150th Anniversary of Artist Mondriaan (Netherlands 2022)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
PostNL Celebrates Mondrian Year with Golden Stamp

PostNL on April 14 issued a special gold stamp in honor of the 150th birthday of painter Piet Mondriaan. The Amersfoort culture alderman Fatma Koşer Kaya officially received the first copy of the gold stamp.

Victory Boogie Woogie
Mondriaan (1872-1944) became world famous with his geometrically abstract works. The gold stamp features a cutout of the Victory Boogie Woogie, Mondrian’s last painting from 1944. The unfinished work, owned by the Dutch state, hangs in the Kunstmuseum in The Hague. The font on the stamp for the value indication 1 and the Netherlands is a design by type designer Martin Majoor from Arnhem. For the rest of the typography, the SF Orson Casual Heavy by type designer Derek Vogelpohl (ShyFoundry) from Omaha, Nebraska was used.

Limited edition
The 24-carat gold stamp 150 years Piet Mondrian is printed in a limited edition. PostNL delivers the stamp including a special storage cassette with certificate of authenticity. The price is € 50.00. PostNL issues gold stamps exclusively on the occasion of special anniversaries and other special commemorations, always in a limited edition. The special thing about this latest issue is that colors other than gold have been used for the first time.

Cargo bike à la Mondrian
The golden 150th anniversary of Piet Mondriaan stamp was delivered today with an electric PostNL mailbox. For the occasion, this was provided with the characteristic black lines and colorful surfaces that we know from Mondrian’s paintings. Four of these mailbox bikes have been made that will continue to ride throughout the Mondriaan year. PostNL is replacing more and more vans with these types of cargo bikes, which are cleaner and more city-friendly. Hundreds of these are now driving through the Netherlands.

Special Artists meet Mondrian
Simultaneously with the presentation of the first gold stamp, alderman Koşer Kaya opened the exhibition Special Artists meet Mondriaan in the Mariënhof (Kleine Haag 2, Amersfoort). The exhibition consists of works by people with disabilities, who have been inspired by paintings by Mondriaan. In addition to paintings, drawings, textiles and ceramics are on display.

Availability
The golden stamp 150 years Mondriaan is, while stocks last, only available via the webshop [in Dutch] at the customer service of Collect Club on telephone number 088 – 868 99 00. The stamp shows value 1, intended for mail up to and including 20 grams with a destination in the Netherlands. The validity period is indefinite. [Inasmuch as the stamp costs €50 (about US$54.25), you’d be a fool to use it for a domestic letter — or even an international one! —VSC]

[The Wikipedia article on Mondriaan, or “Mondrian,” notes that he was living in New York City at the time of his death at age 71 from pneumonia.]

Eid (Canada 2022)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Stamp casts light on important Islamic festivals
Image of intricately designed lantern celebrates Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha

EDMONTON – Today, Canada Post issued its latest stamp celebrating Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, two of the most important festivals in the Islamic calendar.

The festivals begin in early May and early July, respectively, and are celebrated by more than one million Muslims in Canada, and millions more around the world.

About the festivals
Eid al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan, a holy month of fasting for Muslims; it is known as the Festival of Breaking the Fast. Eid al-Adha, the Festival of Sacrifice, follows and marks the end of the Hajj pilgrimage to one of the holiest sites in Islam, the Kaaba shrine in Mecca, Saudi Arabia. Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha, both of which can last several days, embody practices and values that are central to Islam, including empathy for those in need and appreciation for one’s community. These are expressed through prayers, communal feasts, family visits, gift-giving and acts of charity.

About the stamp
Designed by Soapbox Design of Toronto, the stamp features an Eid lantern casting colourful patterns of dappled light. Richard Nalli-Petta used a montage of photographs and illustrations to create layers of texture and background colour in the stamp. Rose and lily silhouettes by Irene Laschi appear on the Official First Day Cover and inside the booklet of six PermanentTM domestic rate stamps; flowers are a popular gift during Eid celebrations.

This is Canada Post’s fourth Eid stamp since 2017 and just one of several annual issues marking events of importance to Canada’s culturally diverse population. Others include Diwali, Hanukkah and Christmas.

Stamp products are available here [direct link] and at postal outlets across the country.

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Un timbre met en lumière deux fêtes islamiques importantes
L’image d’une lanterne aux motifs travaillés souligne l’Aïd al-Fitr et l’Aïd al Adha

EDMONTON – Aujourd’hui, Postes Canada a émis son plus récent timbre soulignant l’Aïd al-Fitr et l’Aïd al Adha, deux des fêtes les plus importantes de la religion islamique.

Plus d’un million de musulmans au Canada et des millions d’autres ailleurs dans le monde prendront part aux célébrations qui commenceront respectivement au début de mai et de juillet.

À propos de l’Aïd al-Fitr et de l’Aïd al-Adha
Marquant la fin du ramadan, un mois sacré de jeûne pour les musulmans, l’Aïd al-Fitr est aussi connu comme étant la fête de la rupture du jeûne. L’Aïd al-Adha, ou fête du sacrifice, suit et marque la fin du pèlerinage du Hadj vers l’un des lieux les plus sacrés de l’islam, le sanctuaire de la Kaaba à La Mecque, en Arabie saoudite. L’Aïd al-Fitr et l’Aïd al-Adha peuvent durer plusieurs jours. Ces deux fêtes incarnent les pratiques et les valeurs fondamentales de l’islam, comme l’empathie pour les personnes dans le besoin et l’appréciation pour sa communauté. Elles sont synonymes de prières, de festins communs, de visites familiales, de cadeaux et d’actes de charité.

À propos du timbre
Conçu par l’agence Soapbox Design de Toronto, le timbre illustre une lanterne de l’Aïd projetant différents éclats de lumière en motifs colorés. Richard Nalli-Petta a utilisé un montage de photos et d’illustrations pour créer l’effet texturé et coloré sur l’arrière-plan du timbre. Les fleurs étant très souvent offertes en cadeau pendant les célébrations de l’Aïd, des silhouettes de roses et de lis illustrées par Irene Laschi apparaissent sur le pli Premier Jour officiel et à l’intérieur du carnet de six timbres PermanentsMC au tarif du régime intérieur.

Ce quatrième timbre que Postes Canada dédie à l’Aïd depuis 2017 n’est qu’une des nombreuses émissions annuelles soulignant des moments importants pour la population culturellement diversifiée du Canada, comme Diwali, Hanoukka et Noël.

Les produits philatéliques sont offerts à [lien direct] et dans les comptoirs postaux de partout au pays.

Organ and Tissue Donation (Canada 2022)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New stamp raises awareness of organ and tissue donation

OTTAWA – More than 4,400 Canadians are waiting for a donation of a life-saving organ, and many more, for healthy tissue to recover from a potentially fatal illness. On 7 April, Canada Post released a new stamp to raise awareness of their need and encourage more people to register as organ and tissue donors.

A single organ donor can save up to eight lives, and a tissue donor can help save or improve the lives of up to 75 people. While the majority of Canadians support organ and tissue donation, fewer than one third have registered to do so. Registration usually takes minutes. Visit organtissuedonation.ca.

The stamp illustration, created by artist Christopher DeLorenzo, features two figures who form a heart connected by a pair of hands, each cradling a glowing star. Within the heart are abstract representations of the spirit of life, including flowers in bloom, a droplet of water and a bird in flight. Green, the official colour of organ and tissue donation, symbolizes hope and appears in various shades on the stamp design.

The stamp is sold in a booklet of 10. The Official First Day Cover is cancelled in Ottawa. The booklet and Official First Day Cover were printed by Lowe-Martin.Canada Post’s video:

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Un nouveau timbre vise à sensibiliser les gens au don d’organes et de tissus

OTTAWA – Plus de 4 400 personnes au pays attendent une greffe d’organe vitale, et de nombreuses autres sont en attente de tissus sains pour se remettre d’une maladie potentiellement mortelle. Aujourd’hui, Postes Canada a émis un nouveau timbre pour sensibiliser les gens au don d’organes et de tissus, et les inciter à s’inscrire.

Une seule personne faisant un don d’organes peut sauver jusqu’à huit vies et le don de tissus peut sauver ou aider jusqu’à 75 personnes. Bien que la majorité des gens au Canada soutiennent le don d’organes et de tissus, moins du tiers ont enregistré leur consentement, une formalité qui se fait souvent en quelques minutes. Visitez organtissuedonation.ca/fr.

Sur le timbre, illustré par Christopher DeLorenzo, on peut voir deux personnes dont les corps entrelacés forment un cœur. Elles ont chacune une étoile brillante dans la main. Le cœur comporte des représentations abstraites de l’esprit de la vie, comme des fleurs en train de s’épanouir, une goutte d’eau et un oiseau en vol. Le vert, la couleur officielle du don d’organes et de tissus symbolisant l’espoir, est illustré dans différentes nuances sur le timbre.

Le timbre est vendu en carnets de 10. Le pli Premier Jour officiel est oblitéré à Ottawa. Le carnet et le pli Premier Jour officiel ont été imprimés par Lowe-Martin.

Les produits de cette émission sont en vente à postescanada.ca et dans les comptoirs postaux d’un bout à l’autre du pays.

Migratory Birds (UK 2022)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
New Stamps from Royal Mail Explore Migratory Birds — The Spring And Summer Visitors to The UK

  • Issue Date: 7 April 2022
  • The 10-stamp set showcases the diversity of migratory birds that visit the UK
  • Bird migration is the annual, seasonal movement of birds along predefined routes, known as flyways, between their breeding and non-breeding grounds
  • Bird migration has fascinated and baffled naturalists for centuries
    The stamps were exclusively illustrated for Royal Mail by Irish ornithologist, Killian Mullarney
  • The stamps will be available at www.royalmail.com/migratorybirds, by phone on 03457 641 641 and 7,000 Post Office branches across the UK

Royal Mail has issued a new set of 10 stamps depicting Migratory Birds, that explore the spring and summer bird visitors to the UK.

The 10 featured birds have been exclusively illustrated in detail for Royal Mail by Irish ornithologist Killian Mullarney, one of Europe’s best-known bird artists. His work has featured in the Collins Bird Guide and on stamps issued in the Republic of Ireland.

The stamps showcase the diversity of migratory birds that arrive in the UK; from seabirds that migrate along the UK’s coastline, such as the Arctic Skua and Arctic Tern, to the exceptionally rare bird of prey, Montagu’s Harrier. [Shown on the right is the Presentation Pack.]

David Gold, Director External Affairs & Policy, Royal Mail, said: “The migratory journeys of the birds featured on these stamps are truly amazing. Their annual travels have fascinated and baffled naturalists for centuries. It is only now that we are beginning to understand what drives and maintains this amazing, high-risk–high-reward behaviour. We hope that these stamps ignite a new interest in this remarkable phenomenon.”

A miraculous journey
Bird migration is the annual, seasonal movement of birds along predefined routes, known as flyways, between their breeding and non-breeding grounds.

It is clear that migration is a perilous venture for birds, whatever their size. The numerous hazards to overcome include topography, sea crossings, inclement and extreme weather, food shortages, predators and hunting by humans, to name a few. Migration is a costly behaviour both in terms of the energy needed and also higher risk of mortality that it involves. Arguably, migrant birds are more susceptible to environmental change than their resident counterparts because these arduous migrations and dependence on different sites at different times of the year place them in multiple jeopardy.

For migration to exist in many different birds, the evolutionary benefits ought to outweigh the costs, and a growing body of evidence shows that to be the case. The seasonal availability of surplus food at higher latitudes and a favourable climate for breeding prove attractive and advantageous to many species. Migration allows birds to find themselves in their preferred climate and take advantage of seasonally abundant food, while simultaneously escaping the threats of local competition from other animals.

The stamps will be available from today (7 April) at www.royalmail.com/migratorybirds, by phone on 03457 641 641 and at 7,000 Post Offices branches across the UK.
Stamp-by-stamp:

Arctic Skua
Stercorarius parasiticus
A rakish seabird breeding in northern Scotland and migrating around the UK’s coasts. A pirate of the seas, eating mainly fish it steals from other birds by harassing them in flight. A decline in sand eels has affected it and other seabirds, and the spread of its predatory relative, the great skua, has also had an impact.

Migration: Arrives in April, leaves in August–September. Winters off the west coast of Africa, down to South Africa. Some birds cross the Atlantic, but most follow the coast of Europe and Africa.

Arctic Tern
Sterna paradisaea
A stunning dainty white seabird with buoyant agile flight. Dives into the water to catch small fish. Nests mostly in Scotland and Ireland, with some in Wales and England. Migrates along the UK’s coastline and often seen on inland lakes. Threats include commercial fishing of sand eels, which has been linked to food shortages, predation by the invasive American mink and climate change.

Migration: Arrives in May–June, leaves in July–October. Winters in the Southern Ocean off the pack ice of Antarctica, with some British birds reaching Australia.

Montagu’s Harrier
Circus pygargus
An elegant, long-winged bird of prey, hunting low over fields and marshes, often quartering back and forth in search of small birds and mammals. Exceptionally rare in the UK, down to just a single nesting pair in recent years. Nests (frequently in cereal crops) are often kept secret and protected to minimise disturbance. Always an uncommon bird, threatened by human persecution and loss of its preferred natural habitats.

Migration: Arrives in April–May, departs in September. Winters in the Sahel zone of western and central Africa in semi-arid desert and savannah.

Nightjar
Caprimulgus europaeus
A curious owl-like bird of open woodlands, heathlands and moors, seen at dawn and dusk. Song is an eerie mechanical, insect-like churring that rises and falls in pitch. Eats insects, especially moths, catching them expertly in flight. Nightjar numbers dropped from the 1950s due to the loss of heathland but have recovered with increasing availability of clear-felled or young conifers in plantations, plus concerted action to restore heathland.

Migration: Arrives in late April–May, departs in July–August. Migrates through Iberia and across the Sahara to winter in tropical forests of central and southern Africa.

Pied Flycatcher
Ficedula hypoleuca
Male in spring is a striking black and white, not even the size of a sparrow. A hole-nesting bird living in mature deciduous woods, especially oaks, in the western and northern UK. Always active, it cocks its tail and flicks its wings. Some males are polygamous and may rear multiple families. Their fortunes reflect the poor state of our woods and changing conditions on migration and wintering grounds.

Migration: Arrives in mid-April–June, departs in August–September. Crosses the Sahara to winter in tropical, humid forests of western and central Africa.

Stone-curlew
Burhinus oedicnemus
The odd-looking ‘goggle-eyed plover’ is a rare bird found mainly on the Brecklands of Norfolk and Suffolk and around Salisbury Plain. Most active at night, it has large yellow eyes that are adapted for hunting invertebrates in the twilight. It breeds on stony ground with sparse vegetation, including on arable farmland. Numbers crashed as its preferred habitat shrank away. A partial recovery is thanks to the protection efforts of farmers, landowners and conservation bodies.

Migration: Arrives in March–April, departs in August–September. Winters in southwestern France, Spain and northwestern Africa.

Swallow
Hirundo rustica
The first flash of the royal blue, red and white of a swallow across a field is eagerly anticipated as the start of spring. Males return to breed first and twitter for attention. A widespread bird of the countryside, it nests in sheds and farm buildings. Agile in flight, it feeds on flying insects caught on the wing. Renovation of traditional buildings and nest sites poses a threat, as do falling insect numbers.

Migration: Arrives in April–May, departs in September–October. Travels through Iberia and western and central Africa to winter in South Africa.

Swift
Apus apus
Its black scythe-shaped silhouette is unmistakable, as is its screaming call. Spends more time in flight than any other bird, even sleeping on the wing. Widespread in the British Isles. A steady downturn in numbers is due to the loss of nest sites in old buildings and probably a fall in insect food. The swifts’ marathon migration also makes them vulnerable to harsh weather conditions along the way.

Migration: Arrives in late April–May, departs abruptly in August. Travels via Iberia into western Africa and on into central and southeastern Africa, reaching the Indian Ocean.

Turtle Dove
Streptopelia turtur
The purring song of this brightly coloured dove is the soundtrack of an English summer. Lives in scrub and woodland, heathland, in hedges and field margins on farmland. Found across the south and east of England. Numbers have dwindled as the countryside has changed and food supplies and nesting habitats have been lost. Added to this are the perils of annual migration through a hostile Mediterranean, where the species is hunted.

Migration: Arrives in May, departs in July–September. Migrates south through Iberia and northwestern Africa to winter in tropical western Africa.

Yellow Wagtail
Motacilla flava
Has a striking yellow head and mainly bright lemon plumage, with a long, white-edged black tail. Found in central and eastern England, where numbers are falling. Breeds on wet grasslands, water meadows and marshes, but also in arable crops. Its preferred traditional habitats are being lost to drainage and conversion, and as mixed farming has waned. These birds are also vulnerable to harsh conditions along their migration routes.

Migration: Arrives in March–May (males return first) and departs in August–September. Migrates through Iberia into northern Africa, crossing the Sahara to winter in sub-Saharan western Africa.

Philatelic Products
Stamp Set AS8400 £9.50
First Day Envelope AE440 £0.30
Presentation Pack AP505 £10.40
First Day Cover – Stamps AF485 £12.05
Stamp Souvenir AW214 £12.05
Postcards AQ321 £4.50
Framed Stamps N3286 £19.99
Full Sheet (x50 Nightjar – Arctic Skua) AS8400AFS £47.50
Half Sheet (x25 Nightjar – Arctic Skua) AS8400AHS £23.75
Full Sheet (x50 Stone Curlew – Montagu’s Harrier) AS8400BFS £47.50
Half Sheet (x25 Stone Curlew – Montagu’s Harrier) AS8400BHS £23.75 There are three first day cancellations available for this issue, two of them pictorials: Technical Specifications:

Number of stamps
Value of Stamps
Design
Illustrations
Stamp Format
Number per sheet
Stamp Size
Printer
Print Process
Perforations
Phosphor
Gum
Ten
1st class
hat-trick design
Killian Mullarney
landscape
25/50
41mm x 30mm
International Security
lithography
14.5 x 14
bars as appropriate
PVA

Delftware Tulip Vases (Netherlands 2022)

[from a press release]
Date of issue: 21 March 2022
Form: sheet with six stamps in six different designs, with value 1 for post up to and including 20 grams for a destination within the Netherlands
Item number: 420161
Design: Jeremy Jansen, Amsterdam
Lithography: Marc Gijzen, Voorburg

The six different stamps in this sheet feature tulip vases from the collections of a number of Dutch museums. The production of these unique glazed earthenware vases reached its peak at the end of the 17th century. The denomination on these stamps is ‘1’, the denomination for items weighing up to 20g destined for the Netherlands.

The history of Delftware is closely linked to that of Chinese porcelain. Delft was one of the VOC’s trading posts, with warehouses where large stocks of this porcelain were stored. [“VOC” stands for “Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie,” the Dutch East India Company. — VSC] Delft potters developed a type of tin-glazed earthenware that could be compared to Chinese porcelain in terms of shape, shine and decoration. Delftware owes its fame mainly to the flower vases with spouts, known since the 19th century as tulip vases. From 1680 onwards, these vases appeared on the market in all shapes and sizes: from gourd bottles, triumphal arches, bowl shapes and goddesses with spouts on their heads to flower pyramids. The pyramids consist of spherical or square segments that are stacked to incredible heights, with the tallest one being almost 2 metres tall. Flowers such as tulips, carnations, Sweet Williams, hyacinths, daffodils and Persian ranunculus could be inserted into the spouts. Often they were also displayed empty on a table, as a showpiece. Because of their decoration, often with Far-Eastern figures and motifs, the vases evoke associations with the Far East. Their construction can also be reminiscent of Chinese pagodas.

The Delftware tulip vases issue features nine different vases, with some vases appearing several times on a number of stamps. Three stamps feature a single vase, two stamps feature three vases, and one stamp features four vases. The three large vases on the stamps are varnished, giving them a porcelain-like sheen. The edge of the sheet not only features all the vases again, but also the names of the museums that have these tulip vases in their collections. The background colour behind the name of each museum corresponds to the colour beneath their vases. Some of the typography on the stamps is placed in a vertical reading direction. On all stamps, the sorting hook is placed at the bottom right-hand side.

Designer Jeremy Jansen studied the subject by consulting catalogues of Dutch museums that have Delftware tulip vases in their collections. ‘For example the Kunstmuseum in The Hague published a wonderful book about a retrospective exhibition in 2007. This catalogue is also an inventory of where all these vases can be found around the world. For practical reasons, I limited myself to vases in Dutch museums. I kept the idea of an inventory in mind, so the stamp sheet has become a sampler, a visual overview of the vases that can be viewed in the Netherlands.’

The stamp sheet features nine different tulip vases from four different museums, using existing images.

The order on the sheet edge, clockwise from top left:

  • Bowl-shaped flower vase, pottery De Grieksche A, tin-glazed earthenware, height 28.8 cm, circa 1690 (Kunstmuseum Den Haag)
  • Flower vase with a blue and white decor of Chinese motifs, pottery De Metaale Pot, tin-glazed earthenware, height 61 cm, 1685-1691 (Keramiekmuseum Princessehof Leeuwarden)
  • Flower pyramid in the style of a Chinese pagoda, pottery unknown, tin-glazed earthenware, height 108 cm, circa 1700 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam)
  • Octagonal gourd flask with spouts, pottery De Grieksche A, tin-glazed earthenware, height 29.7 cm, circa 1690 (Het Loo palace, Apeldoorn)
  • Flower vase with spouts, in the shape of a gourd flask, pottery De Grieksche A, tin-glazed earthenware, height 28.2 cm, circa 1690 (Kunstmuseum Den Haag)
  • Flower vase with five spouts, pottery De Metaale Pot, tin-glazed earthenware, height 16 cm, circa 1690-1715 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam)
  • Flower vase, pottery De Metaale Pot, tin-glazed earthenware, height 28.4 cm, circa 1691-1724 (Kunstmuseum Den Haag)
  • Flower vase with mirror monogram WR (Willem Rex) and bust of king-stadtholder Willem III, pottery De Metaale Pot, tin-glazed earthenware, height 39.8 cm, circa 1695-1702 (Het Loo palace, Apeldoorn)
  • Flower pyramid consisting of 11 segments, attributed to pottery De Metaale Pot, tin-glazed earthenware, height 156 cm, circa 1692-1700 (Rijksmuseum Amsterdam)

The Delftware tulip vases stamps are available while stocks last at the post office counter in Bruna shops and at https://shop.postnl.nl/webshop/collect-club/delftse-tulpenvazen-6-vel-nl1 [in Dutch]. The stamps can also be ordered by phone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number +31 (0)88 868 99 00. The validity period is indefinite.

Technical Details:
Stamp size: 25 x 36mm
Sheet size: 75 x 144mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Glue: synthetic
Printing technique: offset, varnish
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow, black, blue and orange
Edition: 91,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in six different designs
Design: Jeremy Jansen, Amsterdam
Lithography: Marc Gijzen, Voorburg
Printing company: Koninklijke Joh. Enschedé B.V., Haarlem
Item number: 420161

Typically Dutch – Hockey (Netherlands 2022)

[from a press release]
Issue: Typically Dutch – Hockey
Date of issue: 21 March 2022
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in six identical designs
Item number: 420361
Design: Claire Bedon and Edwin van Praet (Total Design), Amsterdam

This issue is the second in the Typically Dutch series this year. In 2022, the multi-annual series is dedicated to five sports in which the Dutch excel. Other stamps in the series are Skating (3 January), Cycling (4 April), Sailing (9 May) and Football (15 August).

Pim Mulier introduced hockey to the Netherlands in 1891. The first hockey clubs were soon established in Amsterdam, Haarlem and The Hague, followed in 1898 by the Nederlandsche Hockey & Bandy Bond, now called Koninklijke Nederlandse Hockey Bond (KNHB, ‘Royal Dutch Hockey Association’). On 23 January 1926, the Dutch men’s hockey team played its very first international match. In Antwerp, they defeated the national team of Belgium, scoring 1-2.

Hockey is a major sport in the Netherlands, with over 250,000 active hockey players based at more than 300 clubs across the country. They play field hockey (September-December and March-June) and indoor hockey (December-February). The Dutch women’s and men’s teams have been competing at the highest level for many years. Both teams won many awards, including Olympic titles (women’s team in 1984, 2008, 2012 and 2020, men’s team in 1996 and 2000). The women’s team has won the world title eleven times, while the men’s team has won it three times.

Hockey matches last 4 x 17.5 minutes and are played by two teams of eleven players. Each team may use up to five substitutes. Indoor hockey matches are played by two teams of six players each. An indoor team may have up to six substitutes on the bench. Unlike football, players may be substituted an unlimited number of times in hockey.

The stamps show an illustration of a hockey player in action. She has the ball on her stick and is about to make a passing move. In the background are the 23m line and the shooting circle, representing the typical layout of a hockey pitch. At the bottom of each stamp is a white strip with the sorting hook, the year 2022, the country (Netherlands) and the denomination 1. The ball and the hockey player’s right shoe run through this strip. The same is happening with the ponytail in the white strip at the top. The logo for the Typically Dutch series is printed above each stamp, with a folded Dutch banner on the left and right. The picture is repeated in enlarged form on the edge of the sheet.

The 2022 stamps for the multi-annual Typically Dutch series were once again designed by Total Design from Amsterdam.

‘We explored two types of sports,’ explains Edwin van Praet, creative director at Total Design. ‘On the one hand, there were the Old Dutch sports often tied in with a particular region. Like klootschieten, beugelen, kaatsen and fierljeppen. On the other hand, we had the sports loved by everyone in the Netherlands. Sports linked to our culture, with water and with large numbers taking part in them: football, hockey, horse riding, swimming, korfball, sailing, golf, et cetera. Often, these are the sports the Dutch excel in, where we’re at the top internationally. Based on that initial selection, we created mood boards, a collection of photographs and images to establish the tone. Then we started sketching.’

A striking feature of the design is that both the ball and the right shoe protrude out of the picture and continue onto the strip at the bottom of the stamp. The same is happening with the ponytail in the white strip at the top. ‘They’re very small details,’ explains Van Praet, ‘but it reinforces the impression that the hockey player is coming towards you.’ You’re involved in the action, you’re the fan sitting in the stadium, watching a sportsperson coming towards you.’

The stamps are available while stocks last at the post office counter in Bruna shops and at www.postnl.nl/bijzondere-postzegels [in Dutch]. The stamps can also be ordered by phone from the Collect Club customer service on telephone number +31 (0)88 868 99 00. The validity period is indefinite.

Technical Details:
Postage stamp dimensions: 30 x 40 mm:
Sheet size: 170 x 122 mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Gum: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow, black and orange
Print run: 75,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of 6 stamps in 6 identical designs
Design: Edwin van Praet and Claire Bedon, Total Design, Amsterdam
Printing company: Cartor Security Printers, Meaucé-La Loupe, France
Item number: 420361

Typically Dutch: Cycling (Netherlands 2022)

[from a press release]

Issue: Typically Dutch – Cycling
Date of issue: 4 April 2022
Appearance: sheet of six stamps in six identical designs
Item number: 420461
Design: Claire Bedon and Edwin van Praet (Total Design), Amsterdam

On 4 April 2022, PostNL will publish the Typically Dutch – cycling stamp sheet. This issue is the third in the Typically Dutch series this year. In 2022, the multi-annual series is dedicated to five sports in which the Dutch excel. Earlier this year, stamps featuring ice skating (3 January) and hockey (21 March) were published as part of this series. Later this year, PostNL will publish stamps featuring the typically Dutch sports of sailing (9 May) and football (15 August).

There’s nothing more Dutch than a bicycle. The Netherlands is home to more bicycles (22.9 million) than people. With all those bicycles, we travel some 17.4 billion kilometres per year, which is around 1,000km per person, with an average speed of 15.6km/hour. Relatively, the most kilometres are covered by the 36,000 cyclists who are members of the over 370 cycling clubs in the Netherlands. Their interests are protected by the Koninklijke Nederlandsche Wielren Unie (KNWU, ‘Royal Dutch Cycling Union’), which was founded in 1928. Besides road cycling, there are many other cycling disciplines: BMX, track cycling, cyclocross, mountain biking, beach racing, para-cycling and artistic cycling.

The Netherlands has produced many famous cyclists, including big names such as Jan Jansen (Tour de France winner), Hennie Kuiper (gold medallist at the Olympic Games), Joop Zoetemelk (Tour de France and Vuelta de España winner) and Tom Dumoulin (Giro d’Italia winner). The Dutch are often also world leaders in disciplines such as track cycling (Jeffrey Hoogland, Harrie Lavreysen) and cyclocross (Lars Boom, Matthieu van der Poel). The achievements of Dutch female cyclists are even more impressive. Especially over the past few decades, Dutch women have dominated global cycling. Well-known champions are Leontien van Moorsel (four Olympic gold medals, Tour de France Féminin winner; shown on the right), Marianne Vos (one Olympic gold medal, twice World Championships winner in road cycling, three times Giro Rosa winner), Anna van der Breggen (one Olympic gold medal, twice World Championships winner in road cycling, once World Championships winner in time trial, four times Giro Rosa winner) and Annemiek van Vleuten (one Olympic gold medal, once World Championships winner in road cycling, twice World Championships winner in time trial, twice Giro Rosa winner).

The stamps on the Typical Dutch – cycling stamp sheet feature an illustration of a cyclist gaining momentum by getting out of the saddle and pushing the bicycle to the left. In the bottom right-hand corner, three diagonal lines can be seen in the background, representing the lines on a cycle track and on public roads. At the bottom of each stamp is a white strip with the sorting hook, the year 2022, the country (Netherlands) and the denomination 1. The tyre of the front wheel continues onto the strip a little way. The same is happening with the bicycle helmet in the white strip at the top. The logo for the Typically Dutch series is printed above each stamp, with a folded Dutch banner on the left and right. The picture is repeated in enlarged form on the edge of the sheet. The dominant colour blue continues on the two tabs on the right. The Typically Dutch logo appears once more on the top edge of the sheet, while the bottom edge features a short explanatory text.

The mood of the Typically Dutch – cycling stamps is created by the colour blue in the background, with orange (helmet, front fork), red (cycling shirt), yellow (face, arms, legs) and black (glasses, bib shorts, handlebars, cycling shoes, front wheel, pedals and bottom bracket) as contrasting colours. Van Praet: ‘All five issues this year include the colours of the Dutch flag. In the right order: first red, then white, then blue and finally two kinds of orange. Diversity was essential. The series features two female athletes, two male athletes including the cyclist, and one neutral figure.’

Technical Specifications:
Postage stamp dimensions: 30 x 40 mm:
Sheet size: 170 x 122 mm
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Gum: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow, black and orange
Print run: 75,000 sheets
Appearance: sheet of 6 stamps in 6 identical designs
Design: Edwin van Praet and Claire Bedon, Total Design, Amsterdam
Printing company: Cartor Security Printers, Meaucé-La Loupe, France
Item number: 420461

Heroes of the Covid Pandemic (UK 2022)

[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions]
Heroes of the Covid Pandemic

Issue Date: 23rd March 2022 • Webpage for ordering Products
Stamp set AS8300 £6.80
Presentation Pack AP504 £7.70
First Day Cover – Stamps AF484 £8.80
Stamp Souvenir Cover AW213 £8,80
First Day Envelope AE439 £0.30
Postcards AQ320 £3.60
Full Sheet 48 x 1st Class AS8300AFS £40.80
Half Sheet 24 x 1st Class AS8300AHS £20.40
Full Sheet 48 x 1st Class AS8300BFS £40.80
Half Sheet 24 x 1st Class AS8300BHS £20.40

In Spring 2020, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Royal Mail Chief Executive, Simon Thompson launched a special stamp design competition. School children from across the UK were invited to design a postage stamp featuring their own hero or heroes of the Covid pandemic. The response was unprecedented, with surplus 600,000 children taking part.

With over a world record-breaking 600,000 entries, Royal Mail carefully selected 120 regional finalists. From this, a special panel of judges, including the Prime Minister, picked 24 regional winners. The final eight winning designs, featured below, were personally selected by HRH The Prince of Wales, with the finished stamps approved by Her Majesty The Queen.

Stamps Technical Details
Number of stamps: Eight
Design: Royal Mail Group
Illustrations: By competition winners Jessica Roberts, Shachow Ali, Raphael Valle Martin, Alfie Craddock, Logan Pearson, Isabella Grover, Connie Stuart and Ishan Bains
Stamp Format: Landscape
Stamp Size: 37mm x 35mm
Number per sheet: 24/48
Printer: International Security Printers
Print Process: Lithography
Perforations: 14 x 14.5
Phosphor: Bars as appropriate
Gum: PVA

Presentation PackThe Heroes of the Covid Pandemic Presentation Pack includes all eight stamps in mint condition. Designed to reflect the nature of the children’s competition, the colourful theme from the eight final stamps is weaved throughout the pack too.

As well as the eight winning designs, the pack celebrates the 24 regional winners, presenting 12 winners on each side. The final designs showcase the children’s heroes from all walks of life; from bus and delivery drivers to food banks, NHS workers and chemists.

The text of the Presentation Pack:
“From our family members, teachers, doctors and nurses to our vaccine scientists and fundraisers, we want to recognise and remember them.” Prime Minister Boris Johnson

Last spring, Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Royal Mail Chief Executive Simon Thompson launched a special stamp design competition. School-aged children across the UK were invited to design a postage stamp featuring their own hero or heroes of the Covid pandemic.

The response was unprecedented. By the time the competition had closed some two months later, hundreds of thousands of children, all aged between 4 and 14, had taken part. With a record-breaking 606,049 entries, the competition had even achieved a new Guinness World Records® title. Over the following weeks, 120 regional finalists were carefully selected. From this shortlist, a special panel of judges, which included the Prime Minister, picked 24 regional winners. Finally, the eight winning designs were personally chosen by HRH The Prince of Wales. The finished stamps were approved by Her Majesty The Queen before being printed and issued.

First Day Cover
Includes all eight Special Stamps cancelled with a choice of either the Tallents House or alternative London EC1 postmark, dated 23.3.22.

The First Day Cover also includes:
• First Day Envelope – includes Heroes of the Covid Pandemic titling on the front
• Filler card – brings together a montage of all 24 regional finalist designs, as well as a brief summary of the stamp issue and the names of the competition finalists.

Stamp Souvenir
The Stamp Souvenir is a non-personalised version of the traditional First Day Cover, which unlike the FDC will not have the customer’s name and address printed on the front. This will be on sale for 90 days from the issue date; until 23rd June 2022. It includes the same Filler Card as the First Day Cover (see above) and is cancelled with the alternative postmark.

There is also a set of postcards:

The Netherlands from The Air, Set 1 (2022)

Issue date: 22 March
Groningen, Friesland, Drenthe

Issue: The Netherlands from the Air
Appearance: 12 sheets of five different personal stamps marked ‘Nederland 1’, the denomination for post weighing up to 20g sent to an address within the Netherlands
Design: studio026, Velp
Photography: Karel Tomeï, Eindhoven

In 2022, PostNL will be issuing a series of 12 personal stamps entitled Kijk op Nederland (The Netherlands from the Air). Each stamp in the series features an aerial photograph of a prominent site in the Netherlands, based on the themes of architecture, buildings, infrastructure, nature and water. The sheets will be issued in four sets, 22 March, 14 June, 13 September, and 15 November.

More details on the series are here.

This set:
Groningen
Fortified village (Bourtange), salt marsh (Hornhuizen), Groninger Museum (Groningen), art installation De Natte Ogen (Winschoten), Damsterdiep (Eemskanaal)

Friesland
ir. D.F. Wouda Steam Pumping Station – Woudagemaal (Lemmer), Afsluitdijk (Kornwerderzand), Het Rif (Schiermonnikoog), skûtsjesilen (De Veenhoop), Achmea tower (Leeuwarden)

Drenthe
LOFAR telescope (Exloo), roundabout (Coevorden), brinkdorp (Noord-Sleen), Bargerveen Nature Reserve (Veenland), Hunebedcentrum dolmen (Borger)

Technical Details:
Sheet size: 102 x 148 mm (wxh)
Stamp size: 40 x 30mm (wxh)
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Gum: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow, black and blue
Print run: 5,000 sheets per issue

The Netherlands from the Air (2022)

Issue: The Netherlands from the Air
Appearance: 12 sheets of five different personal stamps marked ‘Nederland 1’, the denomination for post weighing up to 20g sent to an address within the Netherlands
Design: studio026, Velp
Photography: Karel Tomeï, Eindhoven

In 2022, PostNL will be issuing a series of 12 personal stamps entitled Kijk op Nederland (The Netherlands from the Air). Each stamp in the series features an aerial photograph of a prominent site in the Netherlands, based on the themes of architecture, buildings, infrastructure, nature and water. The themes are shown at the top of each stamp sheet. Each theme was assigned its own colour, which in turn corresponds to the colour of the typography on the stamps. Each stamp states where the picture was taken, what we are looking at and what the title of the series is. The bottom edge of the sheet features an enlargement of one of the aerial photos as a background image.

The top of the sheet edge features a graphic representation of a fictitious Dutch subdivision pattern. By colouring in parts of it, the letters of the title of the series have been made visible on top of the subdivision pattern: KIJK OP NEDERLAND. The title becomes visible when all the stamp sheets are placed side by side. [Click to see a much, much bigger image.]On the left edge of the sheet, under the provincial name, is a map of the Netherlands depicting the provincial boundaries. The relevant province is picked out in colour.

The sheets will be issued on four dates, as follows:Item number: 820031 Groningen 22 March
Item number: 820032 Friesland, 22 March
Item number: 820033 Drenthe, 22 MarchItem number: 820034 Overijssel, 14 June
Item number: 820035 Flevoland, 14 June
Item number: 820036 Gelderland, 14 JuneItem number: 820037 Utrecht, 13 September
Item number: 820038 Noord-Holland, 13 September
Item number: 820039 Zuid-Holland, 13 SeptemberItem number: 820040 Zeeland, 15 November
Item number: 820041 Noord-Brabant, 15 November
Item number: 820042 Limburg, 15 November

Details on the 22 March set are posted here.
Details on the 14 June set will be posted here.
Details on the 13 September set will be posted here.
Details on the 15 November set will be posted.

In addition to the usual stamp release schedule, PostNL also has an annual personal stamp release schedule. This programme is flexible. It allows PostNL to respond to topical developments and requests. Each issue is designed based on a fixed layout with a fixed number of personal stamps. The stamps are available while stocks last on the webshop.

The design of the personal stamps for the The Netherlands from the Air series was created by Huub de Lang and Anne Schaufeli of studio26 in Velp. They designed stamps for PostNL before, but this was the first commission for a series. ‘With a huge topic this time,’ says Anne Schaufeli. ‘The brief was to depict the Netherlands from above on 12 stamp sheets using existing photographic material. One province per stamp sheet – that was our starting point. Then we developed our concept, as usual. The main thing that struck us is that if you look at the Netherlands from above, you notice that everything is cultivated down to the square metre. This malleability of the landscape is reflected in the subdivision patterns that you can often only see clearly from the air. The land was divided and delimited through subdivision, revealing the intervention of man. This is really characteristic of the Netherlands. We found the balance between man and nature to be an excellent theme to pursue further. This is typical of our approach: first we plan, then we work it out. This way, we could also find images that could represent the Netherlands in the same way on all stamp sheets.’

Based on the concept they had drawn up, Schaufeli and De Lang established the selection criteria for the photos. ‘We decided to use the themes of architecture, buildings, infrastructure, nature and water,’ Schaufeli explains. ‘As these are pretty broad terms, we were able to use a large variety of images. For each province, we first looked at which landmarks would qualify. This included logical candidates such as the Afsluitdijk, for example, plus the Delta Works, the windmills at Kinderdijk and the Ridderkerk intersection, of course. But the search for images also threw up all kinds of surprises. Like the Natte Ogen art installation in the Haringvliet near Winschoten and the green cathedral at Almere.’

Dutch photographer Karel Tomeï specialises in aerial photography. Schaufeli: Following our advice, PostNL contacted Tomeï to ask if he would like to participate in this series of stamps. So he started looking for images with the concept and themes as guidelines. Sometimes the image we were looking for could not be found, other times he came up with pictures we were not expecting. Or he would send us a beautiful image, but the content just didn’t fit the concept. And vice versa. We ended up looking at masses of pictures.’

According to Schaufeli, other criteria also played a part in the selection of the 60 photos for the 12 stamp sheets. ‘We didn’t want too much repetition. Like 12 bridges, for example. And each stamp sheet had to give an equivalent overall picture. That was a bit of a puzzle, to say the least. The angle at which the photos were taken is important. We would have preferred them all to be taken straight from above, but that does not work in all cases. For example, if you want to feature a tall building. However, our aim to get as many pictures taken straight from above sometimes ended up with amazing results. Take the Groninger Museum, for example, which makes a very different impression from the air than it does from the side.’

Technical Details:
Sheet size: 102 x 148 mm (wxh)
Stamp size: 40 x 30mm (wxh)
Paper: normal with phosphor print
Gum: gummed
Printing technique: offset
Printing colours: cyan, magenta, yellow, black and blue
Print run: 5,000 sheets per issue