Envelopes

Share envelopes you really like, special envelopes received or sent.

(Photo: mail art from Richard Baudet)

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  • Jan Hodgman

    Linda, the Canada stamp especially is tres cool! Did you make it?

  • Linda Pelati

    Hi Jan... No the Canada stamp is a cutout from a magazine....

  • carl baker

    WARNING

  • carl baker

    thanks carolyn, i 'll do another one soon.

  • Fast Eyes

    Finally here- thanks.
  • carl baker

    ACMEenvelope

  • carl baker

    hooray du champ!, thank u matthew stolte/p>

  • Katerina Nikoltsou (MomKat)

    Beautiful prints on envelope from Julie Simmons:

  • Katerina Nikoltsou (MomKat)

  • barbargirl

    Outgoing envelopes.

  • Debra Mulnick

    These are really great envelopes!  Love the overall colors and pattern/print combos.  So much fun.

  • Mail Art Martha

  • barbargirl

    Outgoing 

  • barbargirl

    Outgoing.

  • Alan Brignull

    Look at this wonderful envelope — in 1982 is was sent from the UN in New York; at some point it was in Belgium and then received a Greek postmark in Athens. Now it has arrived here in England from Idaho (no wonder it's falling apart). And there was stuff inside, too. Thanks Debra Mulnick!

  • Bill Porter

    Hey Alan, I'm surprised that it didn't originate with you.  :^)  ~Bill @ The Olathe Poste

  • Fast Eyes

    Lucky it reached you, considering USPS.
  • Debra Mulnick

    I collaged the UN stamps with postmark (note different colored paper background) onto the Philatelic envelope, which I found in Greece. 

  • Mail Art Martha

    Hi 

    I got an interesting envelope from Austria, by XXJones

  • Mail Art Martha

    And this rather plain envelope arrive today. The interesting bit is that it came minus a stamp and I was not asked to go to the post office and pay!

    It is from B.E. Pilcher here in England. 

  • Sabrina S

    Nice work from XXJones!! Sehr hübsch!

  • Mail Art Martha

    Yes it is indeed sehr hübsch! Thanks Sabrina, I learned another German word!

  • Mail Art Martha

    This envelope from Jack Lattemann of Cascadia took more than a month to arrive in the UK, it came via Barbados.

  • Heleen de Vaan

    Oh, how much I love those 'mis-sent' stamps! Even though they take a lot of our patience. I collect them, too, as they are a sign of the mail's big travel adventure, and I already have one (mis-sent to Canada, on route from Spain to Netherlands).

    Beautiful stamps (rubber- and arti-) by Cascadia Artpost, too!

  • borderlinegrafix

  • Ruud Janssen

  • Debra Mulnick

  • Debra Mulnick

    I was inspired by Mike Untzilla’s red & blue envelope recently posted.  

  • Yayoi S.W.

    Carolyn Cline sent this beautiful envelope she created with metallic sharpie. So precious to receive something that took this much effort and time.


  • carl baker

    mandible    mail arts not dead its been living everywhere, post card from cascadia artpost, thanks again!

  • barbargirl

    From Emily...another cool collage envelope.

  • barbargirl

    From Debra Mulnick...love the awesome details!

  • barbargirl

    From Babette...great collage envelope with a cool selection of images and words.

  • Debra Mulnick

    The post office stamped “NON-MACHINABLE” in red on both sides of the address label, but probably because of the printed paper, it was not read.  Probably I should have said something since I saw this happen.  Two days later, it was delivered back to me.  My return address label was interpreted as the intended address.  I guess I will reapply a new address label and try again.  I wonder if it would have helped if I made my own NON Machinable label?  Ideas or suggestions?

  • Alan Brignull

    Debra, I'd guess that because your stamps are nearer the bottom left than the top right it got turned round by the 'facer' part of the machine and went through upside down, thus putting the wavy cancellation bars all over the destination address.  Try again…

  • MaoMao

    Hi Debra, I really dread the day that Australia Post becomes as draconian as this about mail! For the present, I am still lucky, and nobody cares where the address is placed so long as it is large and can be read by a human being, and the stamp can be wherever you please, so long as there is proof that you have paid postage duty...

    I don't get to drop my outgoing mail in a box, though, I have to go in to see the girls at my local PO and oversee the franking and explain "which ones are the real stamps and which are artistamps"... :D

    Such a pity this first piece gave you some trouble. Often, it's just one postal worker in a bad mood who decides to go "by the book". I'll let you know when the cheeky letter gets to me. It looks fantastic and I am so excited.

  • Sabrina S

    I got such problems with the German post recently, too. They want machinable mail, otherwise it might not go through... 

  • Debra Mulnick

    We pay extra (21 cents) to send something non-machinable for an extra ounce of weight, or for something too thick or stiff, or oversized that cannot go through the automated process.  Beginning Jan 27th, the cost will actually go DOWN to 15 cents- in the US.  I wish I didn’t enjoy sending thick, stiff, & oversized things out so often, but I can’t help it.  Unusual things are more fun in my book.

  • MaoMao

    Interesting how it varies from country to country.  Nobody says anything here about machines, but you pay 10% on top of the prescribed postage cost if you use domestic, instead of int'l, stamps on letters going overseas. With only 2 int'l stamp designs to choose from, I am resigned to paying 110% every time.

  • Alan Brignull

    MaoMao (@natquintosuhing) - is that something to do with taxation? Here, ordinary postage is VAT exempt but for some postal services it is payable. Luckily, we can use any sort of stamp on any mail as long as it totals the right amount.

  • Sabrina S

    Understandable, Carolyn. In Germany the worth of the stamp is written on the stamp, so we can just play puzzle with it. It's just like changing your currency to another one. I was surprised when I understood that in the US you pay for the service and when the fee is more expensive you can still use the stamps you bought before as you already payed for the service, not just changed your currency. So we had small stamps several times to "upgrade" our stamps when it got more expensive again and the old stamps weren't enough anymore.

  • Heleen de Vaan

    @ Carolyn, I think what Sabrina says, also is possible in the USA. I've received various US envelopes from mail artists showing a variety of stamps, and last week even this one, from my old 90+ uncle (who unconsciously is a mail artist, too :-) ).

     

  • Alan Brignull

    Speaking of stamp values, look at this new set from Royal Mail

    https://shop.royalmail.com/special-stamp-issues/stamp-classics

    -- they all have two different denominations. Especially the big green one, it says "£1" twice in big figures but the little "1st" means it is really only worth 67 pence!

  • Ooh, I like those Alan

  • Alan Brignull

    They're available at your post office now, Gü . . . possibly.

  • FinnBadger

    @Alan Brignull At first glance I didn't think much of the Classic Stamps set, yet the more I look at them, particularly looking at each stamp individually, the more I like them.

  • Mail Art Martha

  • Mail Art Martha

    Oops! forgot to tell you that the amazing envelope came from Kathy Barnett, carrying a bird cage construction with pop up bird in it, more amazing still. 

  • Debra Mulnick

    This is a beautiful envelope, indeed!  Black & white can be so beautiful.

  • Ruud Janssen