Added by | Alain Martineau |
General Description : | From the booklet of 10 stamps OFDC Cancellation Location: Flowers Cove, Newfoundland and Labrador Gum Type: pressure sensitive Quantity: 14,000,000 for both types Wild yellow or orange daylilies growing in ditches and along fences are a familiar sight to families heading off to cottage country. Sincethe early 1930s, the daylily has been hybridized by gardening enthusiasts and professional horti-culturalists, and this beautiful, hardy perennial can now be found in a rainbow of colours and an array of shapes across the country. The Daylily (Hemerocallis) was long placed in the Lily family (Liliaceae), but is now considered to belong in the plant family Hemerocallidaceae. This term, from the Greek words meaning “beauty” and “day,” alludes to the fact that each flower lasts for just one day. Since there are many flower buds on each flower stalk and many stalks in each cluster, the overall flowering period is usually several weeks long. The flowers of most species open at sunrise and wither atsunset, often replaced by another on the same stalkthe next day. Although not commonly used for arrangements, daylilies make good cut flowers, as new blossoms continue to open over several days. Originally, dOriginally, daylilies could be found only in yellow, orange, and reddish-brown. Today, colours range from near-white, to yellow, orange, pink, red, purple, blue and more. While the roadside yellow or orange daylilies—known to hybridizers as Hemerocallis fulva (or Hemerocallis fulva Europa)—are forms of the cultivated types that ‘escaped’ and now grow wild, all modern daylilies have evolved through a complicated history of hybridization. The purple daylily, which has been identified as “Louis Lorrain,” was chosen not only because it was a bit more exotic but also contrasted so beautifully with the orange. Also available in coil of 50 stamps, dimensions: 24 mm x 20 mm (horizontal), quantity: 120,000 coils or 6,000,000 stamps, simulated perforation top and bottom only. |
Face value | PERMANENT™ domestic rate $0.61 |
Catalog code (Michel) | CA 2808 |
Catalog code (Scott) | CA 2530 |
Catalog code | Canada post Product #: 413829111; Yvert et Tellier CA 2690 Stanley Gibbons CA 2846 |
Series | Flowers |
Stamp colour | multicolor |
Stamp use | Definitive stamp |
Print run | 7,000,000 |
Issue date | 01/03/2012 |
Designer | Isabelle Toussaint Design graphique |
Paper type | Tullis Russell |
Print technique | Lithography in 6 colours |
Printed by | Lowe-Martin |
Perforation | Simulated perforation (SP) |
Height | 26.00 mm |
Width | 32.00 mm |
Catalog prices | No catalog prices set yet |