now is modern browser

CLOSE

1/ 3

2024 Holiday Joy First Class Postage Stamps

$2799
$000
Quantity
5 Sheets of 20 (100 Stamps)
15 Sheets of 20 (300 Stamps)
50 Sheets of 20(1000 Stamps)
250 Sheets of 20(5000 Stamps)
500 Sheets of 20(10000 Stamps)
Quantity
Only 986 left
Free worldwide shipping
Free returns
Carbon neutral
Secure payments

Description:

Celebrate the holidays with four stamps from the U.S. Postal Service. These festive, folk art-inspired stamps are sure to enliven your 2024 holiday mailings.

With a color palette including red, green, blue, pink, yellow, and white, illustrator Michelle Muñoz channeled her love of Christmas, vintage ornaments, and Mexican folk art to create unique images of holiday decor: two traditionally shaped ornaments ready to hang; a vibrant poinsettia surrounded by greenery; and a whimsical blue flower centered against green leaves and delicate scrollwork.

Evergreen trees and flowering plants have been a part of winter and seasonal festivities for thousands of years. Firs and other foliage that stayed green during those long, dark days provided hope and comfort to pagan celebrants by reminding them that summer and sunlight would eventually return. Over time, Christians made the tradition of using greenery at winter celebrations their own: the first recorded mention of decorated fir trees came from early 17th-century Germany.

Glass ornaments appeared in Germany in the mid-1800s, spreading to the United States and many other countries by the end of the 19th century. Mass produced, commercial tree decorations are ubiquitous today, but unique, hand-blown or handcrafted baubles are still produced by small companies in America and Europe.

Unlike holiday tree ornaments, the iconic poinsettia did not arrive in the United States by way of Europe. Native to Mexico, where it can grow 10 feet tall or more, the poinsettia is the one of the most popular potted plants in the United States today with more than 34 million poinsettias sold each year. It has been associated with Christmas here since the 19th century.