{| |- | Yes, you can, as long as the envelope is properly marked for air mail. Any number of stamps can be used to make up the rate. An air mail 'etiquette' the sticker that says Air Mail and Par Avion, is also required if Air Mail is not printed on the envelope. |}
Yes, you can. Bulk rate, precancels, presorts, etc. you cannot use, but airmail is OK.
Yes
B.O.B. stands for 'back of the book". The name comes from the way the catalogs list stamps. Stamps issued for special purposes such as air mail, special delivery, postage due collection, tax collection, official government mail, military post offices and other things, are listed behind the regular postage stamps and given special catalog numbers.
{| |- | Over 4100 US regular postage stamps have been issued. That doesn't count all the minor variations. And that doesn't include Air Mail, Special Delivery and other back of the book issues. |}
dude it depends on the kind of mail there is air mail there is regular mail and more kind of mail
Back of the Book stamps are those that are used for special purposes. These include Air Mail stamps, Special Delivery stamps, tax, official, and postage due stamps. In stamp albums and catalogs they are found at the 'back of the book.'
Harold G. D. Gisburn has written: 'Stamps and posts of the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan' -- subject(s): Air mail stamps, Postage-stamps, Postal service
You do not need airmail stamps because all letters go by airmail. The postage for a standard sized envelope weighing one ounce or less is 98 cents. There is a postage calculator at http://ircalc.usps.gov/
Regular air mail - around 10days. Fedex or UPS - 2-3days.
No. It's enough to write "Par Avion - By Airmail"clearly in the top left hand corner of your envelope.
SAL mail is a cheap way to get mail to and from Japan. It cost less than usual air mail, but is usually faster than regular snail mail. SAL= Surface Air Lifted. Basicall, while on the ground the mail is transported like normal ground mail, but when going from one country to another, it is in the same class as air mail. At it's destination, the handling is back to regualr mail.
The design was pretty consistant during the time frame and was a picture of an airplane. The internationally recognized color at the time was red, so most of them are printed in red ink. The stamps were relatively small, but were a horizontal format rather than the more common portrait format of regular mail stamps.
The rate is $2.10 ( Australian) from up to 50 grams via air mail from Australia to the US.