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  2. Neopost web-enabled stamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neopost_web-enabled_stamps

    Dispenses the stamp sheets to the consumer. The ability to peruse, request, authorize, print, and dispense a stamp purchase using the Internet made these the world's first browser-based stamps. [3] The Neopost web-enabled stamps are listed in Scott catalogue (Specialized Version) under Computer Vended Postage section with several unlisted ...

  3. Make up stamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Make_up_stamp

    Deutsche Post added two Internet-only make-up rate stamps, valued €0.02 to their website to allow customers to use up their Internet-purchased €0.58 stamps when the rate was increased to €0.60 for domestic mail and a €0.10 for registered mail and some international rates on 1 January 2014 but were no longer available after 31 March 2014.

  4. Planning to mail Christmas cards for the holiday season? Here ...

    www.aol.com/planning-mail-christmas-cards...

    The Forever stamp cost 41 cents in 2007 when USPS introduced it. The price of first-class Forever stamps increased from 68 cents to 73 cents July 14, an increase of more than 7%.

  5. Personalised stamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personalised_stamp

    A German personalised stamp. A personalised (or personalized) stamp is a postage stamp on which, for a fee, an image and/or text of the purchaser's choosing may be placed. The stamps vary from country to country, and while some are normal stamps with a personalised label on the left attached by perforations, elsewhere the stamps are more properly regarded as one-piece personalised meter stamps ...

  6. Postage stamp reprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postage_stamp_reprint

    A notable example of this occurred in 1875 in the United States, where all stamps issued to date were reproduced or reprinted with the intention of making them more readily available to collectors. (The actual numbers printed were small, and so most of the reissues are now rarer and more expensive than the originals they resemble.)

  7. Sheet of stamps - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_of_stamps

    The stamps are arranged on the sheet in a table with rows and columns. Due to this arrangement, the location of each stamp can be precisely determined. The philatelist counts the single stamps horizontally from left to right, but the post counts them vertically from top to bottom. Accordingly, the third stamp in the sixth row of a sheet of 10 x ...

  8. Postage stamps and postal history of the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postage_stamps_and_postal...

    Later in the 2010s, automated stamp and bank automatic teller machines began dispensing thinner stamps. The thin stamps were to make it easier for automated stamp machines to dispense and to make the stamps more environmentally friendly. [68] On January 26, 2014, the postal service raised the price of First-class postage stamps to 49 cents.

  9. Specimen stamp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Specimen_stamp

    Specimen stamps have no postal validity so postal administrations are free to distribute them as widely as they like and this can include to stamp dealers, philatelic magazines, government bodies, embassies and as promotional items for philatelists. As many specimen stamps are worth more than the originals, they have often been forged.