You would have to use TWO uncancelled E series stamps in 2017. This could change in 2018.
They had an issued value of 25 cents (1988). The 2017 first-class rate is 49 cents for 1 ounce letters.
No. Although the "letter series" were designed to function as nondenominated stamps, each successive letter has a specific value after it was superseded. Only the Forever stamps are good for a one-ounce letter "forever." The H stamp is worth 33 cents toward the 2011 rate of 44 cents (88 cents large envelopes). The H "makeup rate" stamp (rooster weathervane) is worth only 1 cent.
44-Cent First Class : February 4th , 2011 .
An airmail stamp will have the word Airmail printed on it. In some cases a photo of an airplane is used. In earlier years, airmail was a sort of 'express mail' that would arrive several days before regular mail would. Today, it make less of a difference and is not common in the US.
No, it is not. It was a non-denominated postage stamp issued for the rate change in 1985 to 22 cents. It can be used for 22 cents of postage within the US, so two of these will mail a First Class letter today.
One regular U.S. postage stamp (which currently cost 44 cents as of today, February 17, 2010) is all you need to mail a letter anywhere in the U.S. This is true unless the letter is over a certain weight. I'm sorry, I'm having trouble finding out what that weight is. But if it's just a normal letter (a few sheets of paper inside a regular white envelope) then it should not cost more than 44 cents.
I need to have a letter postmarked today, Vetrans Day, will the post office stamp the letter with todays date tomorrow?
For letters weighing up to 100g that are no more than 5mm thick and up to C5 in sizeIf a single stamp or a small book of stamps are currently 27p each however if you have an account with the post office or a franking machine it's 24p. (Correct as at December 2008)
One regular U.S. postage stamp (which currently cost 44 cents as of today, August 27, 2010) is all you need to mail a letter anywhere inside the U.S. Additional postage is decided by the weight of the letter, not where it's coming from and going to. One regular stamp is all you need for letters weighing up to one ounce. Letters over one ounce will require additional postage.
44 cents is the going rate for an ordinary first class stamp.
44 cents today (May 2009) for a standard 1st-class stamp.
Pretty much the same way as today. The difference was that the person receiving the letter paid the carrier for the delivery.
49 cents today.