3 cents!1 lol i think
The Lady Liberty stamp with the flag was sold for 39 cents, and it came out in January of 2006. There have been dozens of US stamps issued that feature the Statue of Liberty. Without more information, it would be difficult to speculate. If you are referring to the one without a value on the front, it was issued in 2000 and has a face value of 34 cents. Scott #3452, et. al. Most used US postage stamps are worth 15 or 20 cents, the minimum amount required to catalog and stock the stamps. Unused will always be worth at least their face value. Special cancellations and different values are likely to be worth more. Consult a postage stamp catalog, usually available at your local library for exact identification and catalog values.
Yes, Lady Liberty (Or known as The Statue of Liberty) is on the one million (1,000,000) Dollar Bill.
{| |- | Yes, they are still valid. There are many different Lady Liberty stamps. Even the ones that don't have a value on them can still be used. They cannot be used for mail going outside of the United States. So you can continue to use them for postage at their face value. |}
The Lady Liberty design from 2000 is worth $0.34. Here is the USPS link with the info: http://c001-iq-prod.responseondemand.com/eCustomer/iq/usps/request.do?session={3710d630-a8cb-11dc-f11c-000000000000}&event=1&view()=c%7B27c85ca0-57e2-11dc-51b6-000000000000%7D&objectId=&eksObjectId=&objectType=Case&isJumpEnabled=false&isContentJumpEnabled=false&vendorKey=&objTitle=&versionId=927
The French
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.
39 cents. This is called the "Lady Liberty and U.S. Flag" stamp. See http://www.usps.com/communications/news/stamps/2006/39/
This was issued December 6, 2006. It has a face value of 39 cents.
These are worth 39 cents. Additional postage of 5 cents must be added to make the current rate. They can be used for US Addresses only.
The stamp without any face value shown is worth 39 cents. It can be used for that amount of postage. Check the USPS web site for pictures and other things.
You will have to provide a more specific description of the stamp, Lady Liberty has been pictured on many different US stamps. You can identify it through an online catalog that may even provide you a general value,
The Lady Liberty stamp is worth 39 cents. These are typically paired with the 5 cent stamp to make the current 44 cent postage. Buy "Forever Stamp" to save $$$ instead, since gas price keeps going up and USPS will only keep hiking its rate like the gas. There is a 2000 Statue of Liberty stamp that is worth $0.33.
Lady Liberty. Half dollars 1916-47 are the "Walking Liberty" style.
probably somewhere around 50 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.
I have not quite sure what you mean by "Lady Liberty stamp", but except for some pre Civil War stamps, all unused US stamps are still good for postage at the price they sold for ( no adjustment for inflation.) The one exception is the new "forever " stamp which sell for current the first class rate, but automatically jumps in value when rates go up.
Uh, the lady is Miss Liberty, as in "Statue of ..." Please see the Related Question for more.