Thursday 8 November 2018

Sparkling tiara's on Curaçao stamps

Last but not least in this series of studying Wilhelmina's tiara's, we will cross the Atlantic to the Dutch Caribbean. Although all stamps during Wilhelmina's reign carry the name 'Curaçao', they were used on the other Dutch Antilles as well (Aruba and Bonaire and St. Maarten, St. Eustatius and Saba). We will see that most designs match the Dutch Indies stamps, starting with the Veth 1903 series. By 1916 the new series by Seegers and Harting was introduced:

postzegel, stamp, NVPH 64
NVPH 64 - 1915 - Queen Wilhelmina 22 1/2c
postzegel, stamp, NVPH 68
NVPH 68 - 1916 - Queen Wilhelmina 50c




















I always felt these designs suited the Dutch possessions in the Caribbean much better than the Dutch Indies territories. This 'feeling' might result from the fact that the Seegers' design only displays an empty horizon and a lonely ship. When thinking of the Dutch Indies I always imagine mighty volcano's and inaccessible mountain ranges which are draped in dense tropical forests. The Dutch Antilles on the other hand remind me of small windswept islands exposed to hurricanes, the sea and whatever more. The Seegers' 'lonely ship' design nears this feeling the closest, but Harting's design with its plain palm trees does invoke this same 'barren' atmosphere. Only when you try very hard, you will uncover the mystic mountain ranges of the Indies:

Detail of NVPH 68 with focus on the mountain ranges
When we continue we will see Cheffer's Jubilee design of 1923 again, which I decided not to review here again - see this post for his design.. Unlike the Dutch Indies however, the colony of Curaçao decided to grant these stamps a second life as definitive series by slightly altering the frame. It appeared between 1928 and 1930:

postzegel, stamp, NVPH 89
NVPH 89 - 1930 - Queen Wilhelmina 6c
I don't know if this design does the trick: I find myself somewhat puzzled by the three ships. I think that Mr Seegers tried reworking the frame, but he pushed the design too far by engraving three seemingly random ships below the queen in my modest opinion. I think it would have better suited the stamp to have only one ship displayed or a combination between the outline of an island and a single ship -  or even better: no display of ships at all. 

postzegel, stamp, NVPH 126
NVPH 126 - 1936 - Queen Wilhelmina 6c
Next comes a stamp which was only used on the Dutch Antilles and in Suriname, since the Dutch Indies had their own iconic square Kreisler stamps. Of course I do not want to suggest that this stamp is inferior to Kreisler's design, but I have to admit it is a bit dull ... On the other hand the designer - Mr Mees -  chose to depict Wilhelmina with a veil. This really makes her a bit magical and quite exotic. A remarkable choice and therefore the design will get my stamp of approval nevertheless. Wilhelmina seems to wear three strands of pearls on a plain tiara. I seriously doubt if Wilhelmina ever possessed a jewel of this kind.

postzegel, stamp, NVPH 138
NVPH 138 - 1938 - Queen Wilhelmina 1 1/2c
We will end with the ruby jubilee stamps which were a shared issue between the Netherlands, Suriname, Curaçao and the Dutch Indies. Mr Koch made a fine drawing of Queen Wilhelmina with the massive Wedding Gift Tiara which was so quickly dismantled after Juliana became our queen in 1948. A very stylized stamp.

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