperforate
q. As #5726f, imperforate
r. As #5726g, imperforate
s. As #5726h, imperforate
t. As #5726i, imperforate
u. As #5726j, imperforate

Canada’s 2023 Stamp Program

Updated October 30th, subject to change. Some of the information may not have been confirmed by Canada Post, but the agency did confirm no Lunar New Year stamps in 2023.

All links open in a new window.

January 30
March 1
April 3
April 18
May 8
May 1
May 23
June 21
June 28
July 12
August 28
September 28
October 19
October 30
November 2
November 2
November 7
November 9
November 16
Chloe Cooley
Flowers: Ranunculus
Eid
Animal Mothers and Babies
King Charles III definitive
Community Foundation semi-postal (literacy)
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Three Indigenous Leaders: Cournoyea, Manuel, Chalifoux
Denys Arcand
Let’s Take The Ferry!
“Women Who Made A Difference” / Quebec Feminists
National Day for Truth & Reconciliation (4 stamps)
Donald Sutherland
Willie O’Ree
Madonna and Child
Holiday: Winter Scenes
Mona Parsons (was “Courageous Canadian WWII resistance fighter”)
Diwali
Hanukkah

A mailing from Canada Post implies this is the end of the 2023 stamp programme. No mention was made of the previously-listed “A Picture Is Worth A Thousand Words.”