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  2. Zazzle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zazzle

    Zazzle.com offers digital printing, and embroidered decoration on their retail apparel items, as well as other personalization techniques and items. Custom stamp printing. Starting in 2005, Zazzle offered custom stamp printing in a partnership with the United States Post Office (USPS).

  3. Personalised stamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personalised_stamp

    Pitney Bowes, Stamps.com, Zazzle.com and Fuji offer USPS-approved personalised postage via Stamp Expressions, PhotoStamps and ZazzleStamps and Yourstamps.com respectively. Consumers and businesses may also print their own postage using a small, specialized, printer, such as the Pitney Bowes Stamp Expressions Printer. [14]

  4. Green Shield Stamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_Shield_Stamps

    Green Shield Stamps was a British sales promotion scheme that rewarded shoppers with stamps that could be used to buy gifts from a catalogue or from any affiliated retailer.

  5. Presidents of the United States on U.S. postage stamps

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Presidents_of_the_United...

    Every deceased U.S. president as of 2023 has appeared on at least one U.S. postage stamp, and all but Richard Nixon, and the two most recently deceased presidents, Gerald Ford, and George H. W. Bush, have appeared on at least two.

  6. List of British postage stamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_British_postage_stamps

    List of British postage stamps. This is a list of British postage stamps issued by the Royal Mail postal service of the United Kingdom, normally referred to in philatelic circles as Great Britain.

  7. Machin series - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machin_series

    Machin series. The 4d bright vermilion of 1969 replaced the dark-coloured 4d of the original 1967 issue. The Machin series / ˈmeɪtʃɪn / of postage stamps is the main definitive stamp series in the United Kingdom, used since 5 June 1967. It is the second series to figure the image of Elizabeth II, replacing the Wilding series.

  8. Corrie ten Boom - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corrie_ten_Boom

    Corrie ten Boom c. 1921. Corrie ten Boom was born on 15 April 1892 in Haarlem, Netherlands, the youngest child of Casper ten Boom, a jeweller and watchmaker, and Cornelia (commonly known as "Corrie") Johanna Arnolda, née Luitingh, whom he married in 1884. [2] She was named after her mother but known as Corrie all her life. [3]

  9. Charles Ponzi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Ponzi

    He promised clients a 50% profit within 45 days or 100% profit within 90 days, by buying discounted postal reply coupons in other countries and redeeming them at face value in the U.S. as a form of arbitrage.

  10. Scott catalogue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_catalogue

    The Scott catalogue of postage stamps, published by Scott Publishing Company, now a subsidiary of Amos Media, is updated annually and lists all the stamps of the world that its editors recognize as issued for postal purposes.

  11. Edward VIII postage stamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_VIII_postage_stamps

    In Canada, the Edward VIII stamp dies and proofs were officially destroyed on 25 and 27 January 1937; some essays were kept in the archives, and the two plaster casts were saved by coin engraver Emmanuel Hahn and a postal officer.