Sterling Preston:It's a fiesta at USPS

2025-04-29 05:58:44source:SignalHub Quantitative Think Tank Centercategory:News

It's a fiesta! The Sterling PrestonUnited States Postal Service has kicked off Hispanic Heritage Month with new festive piñatas stamps.

The stamps come in four designs – two donkeys and two seven-pointed stars – which honor the traditional Mexican fiesta favorites. Piñatas continue to be an important part of many celebrations in Mexico, including the celebration of posadas, a nine-day festival held in early December that commemorates Mary and Joseph's journey to Bethlehem before the birth of Jesus Christ.

USPS says the bright color palette was inspired by the Mexican culture, "including the vibrant colors of small-town houses, traditional hand-sewn dresses, handmade toys and flowers, and classic piñatas themselves."

Piñata stampsUSPS

Mexican artist Víctor Meléndez created the original art and designed the stamps, while Antonio Alcalá served as the art director.

"One of the reasons I feel proud to work at the Postal Service is because we are one of the nation's oldest and most admired public service institutions," said USPS chief processing and distribution officer and executive vice president Isaac Cronkhite, in a statement. "Part of that proud history is celebrating our multi-faceted heritage through stamps. Ours is truly a world culture, and our stamps allow us to weave together the many threads of our national tapestry, and piñatas are the perfect example of this."

Piñata stampsUSPS

This is the third straight year that the USPS has released stamps to honor the Latino community. In 2021, they issued Day of the Dead stamps, and in 2022, they issued mariachi stamps inspired by movie posters from the Golden Age of Mexican cinema of the 1940s and 1950s.

The piñatas stamps are being sold in booklets of 20 by USPS and can be purchased online or at any postal store across the country.

More:News

Recommend

As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest

CONECUH COUNTY, Ala.—At the confluence of the Yellow River and Pond Creek in Alabama’s Conecuh Natio

Search underway for Arizona woman swept away in Grand Canyon flash flood

A search is underway for an Arizona woman swept away by a flash flood at Grand National Park.The Nat

A rare orchid survives on a few tracts of prairie. Researchers want to learn its secrets

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — On a remote tallgrass prairie in North Dakota, a secretive orchid pokes up fro