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It is a forever stamp. It is good for the current value of a first class stamp.
Yes and no. You can apply the Lady Liberty stamp from 2006 toward postage. But you will have to add 3 cents worth of stamps in addition. The Lady Liberty stamp is worth 39 cents. Today 1st Class postage is 42 cents. As of this writing (June 2009) first class postage is 44 cents, so you need to add 5 cents.
The Liberty Bell is pictured on the Forever Stamp. They are worth the current value of a first class stamp, which is 44 cents in 2009. They can only be used for US addresses.
A first-class stamp is not the same as a forever stamp. A forever stamp holds the value of a first-class stamp regardless of how often the rate for first-class postage has increased. A first-class stamp only holds its face value.
Statue of Liberty in front of US Flag.
It is a Forever stamp and was worth 39 cents when it was first issued. It can still be used for one unit of first class mail, which is currently 45 cents.
The cost of a first class stamp in England is 62p.
The price for a US first class stamp is currently 49 cents. The previous rate for a first class stamp was 46 cents.
Technically, there is nothing wrong with the stamp. It's a fully functional USPS First Class Forever stamp. However, the stamp depicts a image of a replica of the Statue of Liberty not the real Statue of Liberty on Ellis Island, NY. The statue on the "Lady Liberty" stamp issued December 2010 is actually a photo taken by Raimund Linke of the replica Statue of Liberty that sits in front of the New York, New York Hotel and Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada.
For First Class postage, one ounce using the Liberty Bell forever stamp, 44 cents.
Assuming you are talking about a US First Class Stamp: No.
A first class stamp costs 46 cents in the US. Each additional ounce is 20 cents.