Signed FDC for International Geophysical Year issue 🇺🇸 United States, 3¢ | Issued May 31, 1958 | Scott 1107 One of my central topical philatelic interests is the International Geophysical Year. I’m fascinated by these nascent days of space science and global cooperation. The IGY also marks a period when the last few empty spots... Continue Reading →
Stamps on Screen: Frasier
Season 2, Episode 6, “The Botched Language of Cranes” Close your eyes. Wait, can you still read this? Open them! Open your eyes. Alright, don’t close your eyes. But before you read any farther, take a pause and name the top female TV fashion icons of the ‘90s. You probably remember “the Rachel,” the hairstyle... Continue Reading →
Did Hungary issue the first TRUE Christmas stamp?
Message to the Shepherds, Nativity, Adoration of the Magi🇭🇺 Hungary, 4–30f | Issued December 1, 1943 | Scott 617–619 There are many ways to approach stamp collecting: by topic, by nation, by volume. But in any collection, primacy is a key component. What came first? The issue of what was the first Christmas stamp issue... Continue Reading →
Stamps on Screen: Eerie, Indiana
George Rogers Clark 🇺🇸 United States, 2¢ | Issued February 25, 1929 | Scott 651 Picture this: You walk by the break room at work, and you see one. You drive home from work and check your mailbox before going inside, and there one is again. The doorbell rings, and there’s one sitting on your... Continue Reading →
To the Kármán line, and beyond!: An introduction to the International Geophysical Year
International Geophysical Year stamp and official emblem on cacheted first day cover 🇺🇸 United States, 3¢ | Issued May 31, 1958 | Scott 1107 When did space exploration begin? Nailing down an origin point on such a subjective timeline is objectively impossible. Was it with the first human spaceflight in April 1961? Or when the... Continue Reading →
Setting sail on the 20th century
Pan-American Exposition Issue 🇺🇸 United States, 1–10¢ | Issued May 1, 1901 | Scott 294–299 When you start to gain a grasp on early American commemorative stamps, you begin to pick up on certain series names: Columbian Exposition, “the Trans-Mississippis”, et cetera, et cetera. So, sure, I understand quality specimens can be very valuable. But... Continue Reading →
Apollo 16: A lunar voyage in 5 cachets
Lunar Voyage Cachets, set of 5 covers 🇺🇸 United States | Issued April 1972 Fifty years ago, three men did what barely a handful had done before them: They flew to the moon, landed, had a look around, and brought a few souvenir pebbles home. In fact, their accomplishment was much more astounding than that.... Continue Reading →
A snapshot of Biltmore in the 1960s
Biltmore House | Asheville, North Carolina 🇺🇸 United States | Postmarked Nov 7, 1963 The Biltmore Estate bills itself as a timeless treasure. And based on this postcard photo, taken in the early 1960s, it is just that. No longer can you park your Chevy Bel Air directly in front of the home. And gone... Continue Reading →
Reading between the perforations: Literary Arts stamps
Some of the Literary Arts stamps in my collection. John Steinbeck | 🇺🇸 United States, 15¢ | Issued Feb. 27, 1979 | Scott 1773 Edith Wharton | 🇺🇸 United States, 15¢ | Issued Sept. 5, 1980 | Scott 1832 Nathaniel Hawthorne | 🇺🇸 United States, 20¢ | Issued July 8, 1983 | Scott 2047 F.... Continue Reading →
Happy birthday to these stamps—and me!
It’s snowed out every “significant” birthday of my life so far. The day my mother went into labor, there were 17 inches of snow on the ground. So much snow, that my father and the EMT on duty had to hoist her four-foot-ten frame by the armpits and carry her the nearly-quarter mile down the... Continue Reading →
