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pájaros cantores en la nieve sellos postales de usps de primera clase para siempre

  • Marca:

    usps

  • Código producto: B01JPR5JNQ
  • Disponibilidad: Traemos a pedido, tiempo de 15 a 25 dias.
  • $CLP 37.419

TÉRMINOS Y CONDICIONES

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- El producto se trae a pedido, en un transcurso de 15 a 25 dias, si alguna restriccion de un ente gubernamental o de salud publica cambia o restringe vuelos, los pedidos pueden demorar mas tiempo.
- Precios pueden cambiar previo aviso. Depende de precio con proveedores o existencia.
- Fotos referenciales del producto, consulte no mas
- Despachamos a todo Chile con Starken.
- Productos importados de Estados Unidos, es probable que los productos electronicos trabajen en 110V y NO en 220V, podria usar un transformador, para mas informacion primero nos puedes preguntar todas las inquietudes que tengas.
-The United States Postal Service celebrated four birds that brighten cold winter days today by dedicating the Songbirds in Snow Forever stamps set
-The Songbirds in Snow collectors catalog features four birds - The Golden Crowned Kinglet, the Cedar Waxwing, the Northern Cardinal and the Red Breasted Nuthatch
-Forever stamps will always be valid for first class mail postage even if rates change to any address in US or great to add to any album collection
-Available books of 20 easy to use Peel & Stick Self Adhesive. Four stamp designs repeated five times. Issue date August 04 2016
-Not only great for postcards, letters, mailing envelopes or collecting but for collectibles, birthday, teachers, occasions, weddings, parties, showers, celebrations and more

The Songbirds in Snow stamps each features one of four birds: the golden-crowned kinglet, the cedar waxwing, the northern cardinal, and the red-breasted nuthatch. Illustrator Robert Giusti painted the original designs in acrylic on canvas board, depicting each bird perched on a snow-covered branch. He and the art director chose these four birds for their color, attractiveness, and adaptability to the small format of a postage stamp. The cedar waxwing (Bombycilla cedrorum) gets its name from its favorite winter food, cedar berries, and the red, waxy tips of some of its wing feathers. One of the few North American birds that thrives on a diet of mostly fruits, the cedar waxwing also consumes the winter fruits of juniper, mistletoe, and crabapple. A spot of bright red against the white of a snowy tree branch signals the presence of a northern cardinal (Cardinalis cardinalis), one of winter?s most colorful and beautiful birds. Cardinals usually appear in pairs but can gather in small flocks during the winter to forage for food. The red-breasted nuthatch (Sitta canadensis), with its distinctive call like a tiny toy horn, prepares well for the season by caching conifer seeds, its preferred winter food. Stashed in cracks and openings in tree bark, the seeds are collected by the bird as it walks headfirst down the trunk.