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| Monaco 2018-04-10 |
La Poste Monaco has issued a single stamp marking the 21st Football World Cup, being hosted in Russia from June thru July 2018. The 1.30 € denominated issue, of April 10, 2018, depicts four footballers in various poses with a map of the Russian Federation in the background. On the map are a grouping of stars, most likely indicating the location of the match stadiums. Around the left, top and right edges of the stamp are the flags of the participating countries. June 14 and July 15, in French, are written in the upper section of the stamp. [ does anyone know of any other World Cup 2018 issues with maps? let us know – web admin]
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USA 2018-03-05,
Illinois Statehood Bicentennial |
On March 5, 2018 the US Postal Service issued a new stamp marking the Illinois statehood bicentennial. The first class, non-denominated “Forever” issue is a pressure-sensitive adhesive (PSA) design. Located in the Midwestern region of the United States, Illinois is the 6th most populous US state and 25th largest in terms of land area. While the state’s largest population area is around Chicago in the northeast, the the capitol is Springfield, located in the center area of the state.
This stamp celebrates the 200th anniversary of Illinois statehood. Known as the Prairie State, Illinois became the 21st state of the Union on December 3, 1818. The stamp art features an outline of the state map with a series of yellow beams radiating upward like the rays of a rising sun. The colors on the map begin at the bottom with a deep yellow. The color fades upward to pale yellow and then into pale blue, with increasingly deeper blues rising to the top of the map; the yellows and blues symbolize the dawning of a new day as the state joins the Union. Stars, representing the first 20 states, grace the top of the stamp. The rising sun symbolizes the 21st star.
On September 19, 2017, Australia Post issued a set of three stamps and a mini-sheet recognizing the cultural heritage of the Australian Antarctic Territory. The issue focuses on cultural artifacts from three key historical periods relating to Antarctica, which we refer to as the “exploration era”, “interwar era” and “postwar era”. Each artifact also represents a specific cultural theme. The set of three stamps are divided into the Exploration era (AUD 1), the Interwar era (AUD 1), and the Postwar era (AUD 2). The exploration era, also known as the heroic period, spans the late 19th and early 20th centuries – a time when several countries undertook voyages to Antarctica. The stamp features an aneroid barometer that was given to Australian physicist Alistair Keith Jack by Ernest Shackleton, expedition leader of the ill-fated Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition’s (1914–16). The Interwar era stamp design features the proclamation over King George V Land that Australian polar explorer and scientist Douglas Mawson signed on behalf of the British sovereign on 5 January 1931. The proclamation represents both political and geographical history and is especially significant as it formed the basis of Britain’s eventual transferal of territory to Australia in 1933. This stamp features a partial map of Antarctica, with the remaining section of the map printed on the center of the mini-sheet, in what appears to be a type of polar stereographic projection. The design of the third stamp, the Postwar ear, features the tracked Weasel M29 vehicle that was introduced to Antarctica after World War II. Following World War II, scientific interest in Antarctica was renewed, facilitated by Douglas Mawson’s lobbying of the government. In 1947, ANARE (Australian National Antarctic Research Expedition) was formed to undertake Australian Antarctic research. The Weasel M29 vehicle pictured in the stamp was the main Antarctic vehicle for ANARE until the mid-1960s, and was used on ANARE’s 1962–63 Wilkes–Vostok traverse, an historic journey of 3,000 kilometres to the Russian station in the Antarctic interior. [please comment on the maps projection if it is incorrect. it may also be a polar planar type of projection. it seems the surrounding continents may have been omitted on purpose. let us know what you think — web-admin]
 Australian Antarctic Territory (AAT) 2017-09-19
France Post has issued some recent Overseas Territory (France d’outre-mer) issues that will be of interest to fellow CartoPhilatelists.
French Southern and Antarctic Lands (TAAF/FSAT), Issues of 2018-01-02.
 France (TAAF/FSAT) 2018-01-02 issue 1 |
 France (TAAF/FSAT) 2018-01-02 issue 2 |
 France (TAAF/FSAT) 2018-01-02 issue 3 |
Saint Pierre and Miquelon (2017-11-13)
 Saint Pierre and Miquelon (2017-11-13) issue 1 |
 Saint Pierre and Miquelon (2017-11-13) issue 2 |
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| Portugal – Azores 2017-09-07 |
Coinciding with the 14th European GeoParks Conference held in the Azores in early September 2017, Portugal Post (CTT) issued a set of four (4) stamps and a souvenir sheet with two (2) stamps on September 7, 2017. A Geopark “is a unified area that advances the protection and use of geological heritage in a sustainable way, and promotes the economic well-being of the people who live there.” This issue commemorates the Azores Geopark, established in 2009/2010, which is comprised of a network of 121 geographically-dispersed sites of geographic heritage and marine areas that covers the nine volcanic islands of the archipelago of the Azores. The Azores Geopark is part of the European Geoparks Network and the UNESCO-assisted Global Geoparks Network. Denominations for the set of four stamps are €0,50, €0,80, €0,85, €1,00, respectively, while the souvenir sheet contains two stamps, with denominations of €0,85, €1,00. All denominations are placed in the lower right corner of each stamp. Each of the stamps has a map, and the souvenir sheet also has small scale a map of the Azores archipelago covering two-thirds of the sheet. The park maps, occupying the upper section of each stamp, use subtle hill shading to portray the terrain. Additionally, local access roads, major hydrographic features, and sparse annotation are also present on the maps. The park or feature is depicted using shades of green while the surrounding areas are shown as only bare terrain. Conversely, a color photograph of a “geo-feature” or landscape occupies the lower section of each stamp. The maps are tied directly to the feature shown in the photograph. Running horizontal through the center of each stamp is the phrase Geoparque Açores with the feature name directly below, in the photo area. The latitude and longitude, presumably of the feature, are shown in a vertical colored bar along the right edge of each stamp. The stamps have a syncopated perforation, resembling a “Knights Templar Cross” common on recent Portuguese issues. This is definitely one of more important cartophilatelic issues of 2017. [after researching these, i think it is time for a trip to the azores! – web admin]
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| Portugal – Azores 2017-09-07 Souvenir Sheet |
 Australia 2016-06-07
The June 7, 2016 Australia Post issue of “Nostalgic Fruit Labels” contains two stamps featuring both a map of Australia and one of Tasmania. The issue contains four $1 AUD denominated stamps, as either gummed or self-adhesives. The designs across either type appear to be the same. Cartophilatelists will be interested in two stamps from the set. The “River’s Pride” Oranges with a map of Australia inset with an image of a paddle-wheel steamer on a river. Varieties of oranges are shown in the foreground of the label. The “Robin Brand” Apples label depicts a map of Tasmania with a robin perched on a tree branch. Some historical background from Australia Post follows. In the early 20th century Australia became a major food exporter, particularly to Great Britain until well after World War II. An early means of identifying fruit for market was by stenciling wooden fruit cases, using metal stencils brushed with black paint. Details included the grower’s name as well as the type, size and grade of fruit. As Australia’s fruit export industry expanded, so did the need for marketing of the fruit. Soon paper labels, pasted onto the end of wooden cases, formed part of the fruit industry landscape between the 1920s and 1970s, before the widespread use of cardboard cartons. There were local market labels, grower labels and more, but the most colorful were the labels used for export. While labels were used for various types of fruit,apple labels from the “Apple Isle” Tasmania were by far the most numerous. In addition to the State Library of Tasmania, one of the largest public collections of fruit labels is part of the Troedel Printing Archive in the State Library of Victoria. The sample books of lithographic printing firm Troedel and Cooper contain an amazing array of colorful designs. Three of the labels featured in this stamp issue are from that collection. The fourth is the Western Australian
label for Paterson & Co., one of the largest shippers of apples and pears in the west from the labels era. [ be sure to check out Australia Post’s new philatelic and collectables web site. also, watch for another post about the Fair Dinkum Aussie Alphabet (current and forthcoming issues) -admin]
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Welcome to the CartoPhilatelic Society Celebrating our 67th Year as a Society. Come and Join Us!
The CartoPhilatelic Society has entered our 68th year as a Society! In 1955 a group of philatelists with a keen interest in map stamps founded the CartoPhilatelic Society. Today we carry on their passion for map stamps in the collections we assemble and the research we conduct.
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