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Malaya's Timeless Design

75 Punktevon cenazoicvor 5 Tagen

4 comments

kubbvor 2 Tagen
Incredible how deep people can go into something so mundane as a post stamp.<p>The other day I was discussing with a friend what would happen if there wasn&#x27;t any need to work at jobs anymore, and whether people would be able to find fulfilment in their lives.<p>I think there would be so many new areas of knowledge being explored that we can&#x27;t even imagine it. In my opinion, people don&#x27;t find meaning, they create it, and they have an endless capacity for it.
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KaiserProvor 2 Tagen
Firstly, this is an awesome website. I was looking for some high resolution stamp images a few weeks ago, these would have been perfect.<p>However the thing that really caught my interest is the font they are using. Yes its designed to look old, nothing new. But what <i>is</i> new is that the letters are not all at a fixed level, they move up and down minutely. Is that a product of the font, or something that is done in the rendering?
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weiliddatvor 2 Tagen
Glad to see a bit of Malaysian&#x2F;Singaporean history in the form of post stamps featured on HN.<p>Personal anecdote: my dad grew up during the post-colonial Malaysian era, and attended some colonial schools that were still ran by the British Anglican missionaries. I guess that&#x27;s what instilled some stamp collection habits, which he did try to impart to me. I recall waiting in line for first day covers in my early school years, or going to tiny local post stamp trading events. For some stamps that were still affixed to letters, we&#x27;d carefully try to dissolve it with water, dry them, and store them in collection books lined with plastic&#x2F;paper. Ah the simple tangible hobbies of the pre-Internet era...
ayushrodriguesvor 2 Tagen
timeless is a great word to describe this. almost impossible to tell what era these are from