Pictorial Stamps

A pictorial stamp is a stamp with a picture! No problem there. It doesn't commemorate anything special, it may well be the kind of stamp that is used on everyday letters and cards. But the main thing is that the people who issued it wanted you to see and learn more about their country, its history and heritage, and sometimes - of course - they just hoped you might simply buy more stamps!



Pictorial stamps started in the era when printing was by the intaglio process - line engraving - or by typography. Both of these processes have their strong points, but neither of them is ideal for reproduction of pictures - they lack the ability to provide subtlety and shade. So the early pictures lacked a bit of immediacy.



Being a bilingual area, these stamps from South West Africa, now Namibia, occur alternately in English and Afrikaans. But whatever their merits, it has to be said that the stamps lacked wow factor. If colour can add wow, then the Bahamas certainly tried



with this interesting view of a 'sea garden.' Oddly, it was also the Bahamas, in conjunction with William Beebe, the oceanographer, which opened the world's first undersea post office. We're not sure how they managed to get the stamps to stick, though.




Sometimes, of course, it wasn't the scenery which featured, but an invention. Early aeroplanes were interesting machines, and created great popular interest. The famous Flying Jenny from the United States, issued in 1918, usually appears flying the right way up (or should it be the Wright way up?) but on a few stamps, the pilot seemed to be having a much more interesting time than usual. Rather rare and expensive like this - perhaps all the letters dropped out?



But pictorial stamps really took off, so to speak, with the coming of photogravure. For now, photographs could be reproduced by the million. The early examples were in one or two colours at best, but from the 1960s onward, the magic word 'multicoloured' started to appear in the catalogues.


This set from the Isle of Man features stained glass windows, and almost all the colours which can be reproduced on a stamp!

   

Where next? Well, in recent years we have seen stamps with holograms, with ground-up bits of oak from HMS Victory, with encapsulated scent, and most recently with a lenticulated surface, which gives the image an illusion of movement as you change the angle of view. None, perhaps, strictly or solely pictorial, but then....

We can take you from here back to Stamps, or back to the Home page, or, if you've enjoyed your tour round, why not send yourself a Postcard?