Yes. As long as you use more than one. The postage just has to add up to the postage of a letter. Right now an average letter of normal dimensions and weight, costs 45 cents. Postcard rate is 32 cents, so you would need two stamps. Postage stamps are just like money, as long as it adds up to the current rate, even stamps that are 20 years old are valid. But a first class stamp twenty years ago was 24 cents. It's value doesn't change... it is still 24 cents.
Yes, you can! Post card stamps are just regular postage. As long as the total value adds up to or exceeds the necessary value, they can be combined.
As long as they add up to the proper total to cover the cost.
If you are talking about cutting out the postcard stamp area, and sticking them on an envelope or a package, I think it is the same in theory as cutting stamps that were stuck to a letter, unused, and glue them to another letter to use. I am also trying to find if there is some restrictions, because if I can use the old postcards, that is unused postage. Postcard stamps can also be used in stamp collecting. They can be used to stamp anything, such as letters. Stamps are like money and they have to add up to the current postage, that is all.
Sure.
No you cannot use US stamps. Items mailed must have the stamps of the country of origin on them. Most shops will be able to provide you with the appropriate stamps to use to mail with their cards, or visit their post office!
The price of a US postal service postcard stamp is 27 cents.
Sending Postcards with the USPSWhat Is a Postcard?A postcard is a rectangular mailer sent without an envelope.Sending a postcard is an extremely affordable way to communicate when you're using the U.S. Postal Service-regular postcards cost only $0.33 to mail!
Postage is 98 cents for a standard letter from the US. You can buy a 98-cent stamps or use any combination that totals 98 cent or more. For example two forever stamps plus a 10-cent stamp. If all you have is forever stamps, you would have to use three of them.
You can still use the G stamps today. It is worth 32 cents, unless marked for postcard rate or First-Class Presort, which are 20 and 25 cents respectively.
Well it actually depends on the amount of the stamps. I believe 44 cents is the correct amount of money needed to mail a letter like that. I would use 1 regular stamp, and 1 2-3 cent stamp.
Yes. But that's more postage than a standard letter is worth. You can add small-denomination stamps to bring the total up to whatever the first class rate is when you use the old stamps. First class stamps in 2006 (Lady Liberty with a US flag backdrop, or two blue lovebirds on a yellow background) were worth 39 cents.
Ebay, but if you are sending one there from US you have to use US postage since that's your carrier and any int'l is expensive unless the card itself is important, I would wait until you have a package or letter.
One First Class is adequate if it is a standard size envelope of one ounce or less.
When mailing a letter or package you always use postage purchased in the country you are mailing from. So if you are mailing a letter from the USA to Canada, you would buy stamps at your local post office.