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Stamp Design: How To Do.

If you are a member of the Elsewhere Philatelic Society, you of course realize that one of the highest callings of someone well-versed in philatelicism is the actual designing of actual, actual stamps. Now you have this opportunity. It is a wide vista; do not let its potential vastness consume you with sleepless nights and dizzied days. Vanquish the self-doubt it is a delusional illusion. You can do this.

What you send to the EPS should be flat. If you design a 3D thing, you should take a photo of it with a nice white or black background that brings out its essential features.

Your stamp design, no matter the shape, will end up as either a rectangular or square-shaped stamp. That is where we all are right now. So your best bet is to optimize for one of these two shapes. You can make an absurdly long or wide rectangle, the ratio of width to height does not matter. BUT. If you are drawing, sketching, noodling, what-have-you -- GO BIG. Stamps are small, but we have shrinking technology. Whatever you turn in should be at least four inches long on its shortest side.

You can use full color, or black and white, shading, halftones, etc.

Don't draw with pencils. Or, if you'd like: draw with pencils, "ink" it in with a pen, then erase the pencil marks once it's dried.

Make sure you are happy with the finished artwork. Shrink it down on a copying machine to about 1.5 inches on a side to get an idea of what it would look like being all small like that. But that is for your eyes only; send along the full-size artwork. Definitely do this test with anything that has fine lines, or a lot of "op art", cross-hatching, many areas of contrasting color, checked suits, moire patterns, butterscotch flames, halftones, dippity-do, or tiny print.

What should it look like? That is up to you. It is your stamp.

Ideally, anything you send should be a copy of your original artwork, in case something goes astray in the mail service. It has happened. You can send files to this website's mailing address as well, which is "mail" and then followed by the name of the website. In this case, you can send along a JPG, PNG, PDF, or EPS file. Make sure fonts are included / outlined if it is one of the last two formats. The subject line should read "[stamp design]" so it is routed properly.

After you have sent your work in, an unspecified amount of time will pass, and then you will receive something in the mail. Which means, no matter if your submission is through email or regular mail: send along your preferred address. Will your stamps also be distributed to other EPS members? It could happen.

YOUR STAMP DESIGN CHECKLIST: