The original stamp artwork is based on Bugs Bunny’s iconic moments and was created especially for this issuance by Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc., featuring work from Warner Bros. Animation artists. They also have created sketches on the reverse side of the stamp pane.
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Originally planned for the APS Great American Stamp Show that had to be canceled due to Covid-19 concerns, these stamps will instead be issued at APS headquarters on the same day the show would have started. The issue celebrates the American spirit of innovation with five different designs, each representing an area in which U.S. scientists and engineers have made significant contributions: Computing, Biomedicine, Genome sequencing, Robotics and Solar technology.
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The 2020-2021 Federal Duck Stamp features a pair of black-bellied whistling-ducks painted by Alabama artist Eddy LeRoy. The new stamp is valid from July 1, 2020 through June 30, 2021.
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These stamps honor pioneering Japanese American artist Ruth Asawa,featuring photographs of 10 of Asawa’s wire sculptures
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The stamp is round and  features a photograph of a pink chrysanthemum on a white background. Taken from  above, the photograph highlights the intricate features of the bloom. 
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The Presorted Star stamp is a First Class Forever rate  stamp designed to meet the needs of business mailers, and is sold in  self-adhesive coils of 3,000 and 10,000. According to the Postal People, “this  new stamp celebrates the beloved American Stars and Stripes by focusing on its  vital components
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The Big Bend stamp captures the beauty of the  Big Bend region in West Texas, where river, mountain and desert ecosystems  coexist in its vast expanses. The stamp art depicts the Rio Grande flowing  between the sheer limestone cliffs of Santa Elena Canyon in Big Bend National  Park. Per Wikipedia, “Because the Rio Grande serves as an international  boundary, the park faces unusual constraints while administering and enforcing park  rules, regulations, and policies. In accordance with the Treaty of Guadalupe  Hidalgo, the park's territory extends only to the center of the deepest river  channel as the river flowed in 1848. The rest of the land south of that  channel, and the river, lies within Mexican territory. The park is bordered by  the protected areas of Parque Nacional CaƱon de Santa Elena and Maderas del  Carmen in Mexico.”
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This new Express Mail stamp depicts the winter beauty of  the Grand Island Ice Caves in Lake Superior, on Michigan’s Upper Peninsula.  Grand Island is marked by massive sandstone bluffs that are especially dramatic  in winter when lake water seeps into the crevices and caverns, forming  magnificent ice curtains and icicles that hang like stalactites from ceilings.  The stamp art features a colorful illustration of how one of these  ever-changing ice caves might appear from the inside looking out toward the  west at sunset.
Viewing ice caves and ice formations has become a popular  winter activity at Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore and the surrounding area.  The ice generally begins to form by mid-December and remains until early April,  forming columns of blue, white, or yellow ice 20-50 feet high.
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This new semi-postal stamp will help raise funds for  those diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The illustration of  a green plant sprouting from the ground, which is covered in fallen leaves,  symbolizes the PTSD healing process. Tens of millions of Americans will  experience PTSD in their lifetimes. The condition develops in some children and  adults who have survived a traumatic event. Experiences such as a natural  disaster, car accident, physical or sexual assault, abuse, and combat, among others,  can trigger PTSD. While post-traumatic disorders have long been a subject of  study, PTSD was not officially added to the American Psychiatric Association’s  Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders until the late 20th  century. Today, the nation is increasingly dedicated to compassionately  treating this mental health issue.
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The Drug Free USA stamp will be issued in October, during  Red Ribbon Week, the nation’s oldest and largest drug use prevention awareness  program. In 1988, the National Family Partnership coordinated the first  National Red Ribbon Week with President Ronald Reagan and first lady Nancy  Reagan serving as honorary chairpersons. The week runs Oct. 23-31 and coincides  with National Substance Abuse Prevention Month every October.
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The Postal Service celebrates the beauty of American  gardens in a pane of 20 stamps that feature these 10 different photographs of  botanic, country estate and municipal gardens: Biltmore Estate Gardens (North  Carolina); Brooklyn Botanic Garden (New York); Chicago Botanic Garden  (Illinois); Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens (Maine); Dumbarton Oaks Garden  (District of Columbia); The Huntington Botanical Gardens (California); Alfred  B. Maclay Gardens State Park (Florida); Norfolk Botanical Garden (Virginia);  Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens (Ohio); and Winterthur Garden (Delaware).
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This stamp honors champion golfer Arnold Palmer  (1929–2016). With drive and charisma, he helped transform a game once seen as a  pastime for the elite into a sport enjoyed by the masses, with “Arnie’s Army”  leading the way. 
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Let’s Celebrate! helps send cheer along with well wishes.
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The stamp features a photograph of an arrangement of a  burgundy mini-cymbidium orchid bloom, a succulent and a touch of green  hydrangea, accented with loops of variegated lily grass, 
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 Environmental  groups have sought to make Earth Day into a day of action to change human  behavior and provoke policy change
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in a booklet of 20 stamps featuring 10 different  portraits of fruits and vegetables. Each stamp features a collection of one  kind of fruit or vegetable: red and black plums, heirloom and cherry tomatoes,  carrots, lemons, blueberries, red and green grapes, lettuces, strawberries,  eggplants and figs.
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The stamp features a photograph  of a corsage containing a spray of peach roses and a pink ranunculus, accented  with deep-pink heather and seeded eucalyptus. A cream-colored lace ribbon entwines  the flowers. The corsage was arranged by floral designer Carol Caggiano
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America’s abundance of natural beauty. These hand-sketched and painted designs  depict these five different scenes of outdoor activities: building a sand  castle, hiking, cross-country skiing, canoeing and biking.
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The 43rd stamp in the Black Heritage series that began in  1978 honors Gwen Ifill (1955–2016), one of America’s most esteemed journalists.  Among the first African Americans to hold prominent positions in both broadcast  and print journalism, Ifill was a trailblazer in the profession. In 1999, she  became the first woman of African descent to host a nationally televised U.S  public affairs program with Washington Week in Review. The stamp features a  photo of Ifill taken in 2008 by photographer Robert Severi.
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The stamp art  features photographs taken by Cade Martin that depict four elements of hip hop:  MCing (rapping), b-boying (breakdancing), DJing and graffiti art. The bold,  digitally tinted images are intended to appear in motion. The name of the  element featured appears across the top of each stam
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Toward the center, red hearts in varying sizes replace pink hearts  in a formation that creates one large red heart, the focal point of this  graphic design. Beyond romantic messages, the stamp is intended for use on  thank-you notes, get-well cards or any occasion when love is the perfect  message.
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This stamp celebrates the 200th anniversary of Maine  statehood. Nicknamed the Pine Tree State, Maine was part of the Commonwealth of  Massachusetts until 1820, when it voted to secede from Massachusetts to become  a separate state.
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Mayflower in Plymouth Harbor Forever Stamp This  commemorative stamp marks the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the Mayflower  in Plymouth Harbor. The Mayflower and the Pilgrims have been featured before on  a 1920 300th Anniversary issue and a 1970 350th Anniversary stamp. The stamp’s  image is based on artwork of watercolor, acrylic and gouache, a method of  painting that uses opaque pigments ground in water and thickened to a glue-like  consistency. The painting was digitally refined to convey a scene of desolate  beauty at the end of the Pilgrims’ long journey to an unfamiliar world.
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Highlighted in gold  foil are the words “Thank you” in cursive script and an elegant floral design  that swirls through and around the words.
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Voices of the Harlem Renaissance Forever Stamps These  stamps celebrate one of the great artistic and literary movements in American  history, the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s, which firmly established African  Americans as a vital force in literature and the arts. Twenty stamps showcase  four stylized pastel portraits of these literary figures: writer, philosopher,  educator and arts advocate Alain Locke; novelist Nella Larsen; bibliophile and  historian Arturo Alfonso Schomburg; and poet Anne Spencer. African-inspired  motifs are used as background elements of each portrait. The pane header shows  a cityscape in silhouette with a sun in its midst and the title “Voices of the  Harlem Renaissance.”
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Flowers in general are among the most popular stamps in  the U.S. and around the world. A set of four Orchids stamps was issued by the  USPS in 1984, and they have appeared within other U.S. flower issues. The 2020  stamps, to be issued in booklets of 20 and coils of 3,000 and 10,000, feature  photographs of one of nine species that grow wild in the United States:  Cypripedium californicum, Hexalectris spicata, Cypripedium reginae, Spiranthes  odorata, Triphora trianthophoros, Platanthera grandiflora, Cyrtopodium  polyphyllum, Calopogon tuberosus and Platanthera leucophaea. Orchids also have  common names, with some plants having several different names in popular use. 
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This stamp commemorates the centennial of the  ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which guarantees  women the right to vote. Inspired by historic photographs, the stamp features a  stylized illustration of suffragists marching in a parade or other public  demonstration. The clothes they wear and the banners they bear display the  official colors of the National Woman’s Party—purple, white and gol
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Lunar New Year: Year of the Rat Forever Stamp The first  USPS Lunar New Year stamp was issued in December 1992. In 2020, the Postal  Service is launching its third Lunar New Year series. The Year of the Rat  observance begins January 25, 2020, and ends February 11, 2021. Calling to mind  the elaborately decorated masks used in the dragon dance often performed in  Lunar New Year parades, this three-dimensional mask is a contemporary take on  the long tradition of paper-cut folk art crafts created during this time of  year.
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