1990 25c Headdresses

# 2501-05 - 1990 25c Headdresses

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US #2501-05
1990 Indian Headdresses

  • Set shows five headdresses worn by Plains Indian tribes
  • First stamps in the Folk Art series
  • First Folk Art series stamps to have more than four designs and to be issued in booklet form

Stamp Category:  Commemorative
Set :  Indian Headdresses
Value:   25¢, First Class Mail rate
First Day of Issue:  August 17, 1990
First Day City:  Cody, Wyoming
Quantity Issued:  149,199,600
Printed by:  Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method:  Offset and Intaglio]
Format:  Booklets of 20 (two panes of 10)
Perforations:  11

Why the stamp was issued:  The five Indian Headdresses stamps were issued to highlight ceremonial headdresses worn by the Plains Indians.

About the stamp design:  Actual examples of historic headdresses were used as inspiration for the stamps.  The tribes honored are the Assiniboine, Cheyenne, Comanche, Flathead, and Shoshone.
Lunda Hoyle Gill was chosen to depict the headdresses.  After extensive research, she created 10 painted sketches of possible ideas the set.  The depictions of war bonnets from the Plains Indians were most familiar to Americans, so they were chosen.  Gill based her final paintings on four headdresses belonging to the Plains Indian Museum and one in a private collection.

Special design details:  The stamps were originally planned as a block of four with vertical orientation.  The decision was then made to make the set in booklet format, another headdress was added.

First Day City:  The Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, Wyoming was the site for the First Day ceremony.  This had been the location for the 1988 Buffalo Bill Cody stamp release.

History the stamp represents: 
Assiniboine – The war bonnet shown on the stamp was made in 1920 from felt and wool.  Ermine skins hang from the area near the temple of the wearer.

Cheyenne – The headdress dates to about 1890.  The brass tacks decorating the front band stand out.  It also has feathers from golden eagles, hair tassels, and ribbons.

Comanche – The Comanche war bonnet was made in the mid-1800s.  It includes feathers from the golden eagle and turkey (these were dyed).  The sides have rabbit skin and fur from other animals. 

Flathead – The bonnet was made around 1905 from felt.  It was decorated with the tail feathers of a golden eagle, pieces of ermine skin, and cow hair.

Shoshone – This headdress was made around 1900.  It has tail feathers from a golden eagle and has porcupine quills embroidered into the head band.

 

American Folk Art Series

On April 13, 1977, the USPS issued the first stamp in the American Folk Art Series.

The USPS created the Folk Art Series in 1977 to honor important and lesser-known items in American art and culture.  Folk Art is loosely defined as the art of the everyday, rooted in traditions that come from community and culture and expressing cultural identity by conveying shared community values and aesthetics.

The first set in the series was issued on April 13, 1977, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  The stamps featured the pottery of Pueblo Indians from Arizona and New Mexico.  An important aspect of Pueblo culture is pottery making.  The pottery of each village has its own special designs.  Pueblos continue to make their pottery the traditional way, fashioning it out of ropes of clay, which they smooth before firing.

The second set in the series was issued on March 8, 1978, in Charleston, West Virginia at a quilt show.  Each of the stamps in this block of four, pictures a basket design from a quilt made in New York City in 1875.  Although the industrial revolution made it possible to mass produce inexpensive blankets, the quilt was considered to be attractive, practical, and very economical.

The third issue in the series featured Pennsylvania Toleware (French for painted tin). The stamps were issued on April 19, 1979, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania at that city’s Pennsylvania Farm Museum. Pictured on the stamps are a coffee pot with a straight spout, a tea caddy, a sugar bowl, and a coffee pot with a gooseneck spout, all of which were made in the early 1900s.

The fourth set in the series was issued on September 25, 1980, in Spokane, Washington.  Honoring Pacific Northwest Indian Masks, each stamp pictures a different carved mask: Heiltsuk Bella Bella mask, Chilkat Tlingit mask, Tlingit mask and Bella Coola mask.

The fifth set in the series honored duck decoys. The stamps were issued on March 22, 1985, in Shelburne, Vermont, near the Shelburne Museum, which provided two of the decoys pictured on the stamps.  The stamps picture different types of duck decoys – broadbill, mallard, canvasback, and redhead.  According to the USPS, decoys are “true folk sculpture, so true to life that many of them are now attacked by cats.  They are no long simply an adjunct to hunting.”

The sixth set in the Folk Art Series featured Navajo Blankets.  They were issued on September 4, 1986, in Window Rock, Arizona.  The stamps were issued to coincide with the annual Navajo Nation Fair there.  The illustrations are based on actual Navajo blankets, three of which are housed in the Museum of the American Indian in New York City.  Blanket weaving has been an important part of Navajo culture for centuries.  To early tribes, each blanket was believed to possess spiritual characteristics and reflect the owner’s identity.

The seventh set in the series pictured different wood-carved figures.  They were issued on October 1, 1986, at the National Gallery of Art to kick off National Stamp Collecting Month.  From the Colonial Era through the 19th century, wood-carved figurines were even more widely used than today’s billboards.  Few merchants felt competitive without a three-dimensional representative of their products or services.

The eighth set in the series honors lacemaking. The stamps were issued on August 14, 1987, in Ypsilanti, Michigan as part of a local lace makers convention. The stamps picture different lace patterns created by lace makers in Michigan.  The USPS spent several months exploring different printing techniques to find one that could best capture the fine detail of the lace patterns.

The ninth set in the Folk Art Series featured carousel animals.  The stamps were issued on October 1, 1988, to mark the start of National Stamp Collecting Month.  The first day ceremony was held at Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio, which was home to four hand-carved carousels, including one of the horses pictured on these stamps.

The tenth set in the series featured Indian headdresses.  The stamps were issued on August 17, 1990, in Cody, Wyoming at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.  The headdress set was the first in the Folk Art Series to include five stamps and was also the first in the series to be issued in booklet form.  The headdresses were prized personal possessions, generally created by the warrior himself, and were usually buried with their owner at death.

The final issue in the series featured a familiar topic – carousel horses.  The stamps were issued on July 21, 1995, in Lahaska, Pennsylvania.  At the suggestion of artist Paul Calle, the first day ceremony was held at the Carousel World Museum.  The first set of carousel animal stamps had been so popular, the USPS was excited to issue a second set, which featured four different horses.

Click here to get all the American Folk Art stamps in one convenient set.

Read More - Click Here

US #2501-05
1990 Indian Headdresses

  • Set shows five headdresses worn by Plains Indian tribes
  • First stamps in the Folk Art series
  • First Folk Art series stamps to have more than four designs and to be issued in booklet form

Stamp Category:  Commemorative
Set :  Indian Headdresses
Value:   25¢, First Class Mail rate
First Day of Issue:  August 17, 1990
First Day City:  Cody, Wyoming
Quantity Issued:  149,199,600
Printed by:  Bureau of Engraving and Printing
Printing Method:  Offset and Intaglio]
Format:  Booklets of 20 (two panes of 10)
Perforations:  11

Why the stamp was issued:  The five Indian Headdresses stamps were issued to highlight ceremonial headdresses worn by the Plains Indians.

About the stamp design:  Actual examples of historic headdresses were used as inspiration for the stamps.  The tribes honored are the Assiniboine, Cheyenne, Comanche, Flathead, and Shoshone.
Lunda Hoyle Gill was chosen to depict the headdresses.  After extensive research, she created 10 painted sketches of possible ideas the set.  The depictions of war bonnets from the Plains Indians were most familiar to Americans, so they were chosen.  Gill based her final paintings on four headdresses belonging to the Plains Indian Museum and one in a private collection.

Special design details:  The stamps were originally planned as a block of four with vertical orientation.  The decision was then made to make the set in booklet format, another headdress was added.

First Day City:  The Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, Wyoming was the site for the First Day ceremony.  This had been the location for the 1988 Buffalo Bill Cody stamp release.

History the stamp represents: 
Assiniboine – The war bonnet shown on the stamp was made in 1920 from felt and wool.  Ermine skins hang from the area near the temple of the wearer.

Cheyenne – The headdress dates to about 1890.  The brass tacks decorating the front band stand out.  It also has feathers from golden eagles, hair tassels, and ribbons.

Comanche – The Comanche war bonnet was made in the mid-1800s.  It includes feathers from the golden eagle and turkey (these were dyed).  The sides have rabbit skin and fur from other animals. 

Flathead – The bonnet was made around 1905 from felt.  It was decorated with the tail feathers of a golden eagle, pieces of ermine skin, and cow hair.

Shoshone – This headdress was made around 1900.  It has tail feathers from a golden eagle and has porcupine quills embroidered into the head band.

 

American Folk Art Series

On April 13, 1977, the USPS issued the first stamp in the American Folk Art Series.

The USPS created the Folk Art Series in 1977 to honor important and lesser-known items in American art and culture.  Folk Art is loosely defined as the art of the everyday, rooted in traditions that come from community and culture and expressing cultural identity by conveying shared community values and aesthetics.

The first set in the series was issued on April 13, 1977, in Santa Fe, New Mexico.  The stamps featured the pottery of Pueblo Indians from Arizona and New Mexico.  An important aspect of Pueblo culture is pottery making.  The pottery of each village has its own special designs.  Pueblos continue to make their pottery the traditional way, fashioning it out of ropes of clay, which they smooth before firing.

The second set in the series was issued on March 8, 1978, in Charleston, West Virginia at a quilt show.  Each of the stamps in this block of four, pictures a basket design from a quilt made in New York City in 1875.  Although the industrial revolution made it possible to mass produce inexpensive blankets, the quilt was considered to be attractive, practical, and very economical.

The third issue in the series featured Pennsylvania Toleware (French for painted tin). The stamps were issued on April 19, 1979, in Lancaster, Pennsylvania at that city’s Pennsylvania Farm Museum. Pictured on the stamps are a coffee pot with a straight spout, a tea caddy, a sugar bowl, and a coffee pot with a gooseneck spout, all of which were made in the early 1900s.

The fourth set in the series was issued on September 25, 1980, in Spokane, Washington.  Honoring Pacific Northwest Indian Masks, each stamp pictures a different carved mask: Heiltsuk Bella Bella mask, Chilkat Tlingit mask, Tlingit mask and Bella Coola mask.

The fifth set in the series honored duck decoys. The stamps were issued on March 22, 1985, in Shelburne, Vermont, near the Shelburne Museum, which provided two of the decoys pictured on the stamps.  The stamps picture different types of duck decoys – broadbill, mallard, canvasback, and redhead.  According to the USPS, decoys are “true folk sculpture, so true to life that many of them are now attacked by cats.  They are no long simply an adjunct to hunting.”

The sixth set in the Folk Art Series featured Navajo Blankets.  They were issued on September 4, 1986, in Window Rock, Arizona.  The stamps were issued to coincide with the annual Navajo Nation Fair there.  The illustrations are based on actual Navajo blankets, three of which are housed in the Museum of the American Indian in New York City.  Blanket weaving has been an important part of Navajo culture for centuries.  To early tribes, each blanket was believed to possess spiritual characteristics and reflect the owner’s identity.

The seventh set in the series pictured different wood-carved figures.  They were issued on October 1, 1986, at the National Gallery of Art to kick off National Stamp Collecting Month.  From the Colonial Era through the 19th century, wood-carved figurines were even more widely used than today’s billboards.  Few merchants felt competitive without a three-dimensional representative of their products or services.

The eighth set in the series honors lacemaking. The stamps were issued on August 14, 1987, in Ypsilanti, Michigan as part of a local lace makers convention. The stamps picture different lace patterns created by lace makers in Michigan.  The USPS spent several months exploring different printing techniques to find one that could best capture the fine detail of the lace patterns.

The ninth set in the Folk Art Series featured carousel animals.  The stamps were issued on October 1, 1988, to mark the start of National Stamp Collecting Month.  The first day ceremony was held at Cedar Point Amusement Park in Sandusky, Ohio, which was home to four hand-carved carousels, including one of the horses pictured on these stamps.

The tenth set in the series featured Indian headdresses.  The stamps were issued on August 17, 1990, in Cody, Wyoming at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center.  The headdress set was the first in the Folk Art Series to include five stamps and was also the first in the series to be issued in booklet form.  The headdresses were prized personal possessions, generally created by the warrior himself, and were usually buried with their owner at death.

The final issue in the series featured a familiar topic – carousel horses.  The stamps were issued on July 21, 1995, in Lahaska, Pennsylvania.  At the suggestion of artist Paul Calle, the first day ceremony was held at the Carousel World Museum.  The first set of carousel animal stamps had been so popular, the USPS was excited to issue a second set, which featured four different horses.

Click here to get all the American Folk Art stamps in one convenient set.