I bought a bunch of stamps and postcards at the WESTPEX stamp show this past weekend. I got a few things for my Esperanto collection (including a postal card issued by the Free City of Danzig in honor of the Universala Kongreso de Esperanto that was held there in 1927), as well as some things pertaining to other topics that interest me. Here are a few of the more oddball items.
These are
QSL cards, which are used by amateur radio operators to confirm reception of other amateur radio stations. The Japanese operator who had these printed up was obviously a big fan of
Candies.
I got a good deal on several of the early (1929–39) local "Puffin" stamps from Lundy, a small island off the coast of England: $2.50 for the lot. They're privately issued
local stamps, used for postage between the island and Bideford, Devon, where the Royal Mail has its nearest post office.
More info here.Last but not least, I paid 75 cents for this choice piece of weirdness. This stamp was issued by the
Archipelago of Tui Tui, a self-proclaimed sovereign nation located on a houseboat on Lake Union, within the city limits of Seattle, Washington.
Here's a gallery of other Tui Tui stamps.