One cent would pay to send a postcard from about 1900 to 1950. There were 4
regular issues that I can think of for one cent stamps. All were green and - 3 pictured
Franklin and one Washington. There was a special issue during WW II and at least
one special issue during the depression.
usually none, but if it needs a stamp, just one stamp is needed.
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.
One 28 cent stamp will do the job if you are mailing your card from within the US.
A first class stamp in 19777 was 13 cents. A postcard was 9 cents.
No, you would need to get a stamp for the country the letter is mailed from.
No, you can only use British stamps for mail posted in London. (You wouldn't expect to be able to use a stamp from a different country on a letter mailed in the USA.)
The price of a US postal service postcard stamp is 27 cents.
a metered postcard is a postcard that already has the stamp made into the the postcard. there is no need to put an adhesive stamp on it.
One normal Canadian stamp (for a letter size and weight)
What is the current cost of a stamp on a first class letter under an ounce mailed in the US? <><><> 44 cents
To where? to the UK it'd be one second class stamp. to europe is 2 first class stamps,,,,,,it all depends on getting a grammatically correct question.
The USPS official website provides the latest cost on the stamps. The current cost of the postcard stamp per the USPS official website is $0.33. The price is determined by evaluating multiple factors like shape, weight and mail class.