It's not so much having different vendors printing the stamps to meet the anticipated supply demands as it is more using different vendors who are better suited to print the different types of the stamps, such as the sheet, booklets, ATM, etc.
So this is my little "giving back" piece.
So they say that no two snowflakes are alike huh??? I guess those flaky “experts†never ran into the USPS' 2006 Snowflakes.
I'm a fan of the newer stuff. I also understand the need to have multiple printers making the stamps to supply the demand, and all that. It does make it VERY difficult on us newbie collectors to tell them all apart. So when I come across some helpful information for me, and I think I can make it into something that kids can understand, I fire up MS Paint and do it.
So without further a-do, here is the Handy Dandy 2006 Snowflake Quick ID Chart.
---Pat
re: ID help for Snowflakes
It's not so much having different vendors printing the stamps to meet the anticipated supply demands as it is more using different vendors who are better suited to print the different types of the stamps, such as the sheet, booklets, ATM, etc.