Stamp Collecting Everything You Need To Know
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Great Stamp Collecting Info

Art Collectibles as Hobbies in the Form of Stamps and Coins

Tips on Collecting Canadian Stamps

Canadian Stamp Collecting

How To Keep Stamps Fine and Dandy

Stamp Collecting in Channel Island

Why Not Join a Chicago Stamp Collecting Club?

3 Tips on How to Start Coin and Stamp Collecting in Torrance

Coins and Stamps: A Favorite for Collectors

Collecting Both Coins and Stamps

The Excellent Tradition of Postage Stamp Collecting

Collecting Specialty Stamps

Collector, Dealer, Etc., Stamp Supply

Buy and Sell Stamps

Getting Stamps from a Reputable Supplier

The Ultimate Price Guide in Stamp Collecting

How Collectors Price Their Stamps

The Encyclopedia of US Stamps

8 Reasons Why Collectors Need Free Stamp Collecting Software

Stamp Collecting Freeware

Tips on How to Get Started with Your Stamp Collection

Stamp Collecting Software for Macintosh OS 9

Postage Stamp Collecting

Tips For The Amateur Postage Stamp Collector

Why Collect Postage Stamps?

2 Things That Every Stamp and Coin Collector Should Know


3 Things to Do When Stamp Coin Collecting Becomes Profitable

Stamp Collecting is Fun!

Taking Care of Stamps Using an Album

The Pros of Stamp Collecting Albums

The Truth Behind Stamp Collecting and The Stamps Value

Grab Free Stamp Collecting Catalogues

Getting Stamps from a Collecting Company

Stamp Collecting For Newbies

Some Things You Should Know About Stamp Collecting

What is in a Stamp Collecting Merit Badge that Makes It So Special?

The Real Deal About Stamp Collecting Prices

Stamp Collecting Software to Choose From

A Guide to Stamp Collecting Supplies

What Supplies Do You Need for Your Stamp Collection?

Beginner's Guide To Stamp Collecting And Stamp Values

What’s the Buzz on Stamp Collecting?

What Makes a Good Stamp Collector?

How to Become a Stamp Collector

A Stamp-ede in San Antonio!

Kentucky Stamp Collectors

Essential Supplies for the Stamp Collector

How the Stamp Collector Should Work

Stamp Collecting as a Fun Activity

The United States Postal Service and the World of Stamp Collecting

The Land of the Free and Happy Philatelists

Great Stamp Collecting Resource

Great Stamp Collecting Resource

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The United States Postal Service and the World of Stamp Collecting!

Stamp Collecting 101 - Great way to start!
Great Book For Stamp Collecting

Even before many philatelists thought up the hobby of stamp collecting, it is rather obvious that the act of exchanging letters through a centralized system that would recognize stamps as payment to cover carriage costs would have to be put in place. The American Philatelic Society (APS), which is the biggest convention of philatelists and collectors in the entire world, is predated by the United States Postal Service.

For more than two centuries now, the United States Postal Service has delivered mail-letters and cards-in huge volumes to all its mailboxes situated in all of the states, including Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Guam, and the American Virgin Islands. It serves 7.5 million customers daily through over 37, 000 postal offices, and providing employment for more than 700, 000 career employees.

While the numbers are overwhelming, the huge network of the USPS only means one thing to stamp collectors and philatelists-this means the issue of a huge volume of stamps with great variety delivered to millions of homes daily. To approximate more closely, the USPS delivers 212 billion pieces of mail on average to over 144 million houses.

The USPS caters to philatelists and stamp enthusiasts in other active avenues other than simply delivering letters to them. In fact, the USPS is the primary source of stamps that are continuously being collected by philatelists in the United States of America, and subsequently, the rest of the world.

However, the USPS and the stamps it issues every year is not the singular pulse of the staff of USPS. Instead, every year, the designs issued on USPS stamps beat the pulse of the entire nation, thus reflecting American history at its best. Every year, the postal service receives thousands of design proposals from Americans on thousands of themes that may be featured in stamps. Through what is known as the Citizens' Stamp Advisory Committee (CSAC) goes over this huge volume of submissions in order to recommend to the Postmaster General educational and interesting subjects for consideration.

Because the CSAC employs no assistance or staff for its purposes, it takes a huge amount of time before a stamp is taken into regard. Subject submissions must be done in writing to provide each submission an equal opportunity of being reviewed and selected. A design proposed for a particular year must be submitted three years in advance of the proposed date of issuance.

If the stamp proposal meets all the requirements of CSAC, it may at the end be chosen as one of the subjects forwarded for the approval of the Postmaster General. Otherwise, submissions may undergo to courses of action-either they will be rejected completely or put for future consideration. However, if the stamp is indeed chosen among thousands of submissions, it will be one of the 25 stamp proposals recommended to be made into commemorative stamps, alongside the extensive line issued by the Postal Service each year.
If the proposal is set aside for future consideration, the submission will be put into file for the Committee to refer to in the future for when the submitted proposal is relevant.

As for the translation of these proposals into designs, the Postal Service employs the services of trained stamp artists to bring these stamps to life.

These commemorative stamps, alongside the regular issue stamps of the Postal Service, are made accessible to the public and to the philatelists through the various USPS postal offices as well as the convenient USPS Postal Store. In the Postal Store, the general public is offered stamps for mailing and shipping purposes, for leisure purposes, for collecting, and for education.

Under the various items for collecting are the traditional first-day covers, commemorative panels, state quarters and stamps, and uncut press sheets. Non-stamp items include miniature mailboxes, which may be used to store stamps, lapel pins with stamp designs, as well as collecting supplies.

First-day covers are stamps attached to envelopes and are cancelled on the same day that they are issued. Commemorative panels are a number of commemorative stamps in an attractive layout, including information on the event, state, or person being commemorated by the stamp. Stamp quarters and stamps is, collectively, a portfolio containing a number of quarters of the state and some stamps featuring the state, alongside pertinent facts and information.

Alongside these collectibles offered by USPS, they also cater to, of course, the provision of the most basic and most important part of stamp collecting-the stamps. This would include 39-cent First Class stamps, the regular 37-cent stamps, additional stamps, priority stamps, and stamps in coils, panes, or stamp books.

At the end of the day, the USPS fuels the continually growing hobby of philately and stamp collecting. Through its help, Americans and enthusiasts worldwide are given access to a continuous supply of stamps, and are given assurance that the stamps will keep on reflecting the strong and vibrant American spirit.


The Latest Stamp News!
Breeding Penguins   04/17/2010
This stamp issue illustrates the breeding penguins of the Falkland Islands. Local photographer Alan Henry and Reinhard Mischke took the pictures for the postage stamps. The set comprises of six Airmail Postcard rate postage stamps (currently 55p) showing the head profile of each type of the five breeding penguins and an unusual picture of an albino Rockhopper penguin. Penguins are generally regarded as being synonymous with the Falkland Islands and attract a great number of tourists each year to our shores. The stamps are available singly in sheetlets of 10 and combined in a souvenir sheet. more info
Britain's Longest Reigning Monarchs   04/17/2010
On 21 December 2007 Elizabeth II became Britain's oldest reigning monarch surpassing Queen Victoria who died aged 81 years, seven months, four weeks and one day on 22 January 1901 and George III five days earlier. However, Queen Elizabeth II still has several years to go before becoming the longest reigning monarch. The Queen, the fifth longest-reigning monarch in 1,000 years of British history, will on March 5 next year overtake Henry III, who reigned for 56 years from 12161272. It will be 2011 before she passes the record of King James VI of Scotland and I of England and then 2012 before she overtakes George III, who served for 59 years from 17601820. With Queen Victoria remaining as the longest serving monarch who ruled the Empire for almost 64 years, providing Queen Elizabeth is still on the throne on 9 September 2015, she will take Queen Victoria's place. more info
Christmas and Henry VII   04/17/2010
The Christmas Stamp of Luxembourg this year, depicting a roe deer, is the work of well-known Belgian wildlife artist André Buzin. He is the artist of more than 300 postage stamp designs around the world. more info
Court of Justice   04/17/2010
To build Europe, the member States have entered into treaties forming the European Community, then a European Union, supported by institutions, which adopt the rules of law in specified fields.Luxembourg issued a special postage stamp on 2 December 2008. more info
Great Pipe Organs   04/17/2010
This third collection of special postage stamps traces in sound and vision the History of some of the most beautiful pipe organs of the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, and is part of a special series which began in 2006. more info