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The Remembrance Poppy

Stamp Info

Name Value
Date of Issue October 29, 2021
Year 2021
Quantity 2,500,000
Denomination
PERMANENTâ„¢ (P).
Current monetary value: $0.92.
Postal Administration Canada

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Layouts

Booklet of 10 Stamps

Quantity Produced - 250,000

Celebrate Remembrance Day and the 100th anniversary of the Remembrance Poppy in Canada with this booklet of 10 PermanentTM domestic rate stamps.

This stamp issue marks the 100th anniversary of the official adoption of the poppy as a symbol of remembrance in Canada and the launch of the National Poppy Campaign.

The significance of the poppy is said to date back to the Napoleonic Wars in Europe – when the battlefields and resting sites of many fallen soldiers were enriched with lime from rubble. The chalky soil enabled the poppy (Papaver rhoeas) to thrive before the lime was absorbed. In WWI, the flowers inspired Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae of Guelph, Ontario, to pen the poem “In Flanders Fields” in May 1915. The poem, in turn, inspired several women and charitable organizations to create fabric poppies as a memorial and to raise funds for veterans and families of the fallen. On July 6, 1921, one of the women, France’s Anna Guérin, proposed that the Great War Veterans’ Association of Canada (now The Royal Canadian Legion) officially adopt the poppy as Canada’s symbol of remembrance. Canada’s first National Poppy Campaign was launched later that year.

Millions of Canadians show respect and honour for veterans and fallen soldiers during the annual campaign, held in the weeks leading up to Remembrance Day (November 11), by wearing a poppy. Poppies are also often worn at veterans’ funerals and other commemorative events.

Good to know

  • PermanentTM stamps are always worth the going postage rate - no top-up stamps required, ever!
Original Purchase Price: $9.20
Perforation: Simulated perforation
Dimension: 40 mm x 32 mm
Printer: Colour Innovations
Printing Process: Lithography in 4 colours
Gum Type: Pressure sensitive
Tagging: General tagging, four sides
Paper: Tullis Russell
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Official First Day Cover

Quantity Produced - 8,000

Celebrate Remembrance Day and the 100th anniversary of the Remembrance Poppy in Canada with this Official First Day Cover. The cancel location is Ottawa, Ontario.

This 2021 stamp issue marks the 100th anniversary of the official adoption of the poppy as a symbol of remembrance in Canada and the launch of the National Poppy Campaign.

On July 6, 1921, France’s Anna Guérin urged the Great War Veterans’ Association of Canada – now The Royal Canadian Legion – to adopt the flower as a symbol to honour those who died in service to their country during WWI. The National Poppy Campaign was launched later that year. Guérin had promoted the remembrance poppy for years among Allied nations as both a memorial and a means to raise funds for veterans and families of the fallen. Her efforts were influenced by an American initiative, founded by YMCA volunteer Moina Michael. Michael began collecting donations for silk poppies after reading Canadian Lieutenant-Colonel John McCrae’s poem “In Flanders Fields.”

Millions of Canadians show respect and honour for veterans and fallen soldiers during the annual campaign, held in the weeks leading up to Remembrance Day (November 11), by wearing a poppy. Poppies are also often at veterans’ funerals and other commemorative events.

The Official First Day Cover for this issue features the stamp, set against a crimson red background, and its cancellation mark. The mark includes the number “100” as a nod to the poppy’s centennial as Canada’s official flower of remembrance.

Original Purchase Price: $1.92
Cancellation Location: Ottawa, ON
Dimension: 190 mm x 112 mm
Printer: Colour Innovations
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About Stamp

The concept behind this big, bold stamp was not only to immortalize the crimson flower itself but also to offer another way to honour the more than 117,000 Canadians who have died in service to their country.

“I envisioned packages and letters literally wearing their own poppy,” says stamp designer Blair Thomson, an avid philatelist and design collector who shares both passions on his popular Instagram accounts, Graphilately and Canada Modern.

“My approach is to strip away all that’s unnecessary, focusing on the purest form of visual clarity, and eliminating distraction,” he explains. “To me, simple, beautiful compositions have the greatest impact, are emotionally stimulating, and resonate longer in the mind.”

With the printer’s help, Thomson custom-mixed ink to create an almost fluorescent red that, when printed, would match the vibrancy of The Royal Canadian Legion poppy. The stark white background gives the flower added pop, while metallic silver ink adds realism to the head of the pin.

Creators

Design: Believe in. Illustration: Believe in.

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Reference

Canada Post Details Magazine - October-November 2021, Volume XXX NO 9

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