Definitive Stamp - Notable Definitive Stamp Series

Notable Definitive Stamp Series

  • Argentina
    • 1935-51 Patriots and Natural Resources Issue
  • Australia
    • Kangaroo and Map
    • King George V series
  • Canada
    • Scroll issue
    • Queen Elizabeth II issue
    • Arch and maple leaf issue
    • War issue
  • France
    • Ceres series
    • Navigation and Commerce issue
  • Germany
    • Germania
    • Women in German history series
  • Greece
    • Hermes Heads
  • Norway
    • Post horn series, issued since 1872
  • Portugal
    • Ceres series
  • United Kingdom
    • Wilding series
    • Machin series
  • United States
    • Washington-Franklin Issues
    • Presidential Issue
    • Liberty issue
    • Prominent Americans series
    • Americana series
    • Great Americans series
    • Transportation coils
    • Distinguished Americans series

Read more about this topic:  Definitive Stamp

Famous quotes containing the words notable, definitive, stamp and/or series:

    In one notable instance, where the United States Army and a hundred years of persuasion failed, a highway has succeeded. The Seminole Indians surrendered to the Tamiami Trail. From the Everglades the remnants of this race emerged, soon after the trail was built, to set up their palm-thatched villages along the road and to hoist tribal flags as a lure to passing motorists.
    —For the State of Florida, U.S. public relief program (1935-1943)

    ... But all the feelings that evoke in us the joy or the misfortune of a real person are only produced in us through the intermediary of an image of that joy or that misfortune; the ingeniousness of the first novelist was in understanding that, in the apparatus of our emotions, since the image is the only essential element, the simplification which consists of purely and simply suppressing the factual characters is a definitive improvement.
    Marcel Proust (1871–1922)

    The use of criticism, in periodical writing, is to sift, not to stamp a work.
    Margaret Fuller (1810–1850)

    I look on trade and every mechanical craft as education also. But let me discriminate what is precious herein. There is in each of these works an act of invention, an intellectual step, or short series of steps taken; that act or step is the spiritual act; all the rest is mere repetition of the same a thousand times.
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)