And USPS continues down the path of excess! Do we really need TEN Christmas stamps? I don't have a problem commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Charlie Brown Christmas classic, but not with that many stamps.
The same news release lists a set of TWENTY stamps honoring pets?!? Again, do we need stamps with iguanas and gold fish on them in that quantity.
I gave up collecting new issues a long time before it got this excessive. They're killing any chance of kids starting stamp collecting with the cost of buying new issues!
I am a Peanuts fan. Back in the day I sent Charles M Schultz this FDC to autograph. He signed it and returned it to me in the enclosed SASE. I was tickled pink, I was 17 at the time and very interested in pursuing journalism back then.
Great cover!
I agree with BenFranklin. Ten Peanuts is ridiculous, twenty pets is nuts and so on! In another era these would have been called "wallpaper". Of course, if everybody felt this way, with just a bit of luck these stamps are going to be worth a fortune.............
Peter
As the father of 6-year-old twin girls and their 5-year-old sister, I can attest these are the stamps they want for their collections.
I am fifty years old (eight months older than the debut of the Charlie Brown Christmas cartoon.) I collect U.S. stamps. I'll be looking for nice used examples of all ten of those stamps for my collection.
I like them and I think they're great!
David Giles
Ottawa, Canada
Yep. I agree (with David... I like them). And further, finally meaningful "Christmas" stamps without that stuff the US government is supposed to be separated from.
I hope to have a sheet of these by the end of the day. -I'll use half and then save a set for my collection.
http://www.peanutizeme.com
This is a fine example of why I gave up collecting new US issues.
I collect used US and enjoy the challenge of obtaining the various varieties. In addition to the 10 face different singles plus the various straight edge varieties, there are also 5 different imperf between pairs, a imperf within block of 4, and all the various combinations of the imperforated versions, the latter varieties from the press sheets. And, it appears that the press sheets are sold out now.
Next, the snowflakes issue.
One can be pretty busy keeping up with all these, not to mention all the stamps being issued by our northern neighbor.
Tad
Me and the gang!
BTW for the other Peanuts enthusiasts here, I have a special note on my SASE cover offer: As a bonus- If the envelope you address/send to me (with the SASE enclosed) is franked with a new US Peanuts (Charlie Brown) stamp, I will enclose 2 random covers in your SASE.
That also means that if you use a Peanuts stamp on your SASE, you will also be getting a Peanuts stamp on cover.
So Tom, which Peanuts character are YOU supposed to be? ;-)
BOB
"So Tom, which Peanuts character are YOU supposed to be? ;-)"
Great picture, Tom!
Randy
I really like what the USPS (and others) are doing with postage stamps! They're just FUN!
I think they'd likely be printing the same number of stamps anyway, so to me, the more variety the better. How boring would it be to just have 5,000,000,000 single issues with a pic of Charlie Brown or Bugs Bunny only.
I don't try to keep up with all the different series, these days. But every now and then, they'll hit on a subject that rings a bell for me personally and I "go for it". Then begins the hunt for used versions of the same.
I simply see these as the latest chapter in postal history. If you think about it, even some "Best Sellers" are bound to have a chapter or two that you don't like as well as others, but that doesn't keep them from being great novels in the end. Besides, without those lesser chapters, the story wouldn't likely play out the same anyway.
My approach is to buy the sets I like and leave the rest for others. I know, it's a simple philosophy, for a simple mind, but what can I say?
WB
Linn's is reporting the today the USPS has announced:
Oct. 1, A Charlie Brown Christmas. Ten different forever stamps will be issued in a double-sided pane of 20 (a format the U.S. Postal Service describes as a booklet). The stamps will be issued in Santa Rosa, Calif.
Click on this link to see four of the ten stamps:
Peanuts Christmas
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
And USPS continues down the path of excess! Do we really need TEN Christmas stamps? I don't have a problem commemorating the 50th Anniversary of the Charlie Brown Christmas classic, but not with that many stamps.
The same news release lists a set of TWENTY stamps honoring pets?!? Again, do we need stamps with iguanas and gold fish on them in that quantity.
I gave up collecting new issues a long time before it got this excessive. They're killing any chance of kids starting stamp collecting with the cost of buying new issues!
I am a Peanuts fan. Back in the day I sent Charles M Schultz this FDC to autograph. He signed it and returned it to me in the enclosed SASE. I was tickled pink, I was 17 at the time and very interested in pursuing journalism back then.
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
Great cover!
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
I agree with BenFranklin. Ten Peanuts is ridiculous, twenty pets is nuts and so on! In another era these would have been called "wallpaper". Of course, if everybody felt this way, with just a bit of luck these stamps are going to be worth a fortune.............
Peter
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
As the father of 6-year-old twin girls and their 5-year-old sister, I can attest these are the stamps they want for their collections.
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
I am fifty years old (eight months older than the debut of the Charlie Brown Christmas cartoon.) I collect U.S. stamps. I'll be looking for nice used examples of all ten of those stamps for my collection.
I like them and I think they're great!
David Giles
Ottawa, Canada
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
Yep. I agree (with David... I like them). And further, finally meaningful "Christmas" stamps without that stuff the US government is supposed to be separated from.
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
I hope to have a sheet of these by the end of the day. -I'll use half and then save a set for my collection.
http://www.peanutizeme.com
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
This is a fine example of why I gave up collecting new US issues.
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
I collect used US and enjoy the challenge of obtaining the various varieties. In addition to the 10 face different singles plus the various straight edge varieties, there are also 5 different imperf between pairs, a imperf within block of 4, and all the various combinations of the imperforated versions, the latter varieties from the press sheets. And, it appears that the press sheets are sold out now.
Next, the snowflakes issue.
One can be pretty busy keeping up with all these, not to mention all the stamps being issued by our northern neighbor.
Tad
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
Me and the gang!
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
BTW for the other Peanuts enthusiasts here, I have a special note on my SASE cover offer: As a bonus- If the envelope you address/send to me (with the SASE enclosed) is franked with a new US Peanuts (Charlie Brown) stamp, I will enclose 2 random covers in your SASE.
That also means that if you use a Peanuts stamp on your SASE, you will also be getting a Peanuts stamp on cover.
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
So Tom, which Peanuts character are YOU supposed to be? ;-)
BOB
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
"So Tom, which Peanuts character are YOU supposed to be? ;-)"
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
Great picture, Tom!
Randy
re: Christmas and Charlie Brown
I really like what the USPS (and others) are doing with postage stamps! They're just FUN!
I think they'd likely be printing the same number of stamps anyway, so to me, the more variety the better. How boring would it be to just have 5,000,000,000 single issues with a pic of Charlie Brown or Bugs Bunny only.
I don't try to keep up with all the different series, these days. But every now and then, they'll hit on a subject that rings a bell for me personally and I "go for it". Then begins the hunt for used versions of the same.
I simply see these as the latest chapter in postal history. If you think about it, even some "Best Sellers" are bound to have a chapter or two that you don't like as well as others, but that doesn't keep them from being great novels in the end. Besides, without those lesser chapters, the story wouldn't likely play out the same anyway.
My approach is to buy the sets I like and leave the rest for others. I know, it's a simple philosophy, for a simple mind, but what can I say?
WB