Yes. Postage does not have to paid through individual stamps; as long as the value of all stamps placed on the envelope is enough to cover the cost that envelope carries, any number and value of stamps can be used.
Yes, you certainly can! As long as the combination adds up to or exceeds the necessary value, they can be combined. Make sure that all of the stamps can be clearly seen and the values read by the Post Office.
Yokiti Yamamoto has written: 'Japanese postage stamps' -- subject(s): Postage stamps 'Japanese postage stamps (for philatelists)' -- subject(s): Postage-stamps
Yes, every country uses postage stamps.
US postage stamps do not expire -- they are always worth face value as postage.
No, they did not exist then. Great Britain introduced the first postage stamps in 1840.
Mark Harris Winnegrad has written: 'Highlights of the history of printing as depicted on postage stamps' -- subject(s): History, Postage stamps, Printing, Topics 'Printing on stamps' -- subject(s): History, Postage stamps, Printing, Printing on postage stamps, Topics
20 stamps
Yes, it is one of the Postage Stamp countries that obtains a large percentage of their revenue through the sale of postage stamps.
There were no stamps in 1801. The first postage stamps were issued in Great Britain in 1840. It was several years after that that German issued postage stamps.
form_title= Postage Stamps form_header= Buy postage stamps for all your mailing needs. How many stamps do you need?*= {10, 20, 30, 40, 50, More than 50} What are you mailing?*= _ [50] What theme would you like on the stamps?*= _ [50]
No, you have to use stamps from the country of origin of the mail. In this case you will have to use Italian postage stamps.
Not in the United States. The US Postal Service approves the postage stamps.
Relating to postage stamps