1995 32c Contemporary Christmas: Santa and Chimney, booklet single

# 3010 - 1995 32c Contemporary Christmas: Santa and Chimney, booklet single

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US #3010
1995 Santa Entering Chimney

  • 1995 contemporary Christmas stamps
  • Self-adhesive
  • Issued in four formats

Category of Stamp:  Commemorative
Set: 
Christmas series
Value: 
32¢, First-class Mail rate
First Day of Issue: 
September 30, 1995
First Day City: 
North Pole, New York
Quantity Issued: 
350,000,000
Printed by:
 Avery Dennison
Printing Method:
Lithographed
Format: 
Booklet panes of 21 (20 stamps and 1 non-stamp label))
Perforations: 
Serpentine die cut 11.25

Reason the stamp was issued:  This stamp is from a set of four which was issued for the 1995 Christmas mailing season.  The stamps highlight Santa Claus and children holding gifts.

About the stamp design:  The four images on the stamps are based upon artwork created by unknown Victorian artists.  These artists worked for commercial printers and publishers.  The original pieces were part of The John Grossman Collection of Antique Images.  The chosen images were scanned into a computer and edited.  Santa Entering Chimney is based on an antique writing tablet cover.
Special design details:  This set of stamps was the first Christmas stamps issued with no wording other than the denomination and “USA.”  Christmas stamps issued in previous years included the word “Greetings.”

About the printing process:  This stamp was issued as sheets, booklets, self-adhesive panes, and self-adhesive coils.

First Day City:  The First Day of Issue ceremony took place at Santa’s Workshop Rural Postal Substation in the town of North Pole, New York, near Lake Placid.  About 1,000 people attended the event.  Santa’s Workshop is the oldest continuously run theme park in the US.

Unusual thing about this stamp:  John Grossman, who owned the Victorian items used for the stamp images, produced collectables with the same designs as the stamps.  These included wrapping paper, tote bags, and note cards.

About the Christmas series: By the early 1960s, the US Post Office was receiving 1,000 letters a year (for several years) asking for a Christmas-themed stamp to frank their holiday mail.  The idea was approved and the US issued its first Christmas stamp on November 1, 1962.
The stamp was wildly popular, featuring popular holiday decorations of a wreath and candles.  The Post Office Department had expected there would be a great demand for the issue, so they printed 350 million stamps – the largest print run for a special stamp up to that time.  Those 350 million stamps sold out quickly, leading the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to produce more stamps – reaching over 860 million by the end of the year.
While the Christmas stamp was very popular, it wasn’t without its detractors.  Some didn’t agree with the idea of the post office issuing a stamp honoring a religious holiday.  Others wanted Christmas stamps that were more religious.  The Post Office would continue to issue Christmas stamps in the coming years that featured the National Christmas Tree, seasonal plants, and an angel in 1965. The angel was considered less controversial because angels are included in many religions, not just Christianity.
In 1966, the Post Office came up with a plan to produce Christmas stamps utilizing classic paintings of the Madonna and Child.  These stamps wouldn’t violate the separation of church and state because they were a celebration of culture.  On November 1, 1966, they issued the first US Madonna and Child stamp in Christmas, Michigan.  The stamp featured the 15th century painting, Madonna and Child with Angels, by Flemish painter Hans Memling.
That stamp was very popular and over 1.1 billion were printed.  The same design was used again the following year, however, the 1967 stamp was larger and showed more of the painting.  The stamp’s continued popularity led the Post Office to issue another traditional Christmas stamp in 1968, this time picturing the Angel Gabriel.   For the 1969 issue, they reverted back to the non-religious theme, with a stamp picturing a painting called Winter Sunday in Norway, Maine.
The Post Office made a big change in 1970.  To keep people in both camps happy, they issued one traditional Christmas stamp, picturing a classic painting of the Nativity, plus a block of four picturing Christmas toys.  That decision proved popular and they have continued to issue stamps with both traditional and contemporary Christmas themes ever since.

History the stamp represents: 

Santa Entering Chimney – The image of Santa on the rooftop is from an antique writing tablet cover from the early 1900s.  In the original image, Santa is smoking a pipe.  Due to the USPS policy against portraying smoking, the pipe was removed in the stamp design.

Since immigrants coming to America first arrived in New York City, many of our Christmas traditions, including Santa Claus, had their beginnings here. Awaiting opportunities to migrate westward, newly arrived immigrants learned their neighbors’ customs, combined them with their own, and carried them across the country. Before long, the Old World St. Nicholas had been transformed into the American Santa Claus.

One of the most definitive descriptions of this legendary figure was given by Clement Clark Moore in 1822. His famous poem, The Night Before Christmas, written solely to amuse his children, almost singlehandedly changed the stern St. Nicholas into “jolly St. Nick” – a plump, happy-go-lucky elf with a sleigh full of toys and eight flying reindeer.

While Moore gave us the written account, it was Thomas Nast who supplied the visual image. His drawings for Moore’s poems helped secure him a job with Harper’s Weekly, and for 23 years his Christmas drawings gave the country an intimate look at Santa and his workshop. His illustrations for George Walker’s book Santa Claus and His Works also confirmed the idea that Santa wore red. And it was Walker’s story that introduced the idea that Santa lived at the North Pole.

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US #3010
1995 Santa Entering Chimney

  • 1995 contemporary Christmas stamps
  • Self-adhesive
  • Issued in four formats

Category of Stamp:  Commemorative
Set: 
Christmas series
Value: 
32¢, First-class Mail rate
First Day of Issue: 
September 30, 1995
First Day City: 
North Pole, New York
Quantity Issued: 
350,000,000
Printed by:
 Avery Dennison
Printing Method:
Lithographed
Format: 
Booklet panes of 21 (20 stamps and 1 non-stamp label))
Perforations: 
Serpentine die cut 11.25

Reason the stamp was issued:  This stamp is from a set of four which was issued for the 1995 Christmas mailing season.  The stamps highlight Santa Claus and children holding gifts.

About the stamp design:  The four images on the stamps are based upon artwork created by unknown Victorian artists.  These artists worked for commercial printers and publishers.  The original pieces were part of The John Grossman Collection of Antique Images.  The chosen images were scanned into a computer and edited.  Santa Entering Chimney is based on an antique writing tablet cover.
Special design details:  This set of stamps was the first Christmas stamps issued with no wording other than the denomination and “USA.”  Christmas stamps issued in previous years included the word “Greetings.”

About the printing process:  This stamp was issued as sheets, booklets, self-adhesive panes, and self-adhesive coils.

First Day City:  The First Day of Issue ceremony took place at Santa’s Workshop Rural Postal Substation in the town of North Pole, New York, near Lake Placid.  About 1,000 people attended the event.  Santa’s Workshop is the oldest continuously run theme park in the US.

Unusual thing about this stamp:  John Grossman, who owned the Victorian items used for the stamp images, produced collectables with the same designs as the stamps.  These included wrapping paper, tote bags, and note cards.

About the Christmas series: By the early 1960s, the US Post Office was receiving 1,000 letters a year (for several years) asking for a Christmas-themed stamp to frank their holiday mail.  The idea was approved and the US issued its first Christmas stamp on November 1, 1962.
The stamp was wildly popular, featuring popular holiday decorations of a wreath and candles.  The Post Office Department had expected there would be a great demand for the issue, so they printed 350 million stamps – the largest print run for a special stamp up to that time.  Those 350 million stamps sold out quickly, leading the Bureau of Engraving and Printing to produce more stamps – reaching over 860 million by the end of the year.
While the Christmas stamp was very popular, it wasn’t without its detractors.  Some didn’t agree with the idea of the post office issuing a stamp honoring a religious holiday.  Others wanted Christmas stamps that were more religious.  The Post Office would continue to issue Christmas stamps in the coming years that featured the National Christmas Tree, seasonal plants, and an angel in 1965. The angel was considered less controversial because angels are included in many religions, not just Christianity.
In 1966, the Post Office came up with a plan to produce Christmas stamps utilizing classic paintings of the Madonna and Child.  These stamps wouldn’t violate the separation of church and state because they were a celebration of culture.  On November 1, 1966, they issued the first US Madonna and Child stamp in Christmas, Michigan.  The stamp featured the 15th century painting, Madonna and Child with Angels, by Flemish painter Hans Memling.
That stamp was very popular and over 1.1 billion were printed.  The same design was used again the following year, however, the 1967 stamp was larger and showed more of the painting.  The stamp’s continued popularity led the Post Office to issue another traditional Christmas stamp in 1968, this time picturing the Angel Gabriel.   For the 1969 issue, they reverted back to the non-religious theme, with a stamp picturing a painting called Winter Sunday in Norway, Maine.
The Post Office made a big change in 1970.  To keep people in both camps happy, they issued one traditional Christmas stamp, picturing a classic painting of the Nativity, plus a block of four picturing Christmas toys.  That decision proved popular and they have continued to issue stamps with both traditional and contemporary Christmas themes ever since.

History the stamp represents: 

Santa Entering Chimney – The image of Santa on the rooftop is from an antique writing tablet cover from the early 1900s.  In the original image, Santa is smoking a pipe.  Due to the USPS policy against portraying smoking, the pipe was removed in the stamp design.

Since immigrants coming to America first arrived in New York City, many of our Christmas traditions, including Santa Claus, had their beginnings here. Awaiting opportunities to migrate westward, newly arrived immigrants learned their neighbors’ customs, combined them with their own, and carried them across the country. Before long, the Old World St. Nicholas had been transformed into the American Santa Claus.

One of the most definitive descriptions of this legendary figure was given by Clement Clark Moore in 1822. His famous poem, The Night Before Christmas, written solely to amuse his children, almost singlehandedly changed the stern St. Nicholas into “jolly St. Nick” – a plump, happy-go-lucky elf with a sleigh full of toys and eight flying reindeer.

While Moore gave us the written account, it was Thomas Nast who supplied the visual image. His drawings for Moore’s poems helped secure him a job with Harper’s Weekly, and for 23 years his Christmas drawings gave the country an intimate look at Santa and his workshop. His illustrations for George Walker’s book Santa Claus and His Works also confirmed the idea that Santa wore red. And it was Walker’s story that introduced the idea that Santa lived at the North Pole.