It will depend on the specific type it is. The bottom line of the stamp tells you the type. If it has US Addresses only, it has a face value of 32 cents, the postcard is worth 20 cents and the First Class Presort is 25 cents. The make up rate stamp is worth 3 cents.
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In 1996 the first class rate was 32 cents. A postcard was 20 cents.
No, it is not. The current rate for a postcard from US to Canada is 85 cents (as of March 2012).
In the US, 12 cents was never a first class rate. It was valid for a postcard during part of 1981.
If it is a "G" stamp and says "postcard rate" on it, it is worth 20 cents. It was issued in 1995, but is still valid postage.
It is worth 32 cents, unless marked for postcard rate or First-Class Presort. Those are 20 and 25 cents respectively.
28 cents is the Us domestic post card rate.
{| |- | First Class postage in 1975 was 10 cents for the first ounce. This rate was valid through December 31st of that year. At that point it went up to 13 cents. |}
Postage for greeting or postcard from Australia to UK is A$1.60 as of December 2011.
As of July 2011, the rate is $0.29.
It was 32 cents after 22 January.
First class postage rate was 29 cents for the first ounce. Second ounce was 23 cents. A postcard cost 19 cents.
The US domestic rate for an ordinary 1st-class letter was 32 cents in 1995.