Friday, 1 May 2015

175th Anniversary of the Penny Black Stamp: Google Doodle Celebrates Landmark British Design


The world's first adhesive postage stamp used in a public postal system, the Penny Black, is being celebrated in a Google Doodle on its 175th anniversary - 1st May 2015. Kevin, who was the artist for this project, was asked a few questions:

"Where are the classic micro-perforated edges normally seen on stamps?"
When creating doodles, there is often a balance between artistic license and historical integrity. The iconic image of a stamp, at least today, is that of a small rectilinear bit of paper with the classic saw-tooth perforations along the perimeter. These perforations, however, were a later invention and the Penny Black came in sheets that had to be subdivided by the scissor or knife. I decided to keep this detail in the final doodle, and depicted the Penny Black stamp with classic imperforate edges.

"How did the sheet get so conveniently faded?"
This was, conversely, a case of artistic license. The original Penny Black stamps were, as the name suggests, blacker than a moonless night. In order to create a silhouette of the Google logo, I made some of the stamps lighter than the others.

"Did you copy the faces or did you draw them each separately?"
Each portrait was drawn individually. I came to be quite familiar with the Her Majesty Queen Victoria's profile!


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