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Showing posts with label Tagore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tagore. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Last 2012 Olympic set from Royal Mail…..

 

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Royal Mail  will issue last Olympic set of 10 stamps on July 27 featuring   different  sports. This  series of stamps is very popular with lovers of Sports philately all over the world.

 

Club News

 

Rabindranath Tagore immortalized in philatelics and  embroidery

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By   Sankalita Shome/ Special to Daily News Egypt
July 12, 2011, 4:59 pm

Rabindranath Tagore, the Indian Nobel Laureate in Literature, is no stranger to Egypt; he was great friends with renowned Egyptian poet Ahmed Shawqi and the words that he penned for Egypt seem almost prophetic in the aftermath of the January 25 Revolution.

He said of Egypt that it is “the land where the head is (now) held high and the mind is (now) without fear.”

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The Maulana Azad Cultural Center in Cairo is organizing year-long celebrations to commemorate Tagore’s 150th birth anniversary. As part of these celebrations, two exhibitions have made it to the shores of Egypt; the first is “A Philatelic Exhibition on Tagore” and the second is an exhibition of kantha embroidered panels.

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The word philately refers to the study of stamps and postal history and other related items. “A person graduates from being a mere collector of stamps into a philatelist when he delves into the postal history relating to the stamps; it is then that stamp collection morphs into a science,” Sekhar Chakrabarti, curator for the philatelic exhibition, told Daily News Egypt.

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Tagore’s famous play “Dak Ghar” portrayed the post office as a symbolic messenger of hope and deliverance. The exhibition, which consists of 20 panels of commemorative stamps and other rare philatelic objects, thus seems an apt tribute to the Nobel Laureate, who was a poet, novelist, musician and painter.

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Chakrabarti has a simple explanation for his interest in Tagore: “I am a Bengali and anyone who is a Bengali cannot but be inspired by him,” he said. But Tagore’s fame extended beyond the shores of India.

Tagore was a native of Bengal, which in his day was composed of both the Indian state of West Bengal as well as the modern independent nation-state of Bangladesh. Tagore was the first non-European to be awarded the Noble Prize for Literature in 1913 and was an avid traveller, having visited 30 countries on five continents during this lifetime; spurred by his curiosity to know more about the cultures and the people of the world.

The postal departments of around 20 countries have issued stamps on him and the first to bestow this honor was the erstwhile USSR, in 1961, on the occasion of Tagore’s birth centenary. Brazil, Romania, Vietnam, Bulgaria and others followed suit, with the latest addition being the one issued by Uruguay, earlier this year, to celebrate the Bengali Bard’s 150th birth anniversary.
Some of the items on display are more than a century old and belong to private collectors in India. The postal departments all over the world may be losing their functional relevance with the arrival of the electronic mail but their commemorative stamps are an important part of the history of a country.

During India’s freedom struggle against the British colonial authority, many items of patriotic postal stationery were printed and featured Tagore, who was an iconic figure in the Nationalist Movement. On display is a postcard from the year 1905 that was in circulation during the partition of the state of Bengal by the British and a symbol of the resistance and boycott of the partition by the nationalists.

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The Indian Postal Department released the first stamp on Tagore in 1952, as part of a set of six stamps on leading poets and saints of India. These stamps were the first to be printed, using the photogravure technology in place of the lithographic one. Among other noteworthy exhibits is the stamp designed by Satyajit Ray, India’s most celebrated filmmaker, the design of which is based on a photograph taken during Tagore’s visit to Milan in 1926.

At the age of 60, Tagore took up painting, inspired by the beauty of a nude image he saw at an exhibition in Paris. One of the many meticulously labelled exhibits by Chakrabarti gives an insight into this aspect of Tagore’s personality and includes the display of a Rupee one denomination stamp, issued by the Postal Department of India in the year 1978, featuring an oval pensive face painted by Tagore.

An enduring art from Bengal, to which Tagore belongs, is the embroidery work known as kantha, characterized by running stitch motifs. From its humble beginnings, when the women in Bengal used old saris and cloth and layered them with kantha stitch to make quilts, it is now blazing a fashion trail, both in India and elsewhere.

The other part of the exhibition at the El Bab gallery in the Cairo Opera House complex showcases a number of panels done in kantha embroidery, telling tales from Tagore’s works and life. A total of 13 panels illustrate Tagore’s short stories, songs, poems and dance dramas and have been conceptualized by Shamlu Dudeja who has worked for over 25 years for the revival of kantha work.

A personal favorite is one that depicts the story of Kabuliwala, a poignant tale by Tagore that has also been immortalized on celluloid. It is the story of a fruit seller, Rahmet, from Afghanistan who visits Calcutta, the capital of Bengal, to sell his wares and befriends a small girl, Minnie, who reminds him of his own daughter back in Afghanistan.

The rural women, who worked on these panels, have used their imagination to conceive important scenes from the story and have painstakingly stitched them, using interesting color palettes.

The philatelic exhibition may showcase a personality who belonged to the last century and the kantha embroidered panels may depict stories, poems and plays that were written almost a century ago; but the man and his stories are relevant even today — 150 years after his birth, the legend of Tagore lives on.
The exhibition runs until July 17 at El-Bab, Cairo Opera House Complex.

Daily News Egypt 

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India Post inaugurates  National Philatelic Museum

New Delhi, July 11 (IANS) The Department of Posts (DoP) Monday inaugurated the National Philatelic Museum which will exhibit rare postage stamps from across the world and also provide a platform to philatelists to exhibit their collections.

‘The museum will provide enhanced and interactive platform for promoting philately and will stimulate interest for stamp collection among children,’ Radhika Doraiswamy, secretary Department of Posts, told reporters here.

The museum will be open Mondays to Fridays — it will also be open on Saturdays for school groups on request. It will have an entry fee but the amount has yet not been decided. ‘There will be a nominal entry fee,’ said Doraiswamy.

The museum has bays dedicated to Mahatma Gandhi and the prime ministers of India, along with freedom fighters. It also has stamps on several themes such as science and technology, transport and wildlife.

There are stamps from abroad, and displays from the Army Postal Service and India Security Press, Nashik.

The museum also has an amphitheatre for talk shows and presentations along with a reference library. In the artists corner, the department has showcased the actual designing of a stamp and also plans to invite artists from time to time to give live demonstrations.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Stamp Exhibition on Tagore at El Bab Gallery, Cairo ….

 

 

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Tagore Exhibition at El Bab Gallery, Cairo begins…..

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 To commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, the Maulana Azad Centre for Indian Culture (MACIC), Embassy of India, Cairo, in cooperation with the Foreign Cultural Relations Sector and the Fine Arts Sector of the Egyptian Ministry of Culture has organized  exhibition related to Tagore which was inaugurated on 5 July, 2011 by H.E Dr Emad Abou Ghazi, the Egyptian Minister of Culture and H.E Mr R.Swaminathan, Ambassador of India at El Bab Gallery at the Opera House Complex. ‘A Philatelic Exhibition on Tagore’ consists of 20 panels of commemorative stamps and other rare philatelic objects issued by the postal departments of around 20 foreign countries on Rabindranath Tagore. Some of these items are more than a century old and belong to private collectors in India. Mr Sekhar Chakrabarti, whose collection has been displayed  in this exhibition, is the curator of the show at Cairo. The other collection on Tagore, displayed in the exhibition is of Mr Moloy Sarkar of Kolkata.

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India's Ambassador in Cairo Mr.  Swaminathan, Sekhar Chakrabarti,Minister of Culture Dr. Emad Abu Ghazi and other dignitaries at the exhibition

Another exhibition presents Tagore's work, called ‘Kantha Works’ and contains 13 of Tagore’s paintings that visualize short stories, songs and poems. All the paintings are made by the tradition style of embroidery, known by its local name ‘Kantha’ and still in practice until this day by rural women in West Bengal and Bangladesh in India. Bengali women used Kantha art to make blankets.
Tagore was fascinated by traditional art, hence his interest in ‘Kantha.’ Miss Shamlo Dodega, who worked for more than 25 years to revive Kantha art by establishing NGOs, came up with the idea of this exhibition.

Read More….

 

- Moloy Sarkar, Kolkata

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Philatelic Exhibition on Tagore in Cairo..

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150th birth anniversary celebrations of Rabindranath Tagore

Tagore Exhibition at El Bab Gallery, 5-17 July, 2011

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To commemorate the 150th birth anniversary of Gurudev Rabindranath Tagore, the Maulana Azad Centre for Indian Culture (MACIC), Embassy of India, Cairo, in cooperation with the Foreign Cultural Relations Sector and the Fine Arts Sector of the Egyptian Ministry of Culture will be bringing two exhibitions related to Tagore which will be inaugurated on 5 July, 2011 at 7 p.m by H.E Dr Emad Abou Ghazi, the Egyptian Minister of Culture and H.E Mr R.Swaminathan, Ambassador of India at El Bab Gallery at the Opera House Complex. The function will be graced by H.E Mr Hossam Nassar, First Under Secretary for Foreign Cultural Relations and H. E Dr Ashraf Reda, Head of the Fine Arts Sector.

Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) was the first Asian Nobel Laureate. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. Tagore was a master of several literary forms – he was a poet, a novelist, a short-story writer and a playwright. His contributions reshaped Bengali literature and music in the late 19th and early 20th century. Tagore is perhaps the world’s only writer whose compositions have been adopted as the national anthems of two countries: India and Bangladesh. At the age of 60, Tagore also became a celebrated painter. Tagore was also a pioneering educationist (thus the honorific ‘Gurudev’ meaning ‘Teacher’), and greatly promoted rural reconstruction. He set up a school, Santiniketan, and thereafter, a world famous university called Visva Bharati in West Bengal, India as well as a centre for promotion of traditional arts and crafts in Sriniketan. He was a national leader and an internationalist who visited many countries including Egypt in 1925.

The Tagore exhibitions will consist of two elements:

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(i) ‘A Philatelic Exhibition on Tagore’ which consists of 20 panels of commemorative stamps and other rare philatelic objects issued by the postal departments of around 20 foreign countries on Rabindranath Tagore. Some of these items are more than a century old and belong to private collectors in India. Mr Sekhar Chakrabarti, one of three Indian collectors, whose collections are used in this exhibition, will be the curator for the show at Cairo.

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(ii) ‘Tagore on Kantha’ which includes 13 panels of ‘kantha’ work illustrating Tagore’s short stories, songs, poems, dance dramas all made in the traditional ‘kantha’ style of embroidery practiced to this day by rural women in West Bengal, India and in Bangladesh. Tagore greatly promoted traditional arts and crafts including Kantha work. Kantha work basically uses the ‘running stitch’ to create beautiful motifs on fabric. It was originally used by Bengali women for making quilts from old, worn out saris. The Kantha exhibition has been conceptualized by Ms Shamlu Dudeja who has worked for over 25 years for the revival of kantha work in West Bengal through the setting up of NGOs.

The two exhibitions are being sponsored by the Indian Council for Cultural Relations (ICCR), New Delhi and have been put together by ICCR’s Rabindranath Tagore Centre in Kolkata. The exhibits are travelling out of India for the first time. The exhibition will run until 17 July, 2011 at the El Bab Gallery.

For further details, please contact (i) MACIC at: Tel: 23933396 / 23960071; Fax: 23936572; e-mail: macic@indembcairo.com and (ii) on Facebook (Foreign Cultural Relations).

- MAULANA AZAD CENTRE FOR INDIAN CULTURE

EMBASSY OF INDIA

23, Talaat Harb Street, Down Town, Cairo

 

Recently  a  Philatelic Exhibition on Tagore was held at  Rabindranath Tagore Centre in Calcutta organised by the Indian Council of Cultural Relations, Ministry of External Affairs, Govt of India. The exhibits of  Sekhar Chakrabarti and Moloy Sarkar were displayed  in this exhibition. The first ever solo philatelic exhibition on Tagore was held by courtesy Sekhar Chakrabarti,way back in 1966 organised by Indo-American Society, Calcutta.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

New Stamps from Royal Mail – Thomas the tank engine

 

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Date of Issue 14 June 2011

Thomas the Tank Engine appears on new set of Royal Mail stamps

One of the world’s best loved children’s characters appear on a new set of Royal Mail Stamps issued on 14 June 2011.

 

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LAUNCH ON TRACK The Fat Controller and Thomas the Tank Engine with the first class stamp

Thomas the Tank Engine is making the appearance to celebrate the centenary of the birth of creator Reverend W Awdry.

The stamps show iconic images from the television series Thomas & Friends, with the 1st Class stamp featuring Thomas pulling into the station under the guidance of the Fat Controller.

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Thomas the Tank Engine was first seen in the book, Thomas the Tank Engine after Reverend W. Awdry created the stories and illustrations to entertain his poorly child, Christopher.

2011 marks the centenary of the birth of the Reverend Wilbert Awdry, Thomas the Tank Engine creator. Royal Mail issued a ten-stamp issue, six printed individually, celebrating the images familiar from the TV series, and a four stamp miniature sheet reflecting on the heritage of the book illustrations.

1st Class – Thomas

1st Class – Thomas

Thomas the Tank Engine is a 0-6-0 tank locomotive, based on the LB&SCR E2 Class. He is painted blue with red lining and is number 1 in the North Western Railway (NWR) fleet. Thomas was given his own branch line, which he operates with his two coaches, Annie and Clarabel. He was built in 1913 and arrived on Sodor in 1915.

66p – James

66p – James

James the Red Engine is a mixed-traffic 2-6-0 tender engine. He is painted red with gold stripes and dome and is number 5 in the NWR fleet. He is quite vain and hot-headed, and loves showing off. He was built 1915 and arrived on Sodor in 1946.

68p – Percy

68p – Percy

Percy the Small Engine is a saddle tank engine of indeterminate origins. He is painted green with red stripes and is number 6 in the NWR fleet. He is a cheeky little engine with a strong sense of adventure, who doesn't let anyone push him around, which sometimes gets him into trouble. He arrived on Sodor on 1949 during a railway strike.

76p – Daisy

76p – Daisy

Daisy is a unique diesel railcar, painted green with yellow lining (similar to the livery of British Railways DMUs in the 1960s), and was built specially for use on the Ffarquhar branch of the NWR. Her number is D1 whereas she originally carried the number 52627. She was built in 1956 and arrived on Sodor in 1961. She first appeared in the book Branch Line Engines.

£1.00 – Toby

£1.00 – Toby

Toby the Tram Engine is a 0-6-0 steam tram engine who works on the same branch line as Thomas. He is painted brown and blue and is number 7 in the NWR fleet. He is a wise, experienced engine who knows all there is to know about running a branch line. He was built in 1903 and arrived on Sodor in 1951.

£1.10 – Gordon

£1.10 – Gordon

Gordon the Big Engine is a 'Pacific' (4-6-2) tender engine. He is painted blue with red stripes and is number 4 in the NWR fleet. He is the biggest engine on the railway, and pulls the Express. He is also very boastful and proud, but good at heart. He was built and arrived on Sodor in 1922.

1st Class – Thomas and Bertie the Bus

1st Class – Thomas and Bertie the Bus

In this original illustration from the story Thomas and Bertie (from Tank Engine Thomas Again), Thomas challenges Bertie the bus to a race. Here he is speeding past Bertie at a level crossing in this original illustration by C Reginald Dalby.

68p – James

68p – James

James ends up covered in tar when he crashes into the yard after failing to pin down his brakes at the top of a hill, fortunately it’s only his pride that is hurt. Original illustration by C Reginald Dalby from the story Dirty Objects in Toby the Tram Engine.

76p – Percy

76p – Percy

Percy ends up in the sea when he ignores a sign in Percy Takes the Plunge (from The Eight Famous Engines). Original illustration by John T Kenny.

£1.00 – Henry

£1.00 – Henry

In the Sad Story of Henry (from The Three Railway Engines), Henry ends up being walled up in a tunnel as punishment for not wanting to get his paint wet. Illustration by C Reginald Dalby.

: Royal Mail

From Our Readers

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Max Card on Rabindranath Tagore prepared by Sanjiv Jain of Dehradun

Saturday, June 11, 2011

Stamps on endangered animals..

Date of Issue : 3 June 2011

Singapore Post issued a set of four stamps on 3 June 2011 featuring endangered animal, Oriental Small-Clawed Otter.


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The Oriental Small-Clawed Otter, also known as the Asian Small-Clawed Otter, is rare in Singapore, but has been recorded from the north-western coast of Singapore namely the Sungei Buloh Wetland Reserve, Pulau Ubin and Pulau Tekong. The Oriental SmallClawed Otter is regarded as vulnerable by the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) in its Red List of Threatened Species. It is distinguished from other Asian otters by its small size, and small hands and feet with short claws that do not extend beyond their partially webbed fingers and toes. The Oriental Small-Clawed Otter inhabits mangrove swamps and freshwater wetlands.

Discussion : Appropriate special cover

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Philatelic Critical analysis

In this column critical analysis of the philatelic items will be published. Interested collectors may send scans of philatelic items for expert comments by Dr Avinash Jagtap. The idea behind this column is to provide right philatelic knowledge to the readers .

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Double Cancellation Cover

Contradicting facts

The above special cover issued during Ahimsapex – 2010, an exhibition on Gandhi exhibits.It must have a stamp and cancellation on Gandhi.

2. The cover featuring both Gandhi and Tagore in the illustration, must have a Tagore /Gandhi stamp

3.The cancellation shows 150th birth anniversary of Tagore. But the cover was issued on 3 Oct 2010 .The 150th birth anniversary is being celebrated in 2011.

4. The exhibition was on Mahatma Gandhi ( Ahimsapex 2010 ) so cancellation should have connection with Gandhi. The cover illustration, stamp and cancellation do not match with each other which should have common connection. No use of taking another cancellation of First issue of Tagore stamp on the same cover. This cover could give you negative points in the exhibition. Read expert comments by Dr. Avinsah B. Jagtap .

Two special cancellations on the same cover ……..

The first cancellation showing Tagore was impressed on a stamp which has nothing to do with Tagore. The cancellation must have some direct relation with the illustration on the stamp. In fact the whole cover has three different themes and they are not at all inter-related. First the choice of the illustrated blank Cover as it is available before affixing a stamp shows Mahatma Gandhiji and Rabindranath Tagore. This indicates that the stamp which will be affixed must have to do with Mahatmaji AND Rabindranath Tagore, but in fact the stamp shows another personality......"Virchand Raghav Ji Gandhi" . (different from Mahatmaji) and the first special cancellation shows Rabindranath. So this is a very much absurd situation and this Cover has no philatelic bearing. In fact it is a trash, "kitsch"! By adding another stamp on Rabindranath Tagore and putting one more special cancellation, the whole thing has become very ridiculous. This can not be considered something of any value and shows only the poor philatelic knowledge of the collector.

- Dr Avinash B. Jgatap, Switzerland

Club News

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The India International Hot Air Balloon Mela was held in Delhi from 13th to 28th November 2010. The inaugural hot air balloon was from near Rajghat, Mahatma Gandhi Memorial. This was the first time a Hot Air Balloon Flight was initiated from near Rajghat.

To commemorate this event, 50 individually numbered Special Cards were prepared by Nikhil Mundra, Gandhi Philatelist (www.gandhistamps.com). All 50 cards were then flown aboard the inaugural flight of the Balloon Mela from Rajghat on the 13th November 2010.

The cards feature an artwork depicting the Rajghat memorial, the main gate and the 0 km milestone at Rajghat.

For more details visit: http://gandhiballoon.blogspot.com

- Nikhil Mundra email : nikchik135@gmail.com

Friday, June 10, 2011

Indo - Sri Lanka Joint Souvenir Cover on Tagore….

 

 

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150th Birth Anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore

A special Indo – Sri Lanka Joint Souvenir Cover was issued by Kolkata Philatelic Club and Sri Lanka Buddhist Philatelic Society. The cover is very special as the Portrait of Tagore depicted on the cover has been printed on Silk.The cover was designed by Shri Dipok Dey. The back side of the cover gives details of Tagore’s great association with Sri Lanka. My thanks to Mr Donald Liyanage of Colombo who sent this Registered cover to me. I will send you recent Tagore FDC from India very soon !! It’s a great pleasure to have this very special cover with Tagore stamp from Sri Lanka !! Many Many Thanks !!

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Copy of thanks

Mr Donald Liyenage , Colombo – Sri Lanka

Thursday, June 2, 2011

New Stamps on Forest…

 

 Date of Issue : 9 May 2011

On 9 May 2011Turkish Post and Post of Bosnia and Herzegovina issued a set of two stamps featuring Forests as EUROPA 2011 theme of this year.

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Stamps from Bosnia and Herzegovina

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Date of Issue : 9 May 2011

Coins on 150th Birth Anniversary of Tagore

Scan of the cover of the cover in which the coin set was sent

To celebrate the 150th (1861-2011) Birth Anniversary of Rabindranath Tagore India Government Mint Kolkata issued Rs100 and Rs 5 coin sets recently in Proof and Uncirculated varieties.

Scan of the  Reverse of the cover in which the coin set

Scan of 100Rs and 5 Rs coins sets issued on Rabindranatha Tagore

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Scan of 100Rs and 5 Rs coins sets issued on Rabindranatha Tagore

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: Cdr. G Sri Ramarao,I.N,(Retd.), Vishakhapatnam

Club News

khadi stamp

Refund of excess payment for Khadi Stamp by India Post

Mr Hemant Jain writes that he has received a cheque of Rs.200.00 as a Refund of excess payment against speed post charges for supply of Khadi Stamp from concerned authorities of India Post India .

Earlier he filed a RTI regarding this matter, virtue of that correspondence ,India Post took necessary action & refunded excess amount accordingly.

Here to remind all that some collectors were charged extra amount of postage for each Khadi MS copy ( when they ordered for more than one copy ) whereas the postage was same for one copy and 10 copies as it was to be sent in single envelope.