• The ribbon leaf wreath is inspired by French floral  art. Aspidistra leaves, folded and manipulated to resemble ribbons, create a  long-lasting wreath.
• Gilded pinecones and magnolia pods grace the wreath trimmed with cranberry red ribbon.
• The woodland bush ivy and red winterberry wreath presents a classic red and green palette.
• Red and gold ribbons adorns the wreath made from gilded dried hydrangea, eucalyptus and nandina foliage, red berries, and small ornaments.
• Gilded pinecones and magnolia pods grace the wreath trimmed with cranberry red ribbon.
• The woodland bush ivy and red winterberry wreath presents a classic red and green palette.
• Red and gold ribbons adorns the wreath made from gilded dried hydrangea, eucalyptus and nandina foliage, red berries, and small ornaments.
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George Herbert Walker Bush (June 12, 1924 – November 30, 2018) was an American politician who served as the 41st president of the United States from 1989 to 1993 and the 43rd vice president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. A member of the Republican Party, he held posts that included those of congressman, ambassador, and CIA director. Until his son George W. Bush became the 43rd president in 2001, he was usually known simply as George Bush. 
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50th anniversary of the first moon landing. There will  be two different stamps. In an understandable departure from their “no living  American” rules, one stamp features a photograph of Apollo 11 astronaut Buzz  Aldrin in his space suit on the surface of the moon. The image was taken by  astronaut Neil Armstrong. Despite much better alternatives, the other stamp  reproduces a photograph of the moon taken in 2010, showing a dot to indicate  the landing site of the lunar module in the Sea of Tranquility. 
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In 2018, it was estimated that 86 million Americans had  watched the series as children. As of 2018, Sesame Street has won 189 Emmy  Awards and 11 Grammy Awards, more than any other children's show.
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This new set of four stamps celebrates Halloween, a  holiday that lets children and adults delight in the things that scare us. With  the approach of autumn, Spooky Silhouettes stamps will offer fun, frightful  scenes that symbolize this annual celebration. 
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With this pane of 16 stamps, the Postal Service brings  Tyrannosaurus rex to life some 66 million years after its demise. One design  illustrates a face-to-face encounter with a T.rex approaching through a forest  clearing; another shows the same young adult T.rex with a young Triceratops,  both dinosaurs shown in fossil form. The third and fourth stamps depict a newly  hatched T.rex covered with downy feathers and a bare-skinned juvenile T.rex  chasing a primitive mammal. Described as “the Nation’s T.rex,” the young adult  depicted on two of the stamps, was discovered on federal land in Montana and is  one of the most studied and important specimens ever found. Its remains will  soon be on display at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of Natural  History in Washington, D.C.
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This set honors artist Ellsworth Kelly. Per  the Postal People, “Kelly pioneered a distinctive style of abstraction based on  real elements reduced to their essential forms.” His artworks include  paintings, sculpture and works on paper. The 20 stamps on the pane feature 10  pieces, each represented twice: Yellow White (1961), Colors for  a Large Wall (1951), Blue Red Rocker (1963), Spectrum  I (1953), South Ferry (1956), Blue  Green (1962), Orange Red Relief (for Delphine  Seyrig) (1990), Meschers (1951), Red Blue (1964) and Gaza (1956). A detail from Blue Yellow Red III (1971)  appears in the selvage (not shown here). Derry Noyes served as art director and  designer for this issue.
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This  issue honors tennis champion Maureen Connolly Brinker. The stamp art features  an oil-on-linen painting of the tennis star by Gregory Manchess. Based on a  black-and-white photograph taken in 1952, the portrait is described as “a  colorful interpretation” of Connolly hitting a low volley. Nicknamed  "Little Mo," the 5-foot-4-inch dynamo used powerful groundstrokes to  become the first woman to win all four major tennis tournaments in a calendar  year.
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The Postal Service honors the nation’s  brave and loyal military working dogs with this new booklet of 20 stamps. Each  block of four stamps features one stamp of each of four breeds—German shepherd,  Labrador retriever, Belgian Malinois and Dutch shepherd—that commonly serve in  America's armed forces.
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Three new stamps in a pane of 18 mark the 150th  anniversary of the completion of the Transcontinental Railroad, a massive  engineering feat that reduced travel time across the country from as many as  six months to about one week and made the American West an integral part of the  nation. 
Two different stamps feature the Jupiter and  the No. 119 locomotives that powered the trains carrying the officers  and guests of two train companies to the "Golden Spike Ceremony,"  held when the two rail lines were joined at Promontory Summit in Utah.  A  third stamp portrays the famous golden spike that was used for the historic  final connection, and was a prominent part of the ceremony. 
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Among  the 2019 postal rate changes, the additional per ounce rate for First Class was  reduced from 21¢ to 15¢ per ounce. To meet this rate, the Postal Service  brought back the design that was first used in 2017, when the add-on rate was  21¢. The primary difference will be that it will bear a 2019 year date instead  of the previous 2017 date. 
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Hearts Blossom is the latest stamp in the Love  series from the U.S. Postal Service. The stamp art features the word “Love” in  cursive script below 12 colorful hearts meant to visually express love’s  joyful, bountiful nature.
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The  Year of the Boar is the 12th and final stamp in the Celebrating Lunar New Year  series. The Year of the Boar begins on Feb. 5, 2019, and ends on Jan. 24, 2020.
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The  42nd stamp in the Black Heritage series honors Gregory Hines (1946–2003), whose  unique style of tap dancing injected new artistry and excitement into a  traditional American form. A versatile performer who danced, acted and sang on  Broadway, on television and in movies,
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This  issuance celebrates the beauty of cactus flowers with a booklet of 20 stamps.  Each stamp depicts a photograph of the flower of one of these ten cacti: Opuntia engelmannii, Rebutia minuscula, Echinocereus dasyacanthus, Echinocereus  poselgeri, Echinocereus coccineus, Pelecyphora aselliformis, Parodia microsperma, Echinocactus horizonthalonius, Thelocactus heterochromus and Parodia scopa.
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This  stamp celebrates the bicentennial of Alabama statehood. Alabama became the 22nd  state in the Union on Dec. 14, 1819. The stamp art is a photograph taken at  sunset in Cheaha State Park. Alabama photographer Joe Miller took the picture  from the park’s Pulpit Rock Trail. With Pulpit Rock in the foreground, most of  the area in the valley below the overlook is part of the Talladega National  Forest, which surrounds the state park. The name of the state and the year of  statehood are included in the stamp art.
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With  this new stamp in the Music Icons series, the U.S. Postal Service honors Marvin  Gaye (1939–1984) — the “Prince of Soul” — one of the most influential music  performers of his generation. 
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The  Postal Service celebrates USS Missouri (BB-63), America’s last battleship, with the issuance of a commemorative stamp  in 2019, coinciding with the 75th anniversary of Missouri’s commissioning on June 11, 1944. 
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This  pane of 10 stamps features five different murals designed to add a touch of  beauty to Post Office walls and help boost the morale of Americans during the  era of the Great Depression. On the stamp art, the town or city and state in  which the work of art is located is printed underneath each mural. The murals  included are: "Kiowas Moving Camp" (1936) Anadarko, Oklahoma;  "Mountains and Yucca" (1937) Deming, New Mexico; "Antelope"  (1939) Florence, Colorado; "Sugarloaf Mountain" (1940) Rockville,  Maryland; and "Air Mail" (1941) Piggott, Arkansas.
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With  this new 2019 stamp, the Postal Service celebrates the American flag, the most  recognizable symbol of our nation. 
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This  issuance celebrates Wild and Scenic Rivers — exceptional American streams that  run freely through natural landscapes without man-made alterations. The pane of  a dozen different designs features photographs that represent the more than 200  rivers or river segments designated within the Wild and Scenic Rivers System.  First row, left to right: Merced River (Michael Melford, photographer), Owyhee  River (Michael Melford, photographer), Koyukuk River (Michael Melford,  photographer) Second row, left to right: Niobrara River (Michael Melford,  photographer), Snake River (Tim Palmer, photographer), Flathead River (Tim  Palmer, photographer) Third row, left to right: Missouri River (Bob Wick, staff  photographer for Bureau of Land Management), Skagit River (Tim Palmer,  photographer), Deschutes River (Bob Wick, BLM, photographer) Fourth row, left  to right: Tlikakila River (Michael Melford, photographer), Ontonagon River (Tim  Palmer, photographer), Clarion River (Bob Wick, BLM, photographer). Small type  on the bottom of each stamp indicates the name of the river.
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With  this stamp, the 32nd in the Literary Arts series, the Postal Service honors  poet Walt Whitman (1819–1892) on the bicentennial of his birth.
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In  2019, the Postal Service issues Frogs, four new stamps in a booklet of 20,  featuring digital illustrations of four North American frogs: the Pacific tree  frog, the northern leopard frog, the American green tree frog and the squirrel  tree frog. 
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Four  whimsical se-tenant stamps celebrate the fun of America's state and county  fairs. The stamps were designed to work together as a panorama of fair  activities, while each stamp also works as an individual picture. The stamp on  the far left shows farmers unloading produce behind a white fence. In the  second stamp, a child holding a chicken sits atop the same fence, with carnival  rides — a Ferris wheel and merry-go-round — in the background. Those rides can  be seen in the third stamp, where some fairgoers admire the livestock behind  the fence while others walk, balloons in hand, toward a sweets stand. The last  stamp shows children at the stand buying treats from the vendor.
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This  stamp issuance celebrates the 50th anniversary of the Woodstock Music and Art  Fair, held in the small farming community of Bethel, New York, in August 1969.  It was the most famous rock festival in history and an expression of the youth  counterculture of the 1960s.
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The  Winter Berries booklet of 20 stamps celebrates four of winter’s small yet  vibrant offerings: the winterberry (Ilex  verticillata), the juniper berry (Juniperus  communis), the beautyberry (Callicarpa  americana) and the soapberry (Sapindus  saponaria). The stamp art features highly detailed botanical portraits of  each plant that highlight the bold colors and rich textures of their berries.
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Celebrating  the desolate beauty of the Joshua tree (Yucca  brevifolia) and its distinct desert environment, this Priority Mail stamp  depicts a common scene throughout much of the Mojave and Sonoran Deserts. Using  the bold colors of the sun’s reflection off of the trees, rocks, and other  shrubby vegetation, artist Dan Cosgrove illuminates the desert scene in warm,  golden hues.
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With this Priority Mail Express stamp,  the Postal Service commemorates the Bethesda Fountain, one of Central Park's  most iconic structures. Dedicated in 1873, the fountain is a gathering place  beloved by New Yorkers and out-of-town visitors alike. The stamp art features a  stylized depiction of the fountain. The illustration was first rendered as a  pencil sketch and then scanned and finished digitally. 
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Four  new postcard stamps celebrate the beauty and wonder of coral reefs. Each stamp  depicts a type of stony coral, along with associated reef fish, in a highly  stylized manner: elkhorn coral, shown with two French angelfish; brain coral,  with a spotted moray eel; staghorn coral, with bluestriped grunts; pillar  coral, with a coney grouper and neon gobies. 
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California Dogface
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