Philatelic News

Worldwide news about postage stamps, stamp collecting, philatelic literature, exhibitions, auctions and more!

Royal Mail looked back at more than seven decades of popular stage musicals to find the most suitable shows for the set.  Criteria included the shows’ origin, writers and composers, longevity and success. A conscious effort was taken to represent the evolving nature of musical theatre, and to include shows based upon successful films and songs from popular artists’ back catalogues. Oliver, Blood Brothers, We Will Rock You, Monty Python’s Spamalot, Me and My Girl, Return to the Forbidden Planet and Billy Elliot were chosen.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 24/Feb/2011
  • Denominations: 1st class: Oliver!, Blood Brothers, We Will Rock You and Monty Python’s Spamalot. 97p: The Rocky Horror Show, Me and My Girl, Return to the Forbidden Planet and Billy Elliot
  • Printing process: Lithography
  • Design: Webb and Webb
  • Stamp size: 27mm x 37mm
  • Sheets: 25 and 50 stamps

Visit Royal Mail’s online shop.

Posted at 8:00am and tagged with: United Kingdom, issues, musicals, one column,.

Together with the forthcoming stamps commemorating the marriage of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, Australia has produced three Royal Wedding stamp issues, which embrace three generations of the royal family.

On 20 November 1947, the marriage of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh was commemorated by a 1d (one penny) stamp featuring a portrait of Princess Elizabeth, based on a photograph by Dorothy Wilding of London. Although issued as a commemorative, the 1d stamp served as a definitive issue, remaining on sale at post offices until 1953. 

In November 1980, Australia Post commenced preparations for a possible stamp issue to commemorate the wedding of Prince Charles and Lady Diana Spencer. The official announcement was made on 24 February 1981; the wedding was subsequently fixed for 29 July that year.

In addition to approving the 1981 Royal Wedding stamp issue, Australia Post management permitted a departure from the stamp issue policy to allow Lady Diana Spencer to be depicted on the stamps. The policy at the time precluded living persons from being portrayed on stamps except “The Sovereign and His or Her Spouse or the Heir Apparent”. The prohibition against living persons was removed with the introduction of the annual Australia Post Legends Awards in 1997.

Brian Clinton was commissioned to prepare the stamp designs. Interestingly, the artist produced painted portraits of Charles and Diana, rather than using actual photographs. The inscription on the two stamps reads “Marriage of HRH Charles, Prince of Wales & The Lady Diana Spencer”. Following her marriage, and until her divorce in 1996, Diana was styled “HRH The Princess of Wales”.

The Royal Wedding stamps were issued on 29 July 1981 in denominations of 24c and 60c, representing basic letter postage within Australia and the first weight step for air mail letters to Europe, respectively.

Source
1. “Royal Wedding Stamps”. Stamp Bulletin, Australia Post, Mar-Apr 2011. Pag. 18.

Posted at 6:00am and tagged with: Australia, Royal Family, issues, two column,.

The Nordic World Ski Championships will be held in Oslo on 24 February - 6 March 2011. Twenty-one cross-country, Nordic combined and ski jumping events will be arranged in the course of these twelve days.

A number of cultural and festival events will also take place at the ski jump and in the city centre. The goal is to create a memorable and eventful ski festival for the whole country. The ski championships in 2011 will be the largest sports event in Norway for many years. Around 650 athletes from more than 60 countries, about 1000 press and media people and at least 300,000 spectators will help set the spotlight on the winter capital. The competitions will be watched by millions of TV viewers all over the world.

The Holmenkollen ski jump has been rebuilt for the championships and the ski arena is now one of the most modern in the world. It has become far more than a ski jump for top athletes. It has an all-year cross-country stadium, a large ski jump at Holmenkollen and six smaller jumps at Midtstuen. Emphasis has also been given to providing a location for children, young people and the general public to practise ski sports.

The help of more than 2000 volunteers will be required to achieve a professionally-run event. Crews are needed in many areas, from arena work and transport to hospitality, spectator services and marketing. No area is less important than another. This is the fifth time Oslo is gathering the world’s ski elite for these championships. The previous time was in 1982, an event Norwegians remember with pleasure.

After several years at rock bottom, Norwegian ski sports reached a turning point at the world championships in Oslo with the cross-country triumphs of Berit Aunli and Oddvar Brå and, when Oddvar Brå’s ski pole broke so dramatically in the relay race, the excitement was almost too much to bear!

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 23/Feb/2011
  • Printing process: Offset 
  • Denominations: 9.00Kr and 12.00Kr

Visit Norwegian Post’s website.

Posted at 4:00am and tagged with: issues, Norway, sports,.

This stamp issue marks the retirement of the Royal Australian Air Force’s (RAAF) most prominent aircraft –the F-111 “Pig”. After 37 years service, this stalwart of aviation combat is being replaced from 2010. The aircraft represent a range of military functions and capabilities and includes F-111’s replacement.

The F-111 “Pig” is a twin-engine, swing-wing aircraft that can take off and land at relatively low speeds. The aircraft gets its nickname from its ability to hunt at night with its nose to the ground due to its terrain-following radar. The aircraft was introduced to the RAAF in 1973.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 22/Feb/2011
  • Denomination: 2 x 60c se-tenant, 1 x $1.20, 1 x $3
  • Printing process: lithography
  • Design: Simone Sakinofsky, Australia Post Design Studio
  • Stamp size: 37.5mm x 26mm
  • Sheets: 50 stamps (2 x 25)

Visit Australian Post‘s online shop.

Source
1. “Air Force Aviation”. Stamp Bulletin, Australia Post, Jan-Feb 2011. Pag. 14-15.

Posted at 2:00am and tagged with: Australia, issues, military, two column,.

A Canadian artist of Aboriginal ancestry, Daphne Odjig was born September 11, 1919, and raised on the Wikwemikong Unceded Indian Reserve on Manitoulin Island (Lake Huron), Ontario. Her father, Dominic Odjig, and her grandfather, Chief Jonas Odjig, were Potawatomi, descended from the great Chief Black Partridge. Her mother, Joyce Peachy, was an English war bride. Her family migrated north and settled in Wikwemikong after the War of 1812. The Potawatomi (Keepers of the Fire) were members, along with the Ojibwa and Odawa, of the Three Fires Confederacy of the Great Lakes.

Both athletic and musical, Daphne was an avid student at the Jesuit Mission in Wikwemikong. Her favourite subject was art and she would spend time sketching with her father and grandfather, both of whom also had artistic ability. She also helped her mother design needlepoint patterns for linens for the church. Unfortunately, in 1932, when she was in grade seven, her formal education was cut short when she developed rheumatic fever and suffered a long illness.

After losing her mother and grandfather just weeks apart, Daphne and her brothers and sisters went to live with their grandmother in Perry Sound, Ontario. Here, for the first time in her life, she felt the sting of racism and that her options were limited due to her last name and her native appearance. To counter these problems, she and her sibling changed their last name to “Fisher,” the name still used by two of her brothers.

Like many young women of her generation, Odjig moved to Toronto during World War II, where factory jobs were plentiful and easy to obtain since employers had lost much of the male workforce to the war effort. She began to frequent the art gallery at the Eaton’s College Street store, the Royal Ontario Museum and the Art Gallery of Toronto (now the Art Gallery of Ontario). Over the next decade, she would teach herself how to paint.

At the end of the war, Odjig married Mohawk/Métis war vet Paul Somerville and moved to Coquitlam, British Columbia, with her new husband and his young son David. She gave birth to son Stanley in 1948. Even as a young mother, she found time to explore her art and experiment with oils on homemade stretchers and tent canvas, at the time painting naturalistic landscapes. She developed an interest in Cubism and Abstract Expressionism, learning the techniques of the Modernists from books and magazines. However, tragedy struck in 1960, and widowed, she became the sole caretaker of the strawberry farm she had owned with her husband, tending the farm in summer, then in winter, painting and spending time at the Vancouver Museum of Art to study brush strokes up close. Influenced by the Impressionists, she experimented with light effects, broken brush strokes and Cloisonnism, and took top honours at her first juried show.

In 1964, Odjig met the elder women of the community at the Wikwemikong Pow-wow and learned about the old Nanabush tales, which she later painted. An exhibit of this collection was seen by then Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, an encounter which led to it being purchased in its entirety by the Federal Department of Cultural Affairs.

A few years later, Odjig made her first private sale and in 1967, her first solo exhibition, of 78 pieces, which showed at the Lakehead Art Centre in Thunder Bay, Ontario. The following year, she accepted a commission to paint a series of erotic illustrations for Tales From the Smokehouse. Meeting Bernard Polly, an art instructor at Brandon University was a significant turn in Odjig’s career. From Polly, Odjig learned collage techniques and began a series of mixed media collages incorporating natural materials. A looser, expressionistic style began to emerge in her work. In 1973, Daphne Odjig cofounded the Professional Native Indian Artists Inc., often referred to as the “Indian Group of Seven,” which included Norval Morrisseau, Alex Janvier, Joseph Sanchez, Jackson Beardy, Eddie Cobiness, Carl Ray and herself.

Many more commissions followed, as well as exhibits with private galleries and finally, a solo show at the National Gallery of Canada, the first of its kind by a First Nation woman artist.

Daphne Odjig has been extensively awarded, receiving seven honourary degrees, the National Aboriginal Achievement Award, the Order of British Columbia and both the Order of Canada and the Governor General’s Laureate, Visual and Media Arts, Canada’s highest honour in the field of visual arts. On her work being chosen as the subject for this stamp series, Odjig says, “I am pleased and honoured to once again have had my art selected for an issue of my country’s postage stamps. I am proud of my First Nations heritage and equally proud of being Canadian. It is my hope that these images of my paintings may help create a vision of the unique possibilities within Canada, for us all, and particularly for our youth.”

This Art Canada issue celebrating her work includes three paintings representative of her powerful style: Pow-wow Dancer (1978, acrylic on canvas), Spiritual Renewal (1984, acrylic on canvas) and Pow-wow (1969, acrylic on board). According to designer Hélène L’Heureux, “Each painting is totally different from the other two. But they are all so very much Odjig’s work, they represent the whole of what her work has been about over the years. The trick was in finding a way to frame such diverse pieces to bring a sense of unity to all three stamps.”

Stamp Design Manager Alain Leduc echoes that sense of diversity. “Odjig draws her ideas from a vast range of sources—she paints legends, she paints erotica. She’s open to a wide range of inspirations and subject matter, which she makes her own.”

The decision to create three stamps for this edition of the series, which in the past has been done only for the Karsh issue of 2008, was made for both aesthetic and practical reasons. In addition to providing collectors with three unique examples of Native Canadian art on stamps, the U.S. and International stamps fulfilled necessary operational requirements.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 21/Feb/2011
  • Printing process: Lithography
  • Denomination: 59c, $1.03 and $1.75
  • Stamp size: 40mm x 40mm, 32mm x 40mm and 56mm x 40mm
  • Edition: 1,552,000; 600,000 and 600,000

Source
1. “Art Canada: Daphne Odjig”, Canada’s Stamp Details, Vol. XX No 1; January to March 2011. Canada Post. Pag. 17-19.

Posted at 10:00am and tagged with: issues, art, Canada, two column,.

Protection of Persons with Disabilities, Respect on the Net, the Use of the Safety Belt and Keep your City Clean are the four stamps of this year’s Civic Values issue.

The rights and freedoms of individuals should be enjoyed by people with disabilities on an equal footing. For this reason, governments are to promote, protect and ensure the full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and fundamental freedoms by all persons with disabilities, and to promote respect for their inherent dignity. United Nations, through the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, provides a set of guiding principles that underlie the Convention: Respect for inherent dignity, individual autonomy including the freedom to make one’s own choices, and independence of persons, non-discrimination, full and effective participation and inclusion in society, respect for difference and acceptance of persons with disabilities as part of human diversity and humanity, equality of opportunity and accessibility.

Respect on the Net is one of the issues in which the EU has legislated regarding the behaviour in the use of the computer network. The initiatives are aimed at protecting copyright and encouraging the use of the network as a platform for the Information Society. Responsibility, tolerance and respect are the main principles to be considered.

Fasten Your Safety Belt when getting into a car is the best choice few can all make. The purpose of its use is to minimize the effect of a collision and being thrown from the vehicle, saving many lives. Under the rules established in the Traffic Act, belt use is mandatory for both driver and all passengers including those sitting in the back seats. Children under three years travelling in the rear seats must use appropriate restraint systems for their height and weight.

“Do not forget, for a cleaner city” is the message featuring on these stamps highlighting the importance of keeping our cities clean. The place where we live and the streets we walk through should be respected by of all citizens. Using the litter containers in accordance with the recycling regulations, preventing graffiti on walls and doors, making use the bins and keeping the streets clean are some of the citizenship obligations.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 18/Feb/2011
  • Denomination: 0,35 €
  • Printing process: Offset
  • Design: Studio Jesús Sánchez
  • Stamp size: 40.9mm x 28.8mm
  • Sheets: 20 stamps

Visit Spanish Post‘s online shop.

Posted at 6:00am and tagged with: Spain, issues, one column,.

St. Patrick is the patron saint of Ireland and one of Christianity’s most widely known figures. Although the dates cannot be fixed with certainty, it’s widely believed he began his religious training during the second half of the fifth century. He studied for more than 15 years before becoming ordained as a priest and then travelled around the country converting the Irish people to Christianity. Nowadays, Irish priests study and are ordained in a college named in his honour.

St. Patrick’s College Maynooth is the National Seminary for Ireland and is located 15 miles from Dublin. The college was officially established as the Roman Catholic College of St. Patrick in 1795, after the then Secretary of State Thomas Pelham introduced a bill for the foundation of a Catholic college.

Between 1875 and 1891, the college chapel was built using the architecture of J.J. McCarthy, who was Professor of Architecture of the Catholic University. Postponed for nearly 100 years due to a lack of money, the chapel’s completion was funded by the contributions of the Irish people. This was quite a feat given

that the country was still recovering from the Great Famine and the foundation of the State had not even taken place yet. Today, the chapel is widely celebrated for its stunning stained glass windows, mosaic marbled floor, massive organ and the row upon row of carved oak choir-stalls that fill the whole church.

To mark St. Patrick’s Day for 2011, Steve Simpson has designed a stamp based on a stone carving of St. Patrick at the entrance to the spire of this great chapel.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 17/Feb/2011
  • Denomination: 82c
  • Printing process: Lithography
  • Design: Steve Simpson
  • Stamp size: 29.79mm x 40.64mm
  • Sheets: 16 stamps

Visit An Post‘s online shop.

Source
The collector. Irish stamps, 2011. Pag. 19-20.

Posted at 6:00am and tagged with: Ireland, issues, two column,.

A pond is an inland body of standing water, either natural or man-made, which is smaller than a lake. It undergoes marked changes as time passes, and the most obvious changes that one will notice is that one form of plant follows or succeeds another, and the different life forms that make the pond a lively and busy place.

There are plenty of opportunities for exciting discoveries at a pond, and this set of Definitives stamps, ($1.10, $2, $5 and $10) with its intricate designs, shows some commonly found life forms at a pond.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 16/Feb/2011
  • Printing process: Rotogravure
  • Stamp size: 50mm x 30mm
  • Sheets: 50 stamps

Visit Singapore Post‘s online shop.

(Source: shop.vpost.com.sg)

Posted at 2:00am and tagged with: issues, Singapore, two column,.

International Women’s Day (IWD) is a global day celebrating the economic, political and social achievements of women past, present and future. It is the story of ordinary women as makers of history and is rooted in the struggle of women to participate in society on an equal footing with men. The IWD global centenary is celebrated in 2011.

The first IWD was held on 19 March 1911 when more than a million European women united, calling for the right of women to vote, work and hold public office and an end to discrimination. In 1910, at an international conference of women held in Copenhagen, a woman named Clara Zetkin (leader of the “Women’s Office” for the Social Democratic Party in Germany) tabled the idea of an International Women’s Day. Clara would go on to launch the very first International Women’s Day on 19 March the following year.

International Women’s Day has been celebrated on 8 March each year since 1913, when the date was transferred from 19 March. It aims to promote positive change and raise awareness about problems women face in their everyday lives and is also a chance to celebrate the achievements of women. This date is also designated in many countries as a national holiday.

The stamp combines images and graphic elements, including the symbol for women, to create a celebratory feel that conveys the sense that this is a centenary for all women.

Technical details:

  • Date of issue: 15/Feb/2011
  • Printing process: Lithography
  • Stamp size: 37.5mm x 26mm
  • Sheets: 50 stamps

Visit Australian Post‘s online shop.

Source
1. “Centenary of International Women’s Day”. Stamp Bulletin, Australia Post, Jan-Feb 2011. Pag. 12-13.

Posted at 2:00am and tagged with: issues, Australia, two column,.