Bicycles on postal items
Bicycles on postal items includes bicycles on postal stationery and other postal items depicting bicycles such as postcards, first day covers and items delivered by bicycle mail. The collection of bicycles on postal items is commonly associated with collecting bicycles on stamps, or collecting the stamps and postal stationery of a specific country.[1]
Definition
[edit]The definition of exactly what constitutes bicycles on postal items is open to debate.[2] As the subject is extensive, each collector individually determines their own rules for what should be included in their collection.[3]
Bicycles on postal items fall into one of the following categories:
- A piece of postal stationery depicting a bicycle. The official definition is: "Postal stationery comprises postal matter which either bears an officially authorized pre-printed stamp or device or inscription indicating that a specific rate of postage or related service has been prepaid".[4][5]
- A stamped envelope
- A registered envelope
- A letter sheet
- A postal card (a card with an imprinted stamp or indicium signifying the prepayment of postage)
- A lettercard
- An aerogram
- A wrapper
- A postal item which is not defined as postal stationery:
- A maximum card, that is a postcard depicting a bicycle with an affixed bicycle stamp
- A postcard depicting a bicycle with a non-bicycle stamp
- A first day cover depicting a bicycle in the design and/or on the stamp
The following types of material are excluded (although they may also be collected by enthusiasts):
- A bicycle stamp in isolation, that is without an accompanying postal item.
- A postal item with Cinderella, local, private or personal issues, i.e. unofficial stamps.
- Items with non-postal stamps, e.g. revenue stamps
- Postal items issued by non-existing/unrecognized countries[6] and/or in excess of actual postal requirements.
Design
[edit]In all these cases the design includes one or more of the following elements:
- It depicts a human-powered cycling machine. This includes a whole (or part of) bicycles, tricycles, unicycles, toy cycles, tandems, rickshaws, exercise/standing bicycles, etc. It excludes powered or unpowered wheelchairs and motor-driven or motor-assisted cycling machines, e.g. motorcycles, mopeds.[Note 1]
- It depicts a bicycle or cyclist in a social context. For example, a cyclist in a street scene, cycling as an energy-efficient, green, mode of transport, or cycling promoting road safety.
- It depicts a building used specifically for cycling sport, i.e. a velodrome.
- It depicts a person notable for being a cyclist, e.g. a winner of the Tour de France, or cycling events at the Olympic Games.
- It depicts the process of manufacturing a bicycle, or a notable bicycle manufacturer (individual or firm).
- It depicts the word "bicycle" in the local language, even if the image of a bicycle is not included. The word triathlon without an image of a bicycle is excluded.
Depiction of bicycles on postal items
[edit]Subjects depicted on bicycle postal items include:
- Cycle sports
- Indoor
- Cycle racing
- Velodromes
- Outdoor
- Event racing, e.g. cycling to raise money for charities
- Tour racing, e.g. the Giro d'Italia
- Indoor
- Non-sports uses
- The history of the bicycle
- Bicycle industrial manufacturing
- Bicycle mail transportation and postal delivery
- Bicycles for commercial delivery
- People transportation e.g. by rickshaw
- Bicycle military use
- Bicycles as toys
- Bicycle tourism
- Bicycles in street scenes
- Bicycles to symbolize alternative, energy-efficient transport
- Bicycles depicting or encouraging road traffic safety
Notes
[edit]- ^ Some collectors believe that the existence of human-powered parts, such as pedals and a bicycle chain, in the pictured bicycle should make the image acceptable, even if the machine is power-assisted.
References
[edit]- ^ Rehm, Arnoldt. "Postal Stationery – Czech and Slovak Republic". Bicycle Philately. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
- ^ Rehm, Arnoldt. "What is "bicycle mail"?". Bicycle Philately. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
- ^ Miller, Rick (14 January 2012). "Postal stationery offers collecting variety". Linns Stamp News. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
- ^ Towle, Ross (2012). "Is it Postal Stationery?". FIP Postal Stationery Commission. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
- ^ Mackay, James (2003). Philatelic Terms Illustrated (4th ed.). Stanley Gibbons Limited. p. 170. ISBN 9780852595572.
- ^ Teideman, A.E. (2001). "Virtual Nations or Make-Believe Countries" (PDF). Bicycle Stamps Club Magazine (BS 37): 22–24. Retrieved 9 May 2024.