2020-2024 Lunar New Year Series
On December 30, 1992, the USPS issued its first Chinese New Year stamp (#2720) honoring the start of the Year of the Rooster.
The stamp was designed by first-time stamp designer, Clarence Lee from Honolulu, Hawaii. When designing the first stamp of the series, Lee created a unique modern and Chinese design, hence the paper-cut look. I... more
2020-2024 Lunar New Year Series
On December 30, 1992, the USPS issued its first Chinese New Year stamp (#2720) honoring the start of the Year of the Rooster.
The stamp was designed by first-time stamp designer, Clarence Lee from Honolulu, Hawaii. When designing the first stamp of the series, Lee created a unique modern and Chinese design, hence the paper-cut look. It was the last US stamp of 1992, and was extremely popular. Many post offices sold out in just a few days and the stamp was in high demand in Asia.
The 1992 Chinese New Year stamp marked several firsts. In addition to being the first Lunar New Year stamp, it was also the first Happy New Year stamp AND the first non-high-value stamp issued in panes of 20 rather than 50.
When the stamp was first created, the USPS didn’t have plans to begin a new series. But since the Rooster stamp was so popular, the Chinese New Year Series was born – all designed by Lee. The second stamp was issued February 5, 1994 (#2817), and the series continued through 2006. On each stamp of the 12 stamps, a professional calligrapher wrote Kanji characters to state the name of each stamp. Kanji is a Japanese adaptation to Chinese characters and can often be read by a variety of Asian groups from differing countries and cultures.
The USPS began a second Lunar New Year Series in 2008. That series ran through 2019, with a third beginning in 2020.
This set includes the following stamps:
US #5428
US #5556
US #5662
US #5744
US #5829
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