Total Solar Eclipse (Canada 2024)

by Danforth Guy

Here’s a first look at the Total Solar Eclipse stamp, marking the center line of the path of totality from Niagara Falls, Ontario/New York to Bonavista, Newfoundland & Labrador. The stamp shows the Horseshoe Falls and the rugged coastline near Bonavista, including The Chimney, a great tower of rock.

The stamps will come in booklets of 10 at the domestic rate of 92c (‘P’). One postal source says they are set to be issued on March 5. A national stamp group is guessing it’s March 14. The VSC calendar says April. [That was from a Canada Post press release on December 20th.]

This image comes from a countertop placemat in a post office, hence the low quality. (Click on it for a larger version; we have cleaned it up.)


[press release] [click on any of the pictures for larger versions] [Canada Post video follows French version]
New stamp marks the upcoming total eclipse of the sun
Awe-inspiring phenomenon won’t be visible in Canada for another 20 years

NIAGARA FALLS, ON, March 14, 2024 /CNW/ – Today, Canada Post issued a new commemorative stamp to mark a much-anticipated astronomical phenomenon. On Monday, April 8, the shadow of the moon will turn daylight to darkness for millions of Canadians, as a total eclipse of the sun unfolds over parts of Mexico, the United States and Canada.

It will be the only time this century that the path of a total solar eclipse will cross parts of North America’s three largest countries.
In Canada, the awe-inspiring spectacle – which won’t be visible here again until 2044 – will trace a path of darkness, called the path of totality, across parts of Ontario, Quebec and the Maritimes.

[On the left, the booklet pane and OFDC under black light.]

Once considered an evil omen, a total solar eclipse occurs when the moon passes between the Earth and the sun in such a way that it blocks the face of the sun from view. The event unfolds over approximately two hours. However, it peaks in a few precious minutes of totality when the sun is completely obscured and the ghostly glow from its chromosphere and corona frames a perfect silhouette of the moon.

The stamp image depicts the sun at the moment of totality as well as a line showing the path of the eclipse from its entrance point in southwestern Ontario to its exit point in eastern Newfoundland and Labrador. Across the bottom of the stamp is a photomontage of land formations along the path of totality, including Ontario’s Niagara Falls, New Brunswick’s Hopewell Rocks, and Spillars Cove in Newfoundland and Labrador.

This stamp is Canada Post’s first one to feature a solar eclipse.

WARNING: Looking at the sun without proper protection can cause serious eye damage. For more information on eye safety during the eclipse, visit the How to safely watch a solar eclipse page on the Canadian Space Agency website.

About the stamp
The stamp was designed by Richard Nalli-Petta and illustrated by Michal Karcz. Printed by Colour Innovations, the issue includes 200,000 booklets of 10 Permanent™ domestic rate stamps and 6,000 Official First Day Covers cancelled in Niagara Falls, Ont. – one of the first Canadian cities on the eclipse’s path of totality.

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

[en Francais pour les médias d’information]
Un nouveau timbre marque l’éclipse totale du Soleil
L’impressionnant phénomène ne se reproduira pas au Canadaavant 20 ans.

NIAGARA FALLS, ON, le 14 mars 2024 /CNW/ – Aujourd’hui, Postes Canada a émis un timbre commémoratif pour marquer un phénomène astronomique très attendu. Le lundi 8 avril, l’ombre de la Lune plongera dans la noirceur des millions de personnes au pays, alors qu’une éclipse totale du Soleil touchera certaines parties du Mexique, des États-Unis et du Canada.

Ce sera la seule fois ce siècle-ci qu’une éclipse solaire totale se produira au-dessus des trois plus grands pays nord-américains.

Au Canada, l’impressionnant spectacle, qui ne sera de nouveau visible ici qu’en 2044, créera une ligne d’obscurité, appelée bande de totalité, traversant l’Ontario, le Québec et les Maritimes.

Autrefois considérée comme un mauvais présage, une éclipse solaire totale survient lorsque la Lune passe entre la Terre et le Soleil, de sorte que ce dernier est entièrement caché par la Lune. Le spectacle dure environ deux heures. Toutefois, il atteint son apogée durant les quelques précieuses minutes de totalité où le soleil est entièrement caché et la lumière fantomatique de la chromosphère et de la couronne solaire dessine la silhouette de la Lune.

L’image du timbre illustre le Soleil au moment de la totalité, ainsi qu’une ligne représentant la trajectoire de l’éclipse depuis son point d’entrée dans le sud-ouest de l’Ontario jusqu’à son point de sortie dans l’est de Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador. Dans le bas de la vignette se trouve un photomontage de formations terrestres le long de la bande de totalité, y compris les chutes Niagara, en Ontario, les rochers Hopewell, au Nouveau-Brunswick et Spillars Cove, à Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador.

C’est la première fois que Postes Canada lance un timbre à l’occasion d’une éclipse solaire.

AVERTISSEMENT: Regarder le Soleil sans protection adéquate peut causer de graves dommages aux yeux. Pour des précisions sur la sécurité oculaire pendant l’éclipse, consultez la page Comment observer sans danger une éclipse solaire sur le site de l’Agence spatiale canadienne.

À propos du timbre
Le timbre a été conçu par Richard Nalli-Petta et illustré par Michal Karcz. Imprimée par Colour Innovations, l’émission comprend 200 000 carnets de 10 timbres PermanentsMC du régime intérieur et 6 000 plis Premier Jour officiels. Le lieu d’oblitération est Niagara Falls, en Ontario, l’une des premières villes canadiennes sur la trajectoire de l’éclipse.

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

4 thoughts on “Total Solar Eclipse (Canada 2024)

  1. Is it possible to send your own unserviced stamped Canadian covers from the US to Canada for FDC cancellations?

    • Yes, it is. There’s a small cancellation fee (CAD $0.15 per cover); for a little more (CAD $0.20), they will affix the stamp for you, so you don’t have to order stamps separately and wait for them to arrive. In that case, you also have to pay for the cost of a booklet or sheet of stamps (about CAD $5.52 for most commemoratives), and they’ll use one for the cover and send you the rest of the booklet.

      The address that you mail your covers to is:
      The National Philatelic Centre
      133 Church St. Unit 1
      Antigonish NS B2G 2R8
      CANADA

      • One other rule to be aware of: You must buy the stamps in complete units. In this case, that’s 10 stamps. (There are 10 stamps on the pane.) Canada Post will also supply envelopes for 25 cents each (stamp and postmark included) but I’ve never asked what size they are!

  2. Considering how much of the US is going to get to experience a total eclipse, and how long it will be till the next one (which will have far less extensive geographic coverage), you really have to wonder what the USPS stamp selection committee was, or was not, thinking. It will be a once in a lifetime experience for millions of people, but instead the USPS packed the schedule with time not sensitive, easily-deferred till another year issues (even if some are quite attractive). Good call, Canada. You get the eclipse. We get pin-back buttons.

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