P1110336
P1110337
Something Fishy This Way Comes
stamps à la canada
framed
You Might Get What I Gave This Stamp!
chocolate stamp
gebraucht und unbenutzt
Prague 2019 – Stamps from the time of the Protecto…
Dalton Adding Machine, Comptometer Box, and Wall C…
Man at Desk, Lewis Walker Company Office, 1925
Lewis Walker Company Office, 1925
The Hague 2008 – Postzegelhandel Inter-Stamps
La 48-a Universala Kongreso - Sofio 1963 - poŝtmar…
La 64-a Universala Kongreso - Lucerno 1979 - poŝtm…
Passport stamps
Venice 2022 – Stamps of the Italian colonies
Venice 2022 – Stamps of the Third Reich
San Marino stamps
old stamp machines
New Jersey Steamboat Company Pass, 1870 (Front)
New Jersey Steamboat Company Pass, 1870 (Back)
King George VI commemorative stamp sheet
Richard Nixon Stamps, GOP (Generation Of Peace), 1…
1er Avril
Je vous l'offre de bout cœur
Recevez mes vœux de Bonheur
Continental Congress Session at York, Pa., 150th A…
stamp machine
Tuberculosis Is Preventable - Holiday Greetings, 1…
Playing Cards, One Pack, U.S. Internal Revenue
Tax Paid Stamp for Uncolored Oleomargarine, Series…
Western Union Telegraph Company, 1906, Complimenta…
Newspaper Stamp, Dover, Somersworth & Rochester St…
One Hundred Thousand Population Jubilee Poster Sta…
Edison Mazda Lamps Poster Stamp
Your Letters Are Priceless, National Letter Writin…
Japanese stamp and Koshigaya cancellation
Polish stamps and Łódź cancellation
Letter to Dubai
Stamp Collage Postcard, 1930s
Electricity Building, Pan-American Exposition, Buf…
Ward's Tip-Top Bread, So Good to Eat and So Good f…
J. T. Handford, Importing Dealer in Postage Stamps…
Hussey's Express Special Message Stamp
Letter to Dubai
envelope for gena (with an "e")
USPS fruit stamps
Cheaper to buy the stamps...
Dubai 2012 – Postage stamps
Rehn and Sons, Photographers, Philadelphia, Pa.
See also...
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
Global Art Gallery | Galerie d'art Mondiale | Galería de Arte Mundial
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cute little hatchlings (parasaurolophus)
![cute little hatchlings (parasaurolophus) cute little hatchlings (parasaurolophus)](https://cdn.ipernity.com/200/54/10/45815410.d9b309d0.640.jpg?r2)
![](https://s.ipernity.com/T/L/z.gif)
Cut-paper collage postcard created for the Kollage Kit theme "Stamps." Color added with markers.
My father was a geologist, so I was inoculated at an early age into a major obsession with the wonderful world of rocks, fossils, and dinosaurs. He did field work in Kansas for his dissertation: along the way he discovered a nearly complete Eohippus skeleton (early relative of the horse). I think that is way cool.
I was going to make a rollage with dinosaur images, but ran out of time. No big deal—as y'all may have noticed, I find almost any theme an excuse for a dino collage. =laugh= The U.S. 32-cent stamps are from a first-day cover block cancelled on May 1, 1997, in Grand Junction, Colorado. I'm not a serious philetalist, so what do I have these babies for, if not to use in a collage? The scene with the Parasaurolophus (say that one three times fast) hatchlings is dated 75 million years ago. I'm not sure of this, but it looks like the females and males had different shapes of crests. Wild, man.
The Parasaurolophus skeleton is from the Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs by Gregory S. Paul—enhanced with a couple of markers. Both backgrounds, geometric and skulls, are from the series of Pepin wrapping paper books (available at Amazon, so check 'em out).
A note on the composition: my great-niece Grace, a high school student, believes that any collage should have something interesting in the lower righthand corner. Who am I to argue with that? =grin=
My father was a geologist, so I was inoculated at an early age into a major obsession with the wonderful world of rocks, fossils, and dinosaurs. He did field work in Kansas for his dissertation: along the way he discovered a nearly complete Eohippus skeleton (early relative of the horse). I think that is way cool.
I was going to make a rollage with dinosaur images, but ran out of time. No big deal—as y'all may have noticed, I find almost any theme an excuse for a dino collage. =laugh= The U.S. 32-cent stamps are from a first-day cover block cancelled on May 1, 1997, in Grand Junction, Colorado. I'm not a serious philetalist, so what do I have these babies for, if not to use in a collage? The scene with the Parasaurolophus (say that one three times fast) hatchlings is dated 75 million years ago. I'm not sure of this, but it looks like the females and males had different shapes of crests. Wild, man.
The Parasaurolophus skeleton is from the Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs by Gregory S. Paul—enhanced with a couple of markers. Both backgrounds, geometric and skulls, are from the series of Pepin wrapping paper books (available at Amazon, so check 'em out).
A note on the composition: my great-niece Grace, a high school student, believes that any collage should have something interesting in the lower righthand corner. Who am I to argue with that? =grin=
buonacoppi, dolores666, neira-Dan, William Sutherland and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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