New Where Dreams Blossom Stamp Lets Your Mail Bloom

Whether you’re sending thank-you notes, save-the-date notices, or cheerful cards of love and encouragement, the new Where Dreams Blossom Forever® stamp is sure to brighten up your envelopes.

WhereDreamsBlossom-Forever-single-BGv1With a playful take on the popular floral theme, this contemporary stamp features eleven colorful blooms, just one shy of the traditional dozen. The stamp’s title is taken from the unattributed quotation, “Hopes are planted in friendship’s garden where dreams blossom into priceless treasures.”

Similar to the design of the two-ounce Yes, I Do wedding stamp, Where Dreams Blossom is a perfect companion for wedding correspondence and notes to friends.

The Forever stamp was released yesterday at the ASDA Spring Postage Stamp Show in New York City and is available now online and in Post Offices around the country.

Where Dreams Blossom is available in sheets of 20 self-adhesive stamps. Forever stamps are always equal in value to the current First-Class Mail® one-ounce rate.

Racing Through the Olympics With Another Contest

The 2012 Olympic Games in London may be nearly over, but that doesn’t mean our love for all the sports is ending, too. The athletics competitions were especially nail-biting, and got us thinking about a truly amazing woman who appeared on a U.S. postage stamp in 2004.

Wilma Rudolph (1940–1994) overcame a childhood plagued by serious illness to become one of the nation’s greatest athletes. Her left leg was crippled by polio at an early age, but she was determined to walk without a brace. “I think I started acquiring a competitive spirit right then and there,” she wrote in her 1977 autobiography, “a spirit that would make me successful in sports later on.” By the time she was 12 the brace had been sent back to the hospital, and soon she was the star of her high school track and basketball teams. Within four years she had developed into a world-class sprinter.

To test your Olympic knowledge, we have a Wilma Rudolph-themed contest for you! Four lucky winners will receive an official USPS ceremony program from the Wilma Rudolph First Day of Issue ceremony held on July 14, 2004. You must answer both questions correctly:

1. When did Rudolph receive her first Olympic medal, and for which event?

2. During the 1960 Summer Olympics in Rome, Rudolph became the first woman to win three of which kind of medal, and for which events did she receive them?

Submit your answers to uspsstamps [at] gmail [dot] com, and remember spelling counts! The winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Deadline for entries is 5 p.m. EDT tomorrow, Saturday, August 11. Good luck!

Four Flags Will Fly High Tomorrow

Don’t forget! The Four Flags (Forever®) stamps, issued earlier this year, will be reissued in booklets of 10 tomorrow at the NAPEX stamp show in McLean, Virginia. The ceremony, which is free and open to the public, will begin at 11 a.m.

We loved these stamps so much the first time around, we can’t wait to celebrate them again! Will we see you there?

Jose Ferrer First Day of Issue Ceremony a Theatrical Affair

Thank you to everyone who came out last week to the First Day of Issue Ceremony for the José Ferrer stamp, the 14th stamp in the Distinguished Americans series. Ferrer, whose career spanned the worlds of theater, film, television, and music, was the first Latino to win the Oscar for Best Actor and is considered to be one of the most accomplished talents of his generation.

The ceremony took place at The Players in New York City. The Players serves primarily as a social club but is also a repository of American and British theater history, memorabilia and theatrical artifacts. Ferrer was a longtime member and received the organization’s prestigious Edwin Booth Life Achievement Award.

Steve Kearney, USPS, addresses the crowd before the stamp is unveiled

“Today, the Postal Service is pleased and proud to bestow upon José Ferrer—a groundbreaking Latino movie, theater and television performer and the first Puerto Rican actor to succeed in Hollywood—a new commemorative Forever stamp,” said Marie Therese Dominguez, vice president, Government Relations and Public Policy for USPS. “Throughout an acting career that spanned more than half a century, Ferrer played a wide range of roles on both Broadway and on the silver screen. His accomplishments extended to many other genres of entertainment. He acted on radio, performed as an opera singer, co-authored a libretto, and was a composer. And, as if all this weren’t enough, Ferrer wrote for theater and television, and directed and produced numerous plays, both on and off Broadway.”

Joining Dominguez to dedicate the stamp were Ferrer’s wife Stella Ferrer; Rafael Ferrer, voice-over artist; Theodore Chapin, chairman of the Board of Trustees, American Theatre Wing; John Martello, executive director of The Players; Harold Smith Prince, Broadway producer-director; actors Frances Sternhagen and Christopher Lloyd; and Stephen Kearney, manager, Stamp Services, U.S. Postal Service.

Steve Kearney, USPS, & actor Christopher Lloyd wait to sign stamp panes

Artwork based on a photograph © Turner Entertainment Co. A Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. All Rights Reserved.

Happy Birthday, Louisiana!

Today marks the bicentennial of Louisiana statehood, and we’re celebrating with a new stamp! The stamp features a photograph by renowned environmental photographer and writer C. C. Lockwood of Baton Rouge.

The photograph shows a sunset at Flat Lake in the Atchafalaya Basin, the largest contiguous river swamp in the United States. The bald cypress trees hung with Spanish moss suggest the unique ecosystem of the Basin and the opportunities the area provides for hunting, bird watching, fishing, boating, and camping.

Digital Color Postmark Keepsake (click to order)

The image also brings to mind the contributions that crawfish, finfish, blue crabs, alligators, oil, gas, and timber make to the economy of the state, as well as the rich Cajun heritage of the region and the music, food, and folk traditions that so many of us associate with southern Louisiana.

When the first European explorers reached present-day Louisiana during the 16th century, Native Americans were farming the land and hunting its abundant wildlife. European settlement began after René-Robert Cavalier de La Salle sailed down the Mississippi River in 1682 and claimed the area for France, naming it Louisiana after King Louis XIV. Settlers founded New Orleans in 1718, fighting alligators and swarms of mosquitoes to establish the town. French ships carrying enslaved Africans began to arrive soon afterward. The Africans brought valuable skills to the struggling colony, including experience growing rice and indigo, plants that flourished in Louisiana’s semi-tropical climate and became vital crops in plantations along the Mississippi.

First Day Cover (click to order)

An important group of new settlers boosted the colony in the 1760s: French-speaking families from present-day Nova Scotia, then called Acadia. After being expelled from their homes by the British, many Acadians settled in Louisiana, where they became known as Cajuns.

As its military power in the New World waned, France ceded all of Louisiana west of the Mississippi River and New Orleans to its ally, Spain, via a secret treaty in 1762. The following year, Britain took control of Louisiana east of the Mississippi. Spain returned Louisiana to France in 1800. In 1803, the land traded hands yet again. President Thomas Jefferson bought much of the present-day state from Napoleon Bonaparte as part of the Louisiana Purchase. In 1804, Congress made most of present-day Louisiana the Territory of Orleans. Statehood followed eight years later.

Digital Color Postmark (click to order)

Much of Louisiana’s complex history is rooted in its unique geography. The great Mississippi River flows through the state and into the Gulf of Mexico, filling portions of Louisiana with fertile alluvial soil. The climate is subtropical, with New Orleans lying on about the same latitude as Cairo, Egypt. As a result, the state is a tapestry of rich agricultural land, piney woods, swampy bottomland forests, and marshes. In fact, about 40 percent of the marshland in the U.S. is found in Louisiana. Nearly 400 miles of coastline borders the Gulf of Mexico.

Louisiana’s culture and people are a rich mixture of different ingredients. About a third of the state’s people are African American, some of whom can trace their ancestors back to the West Africans who brought the crops and culture of their native land to Louisiana. Another large group is descended from the French, including the Cajuns of southern Louisiana. The descendants of Africans, Native Americans, and white settlers who intermarried call themselves Louisiana Creoles. The Creole language blends French and African words to arrive at new terms such as “gumbo”–a flavorful stew. Nowhere are these diverse groups better represented than in Louisiana’s music. From a brass band leading a New Orleans jazz funeral, to Cajun fiddlers keeping time for dancers at a fais do-do, or an accordion player launching into a joyful Zydeco riff in the Creole tradition, Louisiana’s music is the hallmark of the state’s cultural heritage.

Ceremony Program (click to order)

With its vibrant music, authentic cuisine, and abundant natural areas, tourism is one of Louisiana’s leading industries. More than 20 million people visit the Pelican State each year, some to attend festivals such as Mardi Gras, a celebration brought to Louisiana by French Catholics. New Orleans has been attracting Mardi Gras revelers since its first parade took to the streets in 1837. Other major industries include petroleum, natural gas, tree farming, and soybeans.

The Louisiana Statehood stamp is being issued as a Forever® stamp. Forever stamps are always equal in value to the current First-Class Mail one-ounce rate. The stamp is available as sheets of 20 stamps and as blocks of four or ten stamps.