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Prado Red - Sunflower

Sunflowers

Stamp Info

Name Value
Date of Issue March 3, 2011
Year 2011
Quantity 1,000,000
Denomination
PERMANENTâ„¢ (P).
Current monetary value: $0.92.
Perforation or Dimension Simulated Perforation
Series Sunflowers
Series Time Span 2011
Printer Lowe-Martin
Postal Administration Canada

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Stamp Price Values

Condition Name Avg Value
M-NH-VF
Mint - Never Hinged - Very Fine Only available to paid users
U-VF
Used - Very Fine Only available to paid users
* Notes about these prices:
  • They are not based on catalogue values but on current dealer and auction listings. The reason for this is that catalogues tend to over-value stamps.
  • They are average prices. The actual value of your stamp may be slightly above or below the listed value, depending on the overall condition of your stamp. Use these prices as a guide to determine the approximate value of your stamps.

Stamp Supplies on Amazon

Layouts

Coil of 50 stamps

Quantity Produced - 40,000
Current Purchase Price: Only available to paid users
Original Purchase Price: $29.50
Perforation: Simulated Perforation
Dimension: 24 mm x 20 mm (horizontal)
Printing Process: Lithography in 5 colours
Gum Type: Pressure sensitive
Tagging: General, 4 sides
Paper: Tullis Russell
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Official First Day Cover (Coil)

Quantity Produced - 16,000
Original Purchase Price: $2.18
Cancellation Location: Ottawa, Ontario
Tagging: General, 4 sides
Paper: Tullis Russell
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About Stamp

It’s hard not to look at the deep warm hues of the sunflower, with its wide open face and not smile. There’s something inherently happy about its blooms.

Sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) were a common crop among Aboriginals throughout North America, so much so that some archaeologists have suggested sunflowers may have been domesticated before corn. The seeds were ground into flour for cakes, mush or bread and the oil was used for cooking.

While sunflowers originated in North America, thanks to exploration and colonization, they made a rather circuitous route to hybridization, via Russia and Eastern Europe. However, it was Canada that established the first official government sunflower breeding program in 1930, drawing the expertise of Mennonite farmers whose families had originated in Russia. The demand for sunflower oil grew and by 1946, these farmers built a small crushing plant. In 1964, the Canadian government licensed a Russian cultivar called Peredovik.

There’s a special story behind the sunflowers that appear on this se-tenant stamp issue. After seeking out several varieties that would appear most attractive on stamps, members of Canada Post’s Stamp Services staff met with horticultural experts at Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Central Experimental Farm, in Ottawa. After choosing varieties sure to flourish under local growing conditions, AAFC’s Pierre Huppé and Sharon Saunders agreed to provide a plot and oversee the planting and tending of several types of sunflowers, which would eventually be photographed for the stamps, official first day cover, souvenir sheet and other items in the issue. The winning varieties were Sunbright and Prado Red.

Isabelle Toussaint, photographer and designer for the long-running series notes, “Both as a single flower and as part of entire field of blooms, there’s something so compelling about the tall sunflower and how it stretches and grows directly facing the sun. How it’s pulled by the light. I wanted to convey the majesty of this flower, to highlight its size and height, to focus all attention on it, a goal that was achieved by simply letting it stand alone against an immense blue sky.”

“This was a first,” notes Stamp Design Manager Danielle Trottier. “Once the flower choice has been approved by the Stamp Advisory Committee, the usual process for obtaining imagery for our popular flower stamps is to use “found” photos to determine what varieties and colours we like paired together, then seek help from agricultural organizations, horticultural schools, gardening clubs and associations to locate the right plant. Then we’d be on call for photography, waiting for that moment when the blooms are at their peak. This time, we knew exactly the kind of flowers we’d end up with because they were grown specifically for the stamp. That made it easier to plan out the entire issue and know exactly how the two varieties would appear. We had the opportunity to watch the flowers grow—and watch local visitors to the field appreciate them. This is another first, and it’s a story I think collectors will appreciate.”

Creators

Design: Isabelle Toussaint Design graphique.

Similar Stamps

Reference

Canada's Stamp Details (Vol. XX No 1; January to March 2011)

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