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Wednesday, July 15, 2009

Postage Stamps From the Future


"QUANTUM SHOT" #578
Link



Stamps Commemorating Future Milestones

"Artificial Intelligence" Passes the Turing Test! -- The First Faster-Than-Light Travel Achieved! -- (future postage created by Mark Wilson)



(images credit: Mark Wilson - via)

See bigger versions here and here.

Mark explains: "It's about a thousand lines of hand crafted PostScript code. I've taken a gray-scale ASCII-Art version of a B&W photo of Turing and injected the text of an actual test conversation into it, and added the title text etc. The stamp's "value" is 25μ, where I'm imagining that's shorthand for 25μgAu (25 micrograms of Gold)." (more info)

We hope that this example will inspire you to create more cool future postage artifacts... taken from headlines of the future (or perhaps from the Wired magazine's "Found" feature)


"In Cthulhu We Trust"? Not on my watch!

The weirdest of the bunch of postage stamps that apparently fell out of some wayward time traveler's machine are the ones issued by the Cthulhu government, dedicated to H. P. Lovecraft - of course!


(image credit: Lovecraft Memorabilia)

in the other Cthulhu-related memorabilia "from the future" (or, rather, alternate reality) are these curious finds:




(images via)


Not really from the future... but generating about the same amount of goosebumps

Just imagine... if in some alternate reality this vision from a vintage postcard of multi-level futuristic New York may be realized... I want to visit, and take some more pictures of this place!


(image via Susan)

Also in some alternate reality... vegetables grow REALLY large in Lexington Heights, Michigan -


(image via Susan)

Communism-inspired Proletariat (the workers) finally defeat the dragon of consumerism (a Soviet-issued stamp from 1921 - really a wishful thinking):


(images credit: Tmora)

Airships ply the skies and the infamous Palace of the Soviets is built:


(images credit: Tmora)

Mythical creatures are celebrated on the postage stamps just issued by the U.K. Royal Mail (painted by Dave McKean: more images and order information here)


(image via)

Finally, I give you the future of mail delivery - on the Moon - more info


(image via)

Mail delivery on the Moon?... not without its challenges, it seems:


(art by: Alex Schomburg)

Also Read: Thrilling Vintage Movie Posters! ->

Don't miss our series "World's Most Curious Ephemera" ->

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COMMENTS:

3 Comments:

Anonymous Spanish classes said...

I've never understood stamp collecting. I'll admit some of them are very cool and I'm sure that it isn't easy to make but it just doesn't appeal to me. Different folks, different strokes.

___  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

MOON NINJAS!@@!!!!@!$@!#!

___  
Blogger Graeme McKay said...

@Anonymous
"MOON NINJAS!@@!!!!@!$@!#!"

that looks more like Mars in the background to me....

___  

Post a Comment

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  • I think we're one of the few countries in the world with such a wide range of accents, especially when relative to our size. We're also one of the few countries in the world that hates those to the north or south of us.
    Read more

  • I feel sorry for those old-time stewardesses. They had to spend their working lives in thick cigarette smoke.
    Read more

  • I certainly can't think of her as my mother... lol
    Read more

  • Those some really awful hats. Really, really hideous.
    Read more

  • I miss the old days. I hate the current PC environment-- it's like they give you the privilege of paying for the flight instead of appreciating your business. AND, I hate the PC no-smoking nazis that appear whenever they see something like this-- as if smoking was the worst thing in the today's world.
    Read more

  • The number 9 pictures are not stewardesses. There hostesses from expo 67 in montreal.
    The logo gave it away...

    Mike
    Read more

  • What about the connection of porn and stewardesses? The "literature" of this subject is really great. Check Flight 69, for example.

    http://www.cduniverse.com/productinfo.asp?pid=7321905&style=ice
    Read more

  • So ... they issued Aeroflot stews with pistols?

    Don't mess with them.
    Read more

  • I keep looking past the ladies to the airline seats of old, which seem so more more comfortable than today's!
    Read more

  • To the person who called me a Nazi; I am not a member of the Nationalist Socialist Party.
    And I did not comment because of any "PC" tendencies; I spoke up because a friend of mine, a former stewardess, has suffered multiple lung problems and surgeries since her early retirement.
    Cigarette smoke is poison and you cannot change that by telling lies about people's motives.
    Read more

  • Sorry, but there has never been a reliable study proving any link between secondhand smoke and health risks.
    I'm not the individual who called the other one a Nazi, but I just thought I'd point that out.
    Read more

  • I agree she is unlike any mother I know of. those come hither eyebrows. Meow.
    Read more

  • @Tennessee: Show me someone with a smoker's afflictions who's never experienced first- or second-hand smoke, and I'll start to care about the lack of studies proving the harm of second-hand smoke.
    Read more

  • Remember... The next time you fly and have to deal with a sour-faced, post-menopausal,hag from hell... These are Them!!!
    Read more

  • What a plesant surprise to see an old photo of a Delta stewardess, in Part 4, that I nearly divorced my wife for. Should have....
    Read more

  • Ah, yes, the good old days. We should definitely bring that back. Luckily women are never, ever actually consumers of commercial flights! So we don't have to worry about the fact that they might want a flight attendant who would be attractive to them, or even might be uncomfortable that the staff's uniforms would be designed to make the women sex objects. Thumbs up for nostalgia!
    Read more

  • I had a wonderful affair with one of the stewardesses in the Delta photo.
    Read more

  • Maybe it's a Fordson Snowdevil
    See it in action
    http://www.liveleak.com/view?i=568_1233111054
    Read more

  • I think the boat struck the bridge bringing it down. The stern is now low in the water beacause of the weight of the bridge on it.
    Read more

  • That ILM short was actually done in 2000.
    Read more

  • heres the story with the ship
    http://seawayblog.blogspot.com/2008/03/ship-collapses-bridge.html
    Read more

  • The Jupiter animation was not made by Cassini. It was made by Voyager 1. ;)
    Read more

  • The second spanish flag, with the oval shape) it's a pre-republican flag. Used until 1931.

    It's followed by the republican tri-color flag and then by the Franco, the dictator, flag, used until 1977 (2 years after his dead).

    Nowadays, it's strange to see republican flags (used in some parades against monarchy or government) with the iconography. Being most in plain tri-color scheme.
    Read more

  • I'm a stamp collector,specializing in "Dead Countries".I find the the
    everyday paraphernalia of fallen countries fascinating.
    Read more

  • I was so excited to see this article. Being Hawaiian now living in NYC I thought I might see the Hawaiian Royal Flag and Arms. Hawaii was a very short but bright Kingdom and I wish we were still independent. Perhaps next time. Great article!
    Read more

  • Great post, as always. Just one thing: of the two flags of Italy, the right one is the royal flag, while the left one is the (current) flag for the navy.
    Read more

  • I read the DRB whenever I can, but this article is great, thanks!
    Read more

  • Some more flags:

    Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/59/Flaga_Rzeczpospolitej_Obojga_Narodow.svg

    Belarusian People's Republic (1918–1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9f/Flag_of_Belarus_1991.svg

    East Germany (1949 – 1990)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Flag_of_East_Germany.svg

    Third Reich (1933–1945)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2f/Flag_of_Germany_1933.svg

    Bavarian Soviet Republic (April – May 1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Socialist_red_flag.svg
    not very sofisticated ;-)

    Republic of Central Lithuania (1920–1922)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a6/Flag_of_Central_Lithuania.svg

    Free, Independent, and Strictly Neutral City of Kraków, called also The Republic of Cracow (1815–1846)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/ff/Flag_of_Krakow.svg

    Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic (1918)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/21/Flag_DKR.svg

    Commune of the Working People of Estonia (1918–1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/20/Estonianworkerscommuneflag.gif
    Read more

  • In many pictures appears the Catalan flag (four red bars over yellow), which is one of the oldest in Europe (dating back to 1150) and it is still widely use in the territories catalans ruled (includings parts of spain, france, sicily but even athens) until they lost the war against castilians.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senyera

    According to a 14th century legend, the flag dates back from the 9th century, when the four red bars were drawn, as an act of gratitude, on Wilfred I the Hairy's (Count of Barcelona) golden shield by king Charles the Bald's fingers drenched with blood from the Count's war wounds prior to Wilfred's death in 897 during the siege of Barcelona by Lobo ibn Mohammed, the moor governor.

    A slightly modified catalan flag with a star is used nowadays to claim independence for the Catalans.
    Read more

  • Great article!!!

    However, the Byzantine flag with the black double-headed bird on a yellow background is related to the Orthodox Church specifically.

    Though they didn't fly flags in the sense that we do today, the banner representing the government in Constantinople was a cross with four betas (pronounced v in Greek), one in each corner.

    The four betas stand for Vasilefs Vasileon, Vasilevon Vasilevonton - Greek for the "King of Kings, Rules the People". It was most likely a reference to Christ, though many contemporary emperors called themselves the king of kings, so we cannot be 100% sure.

    Here is a picture:

    http://www.oramaworld.com/images/flags/4b_300.jpg

    -Alex
    Read more

  • Here would be an adition as well, a total different flag for Switzerland, proposed by the French and used in the "Republique Helvetique" for 5yYears, before Switzerland was again Swiss and not French anymore...

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helvetic_Republic
    Read more

  • For Yugoslavia (formerly Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenians), you only showed coat of arms. Actual flag were simply 3 horizontal stripes: blue, white and red.
    And those stripes stayed for the Yugoslavia till the end in '90. with addition of a red star.

    My point is...if this is wrong, and I read something about Italian flag too...what else is wrong?
    Read more

  • Fascinating article and pictures. Thanks, enjoyed it immensely.

    Regards,
    Donna
    Children’s Author
    Donna M. McDine’s Website
    Read more

  • Thank you all for great additions and info... the Kingdom of Italy flag was fixed, and we are hoping to include the rest of great tips into a next article about flags.
    Read more

  • Great article though is a shame the inclusion of that so-called flags from Japan ¿Do this people have always to do everything copying the west? They have obviously a very poor meaning compared to the flags above. Flags must have significance given by history, they must not become a design hobby. I pity them.
    Read more

  • Interesting collection. Just thought I'd point out you got the Iranian flag wrong, that is the Imperial standard and not the state flag that was used up to 1979. The state flag was the Lion and Sun which has a much older history than the Pahlavi Imperial standard.
    Read more

  • Some more flags of non-existing countries and provintions related to polish history:

    Free City of Gdańsk (under Prussian protection) [1807-1814]
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/ed/Gdansk_flag.svg

    Kingdom of Poland (called also Congress Poland, under Russian protection) [1815-1916]
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/48/Flag_of_the_Congress_of_Poland.svg

    Grand Duchy of Posen (under Prussian protection) [1815-1848]
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/85/Flag_of_Wien.svg

    The same flag as above was used by Königreich Galizien und Lodomerien mit dem Großherzogtum Krakau und den Herzogtümern Auschwitz und Zator (under Austrian protection, what a name - typisch österreichisch) [1772-1918]

    Flag used during January Uprising, with symbols of Poland (eagle), Lithuania (racing knight) and Ukraine (archangel Michael)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/f6/Chor%C4%85giew_powsta%C5%84c%C3%B3w_styczniowych.PNG

    And yet another flag of United Kingdom of Poland [1320-1386]
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c3/Alex_K_Kingdom_of_Poland-flag.svg
    Read more

  • When I was in high school and a rabid fan of the brand-new "Nick Fury, Agent of SHIELD" comic book (which shows you how long ago it was), I drew a pastiche in which Fury exposes a world-domination plot by a cadre of disgruntled descendants of Austro-Hungarians. They dreamed of restoring the True Empire. Wish I'd had your article for reference.

    The interesting thing about flags is that they, like ethnic or territorial claims, are attached to specific dates or events. Like those claims they establish an abstract "year zero" for the flagmaking power. As long as the flagmaker stays in power he gets to wave the real flag on behalf of the true country. Examples: USA; claims by earlier conquerors or the original(?) inhabitants are merely History. Iran: for the late Shah's die-hard gfans his is the real flag, regardless of what came before or after. Similarly the Catalonians can trace their flag to the 12th century, but what was the flag for the 11+ centuries before?

    In the end flags are expressions of the most artificial of human constructs: the country, the nation, the empire, the true faith.
    Read more

  • Actually, every town in Japan has its own flag, not just the cities/wards in the Tokyo era.
    Read more

  • Good work on the flags, can't wait for part 2!
    Read more

  • @Jamie
    Actually, every town in Japan has its own flag, not just the cities/wards in the Tokyo era.

    Actually, many cities around the world have it's flags. I know that every bigger city in Poland has. The same in Germany. And perhaps the same in most of European countries. Some of them contains city coat of arms, some just traditional colors.

    Berlin, Chełm, Wrocław, Warszawa, Kraków, Gdańsk, Wrocław
    Read more

  • lots of incorrect historical data...
    Read more

  • http://www.dubrovnik-guide.net/pics/thumbs/libertas%20flag.gif

    flag of free state of Dubrovnik, which played important role as one of the biggest mediterian trading harbours in 12th to 18th century, then taken by Napoleon and lost its soverenity.
    Read more

  • The double eagle motif was also used in the flag of the Duchy of Grand Fenwick...the fictional country in the novel & film "The Mouse that Roared"
    Johnleemedia
    Read more

  • That's pretty cool. I love flags!

    As for the last part showing the Tokyo city flags, they do that in Peru to. They have a flag for every department, province, district and town.
    Read more

  • I great source of extinct flags and coats is the Gerle Amorial

    http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k38944m.image.f1.pagination
    Read more

  • Very fascinating article. For the flag of Byzantine Empire, i have to add that part of it was what inspired Albanian National Hero , Scanderbeg to use it as the flag that was raised in 1443.

    Best
    Read more

  • Oops, Not to toot my own horn but I built a site for exploring flags and their locations. This post is beautiful, I was thinking of adding some of your finds to my site: http://www.flagthousand.com
    Read more

  • I'm a stamp collector,specializing in "Dead Countries".I find the the
    everyday paraphernalia of fallen countries fascinating.
    Read more

  • I was so excited to see this article. Being Hawaiian now living in NYC I thought I might see the Hawaiian Royal Flag and Arms. Hawaii was a very short but bright Kingdom and I wish we were still independent. Perhaps next time. Great article!
    Read more

  • Great post, as always. Just one thing: of the two flags of Italy, the right one is the royal flag, while the left one is the (current) flag for the navy.
    Read more

  • I read the DRB whenever I can, but this article is great, thanks!
    Read more

  • Some more flags:

    Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (1569-1795)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/59/Flaga_Rzeczpospolitej_Obojga_Narodow.svg

    Belarusian People's Republic (1918–1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/9f/Flag_of_Belarus_1991.svg

    East Germany (1949 – 1990)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a1/Flag_of_East_Germany.svg

    Third Reich (1933–1945)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/2f/Flag_of_Germany_1933.svg

    Bavarian Soviet Republic (April – May 1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/47/Socialist_red_flag.svg
    not very sofisticated ;-)

    Republic of Central Lithuania (1920–1922)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a6/Flag_of_Central_Lithuania.svg

    Free, Independent, and Strictly Neutral City of Kraków, called also The Republic of Cracow (1815–1846)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/ff/Flag_of_Krakow.svg

    Donetsk-Krivoy Rog Soviet Republic (1918)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/21/Flag_DKR.svg

    Commune of the Working People of Estonia (1918–1919)
    http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/2/20/Estonianworkerscommuneflag.gif
    Read more

  • Fascinating article and pictures. Thanks, enjoyed it immensely.

    Regards,
    Donna
    Children’s Author
    Write What Inspires You Blog
    Donna M. McDine’s Website
    Read more

  • Last picture is from guild wars expansion :)
    Read more

  • ^^ ... Which makes sense since Daniel Dociu was the lead artist on Guild Wars: Factions -- as well as the other games in the series. (Actually all of the images posted here for him are from Guild Wars: Factions concept art, not just the last one.)

    (And not to get pedantic or anything, but some of those those aren't moving cities... Maybe the Leviathans can be called that although they're more like war vessels, but the other images are just normal cityscape in the game. You can even see it's anchored to rock in the seaside picture.)
    Read more

  • I was going to mention Guild Wars too, and Daniel is a major reason why it's one of the most beautiful games out there. I have the "Eye of the North" expansion which is just gorgeous. Immense architecture, sprawling winter landscapes, and that on a really old PC with graphics on "medium-low". Crank up the graphics, you can walk your character around the North with your jaw on your lap.
    Read more

  • Okay, so I'm not crazy...I thought those Daniel Dociu pics looked like artwork from Guild Wars: Factions.
    Read more

  • i would suggest yoshitaka amano's art for final fantasy 6. very steampunky.

    check it out.
    Read more

  • Fantastic artwork.
    Read more

  • We ran an interview with Keith Thompson about his artwork last month. You can check it out at http://www.dieselpunks.org/forum/topics/interview-keith-thompson. He really is crazy talented.

    ~Tome
    Read more

  • Great interview, thank you Tome
    Read more

  • The pic with the Praktica SLR shout be at the technical museum, Dresden, Germany. it is the old factory of Praktika and displays some touchable models like this.
    Read more

  • Dude those are some of the coolest images I have ever seen!
    Read more

  • IIRC the cat with the photographers is Socks Clinton.
    Read more

  • so interesting
    Read more

  • heres an addition to your animals and cameras
    http://pix.ie/muineach/393009

    its an irish red fox cub who got a bit cheeky :)
    Read more

  • top photo is actually a goal celebration.
    Read more

  • I think the picture with the lady from the beggining of the 20th century it's about the Brownie Camera, launched by Kodak.
    Read more

  • I can't recall the Bertin Aerotrain to be seen in Truffaut's Fahrenheit.

    But there's for sure a futuristic suspended train in this movie, the SAFEGE prototype (see http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Orbit/1061/safege/ for instance). Sadly enough, both projects were abandoned, without much consideration, and left to rot in remote hanger (the SAFEGE firm has patented a kind of monorail system, anyway).

    Greets from France !
    Read more

  • The first link - to the film - crashes my computer. FireFox under W2k.
    Read more

  • It should be just an embedded QuickTime movie - maybe try it in another browser.
    Read more

  • Would love to have that film from the first link as a screensaver
    Read more

  • Brutalist Architecture is a term as is a Modernest Brutalist but as a classic?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brutalist_architecture
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Modernist_architecture

    see: forex Trellick Tower
    Read more

  • The monorail in 451 was an underslung model, see here:
    http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Orbit/1061/safege/safege.html
    The Aerotrain would have been much more interesting, though it would not have fit into the mundane landscape quite as well as the more utilitarian one actually used.
    Read more


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