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The special edition Adlai Stevenson II stamp set came out a few months after his death

The special edition Adlai Stevenson II stamp set came out a few months after his death


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A First Day Cover from Sept 9, 1969 commemorating the Apollo 11 moon landing. There’s a post stamp from the July 20 moon landing & a beautiful 10 cent stamp featuring Neil Armstrong stepping down upon the lunar surface. So many great space-themed stamps were designed by the USPS during the space age.

vintage ephemera kit for journaling and snail mailsfeel good parcel (link) on Etsy*leave a message ivintage ephemera kit for journaling and snail mailsfeel good parcel (link) on Etsy*leave a message i

vintage ephemera kit for journaling and snail mails

feel good parcel (link) on Etsy

*leave a message in the note section, saying you’re from tumblr so that you can get extra cuts and bits :)


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normal-horoscopes:uglymelon: ymutate: The Relief Prints of Kathleen Neeley @normal-horoscopesI’m g

normal-horoscopes:

uglymelon:

ymutate:

The Relief Prints of Kathleen Neeley

@normal-horoscopes

I’m going for a little ride haha whee


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Postage stamp tattoo designs for a mail art friend!! First one features bog beacon mushrooms, second is the bog copper, a butterfly that only lives in cranberry bogs!

The staff of the Forbidden City stamp various Forbidden City-related stamps for visitors

#stamps    #forbidden city    

sablingart:

A Pokémon stamp starter pack

Look who I found at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum today!

Look who I found at the Smithsonian National Postal Museum today!


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Here’s May’s stickermail! Become a sticker mail member on my ko-fi before May 1st and get thesHere’s May’s stickermail! Become a sticker mail member on my ko-fi before May 1st and get thes

Here’s May’s stickermail!

Become a sticker mail member on my ko-fi before May 1st and get these sticky friends + a surprise postcard mailed to you by letter next month!

Link to ko-fi >>> Sticker Mail


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msuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigumsuprovenance: Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac Special Collections has recently acquired an intrigu

msuprovenance:

Unlocking a 250-Year-Old Almanac

Special Collections has recently acquired an intriguing copy of Rider’s British Merlin, an almanac published in London in 1768 — 250 years ago this year!

Rider’s almanac first appeared in 1656, “compiled for the benefit of his country” by one “Schardanus Rider,” believed to be an anagram of the name of physician and astrologer Richard Saunders (1613-1675). The almanac continued to be published for many years after his death.

A number of special features make our copy uniquely interesting, such as its elaborate red morocco binding. Perhaps most fascinating is the metal lock, which is actually even more complex than it might appear at first glance. In spite of the provided key, it seems that the only way to truly open the lock is through a secret mechanism — by gently sliding one of the rivets connecting the lock to the cover, the inner latch shifts, and the flap can be opened.

A convenient slot is incorporated into the flap to store a metal stylus, which is (happily) still present. This was used for taking notes on a pair of waxed sheets bound in at the front of the volume, which effectively acted as erasable writing tablets. In much the same way that the ancient Romans used wax-filled wooden frames for temporary note-taking, the pages in this almanac could be incised with the stylus and then erased at the appropriate time. An owner of this volume — perhaps Ann Cackett (?), who wrote her name on one of the flyleaves — has used the stylus many times, leaving incisions behind in the form of repeated circles and other rudimentary markings.

Inside each cover is a little fold-out pocket for the storage of important documents, though sadly they arrived at our library empty. These pockets are partially formed by the end-papers, which are made from beautiful multicolored Dutch gilt paper (actually originating in Germany). Our papers bear a portion of the name of their maker: “Johan Wilhelm.”

It’s easy to concentrate on this almanac’s bells and whistles, but it is also rewarding to look at its contents. It opens with a handsome calendar, printed in red and black, that incorporates religious, astronomical, meteorological, and agricultural observations. Other sections include a list of the year’s moveable feasts (holy days that occur on different days each year), a calendar of eclipses, a zodiac man (a diagram of the relationships of the planets to various parts of the human body), a table of the monarchs and the dates of their reigns, a description of the country’s major roads with the distances between towns, and an extensive list of the fairs regularly held in England and Wales.

Several pages are filled with the reckoning of the years since major events – 4061 since Noah’s Flood, 315 since “printing first used in England” (this is about 20 years earlier than the date generally accepted today), 188 since “a blazing star in May” was observed, and five since “a general peace.” Finally, there is a tipped-in sheet documenting “An account of the holydays” for 1768. (This is unrecorded in the English short title catalogue.)

We are excited to add this unique almanac to our collection, and look forward to welcoming you into our reading room to see it in person!

Provenance addendum: This beautiful little almanac also bears an original two-penny duty stamp in the lower corner of its title page. This was mandated by the Stamp Act of 1712, which assessed duties on all sorts of printed matter (a version of this act was instituted in the colonies in 1765, and the reaction against it helped to spur on the new cause of American independence).


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Circulation slip, with checkouts between and 1977 and 2006.From the back matter of A Theory of Pure

Circulation slip, with checkouts between and 1977 and 2006.

From the back matter of A Theory of Pure Design: Harmony, Balance, Rhythm by Denman W. Ross (1907). Original from Harvard University. Digitized March 7, 2007.


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Stamps printed by Artmaster commemorating the 400th birthday of ShakespeareNewberry call number: Cas

Stamps printed by Artmaster commemorating the 400th birthday of Shakespeare

Newberry call number: Case Wing folio PR2877 .S53


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The new #RoyalMail #Starwars #stamps are beautiful.

The new #RoyalMail #Starwars #stamps are beautiful.


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