Commemorative Tokyo 2020 stamps go on sale
CGTN
["other"]
Stamps celebrating the Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games went on sale on Tuesday, 500 days before the start of the summer showpiece.
The stamps, released by Japan Post Co., feature the Olympic and Paralympic mascots Miraitowa and Someity as well as an image of the new Olympic Stadium, which is still under construction.
One million sheets of 10 stamps are on sale, priced at 920 yen (8.26 U.S. dollars), which includes a donation of 100 yen (0.9 U.S. dollars) towards preparations for the Games.
Dozens queued outside the main post office near Tokyo station to get their hands on the special stamps.
"Each stamp has 10 yen donation to operations for the Olympic and Paralympic Games in Tokyo 2020 so I would like to contribute to the Games even if a small amount," said 77-year-old Masaki Nakamura at Tokyo station.
Tokyo 2020 mascots Miraitowa (L) and Someity attend a commemorative event marking the 500-day countdown to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, March 12, 2019. /VCG Photo

Tokyo 2020 mascots Miraitowa (L) and Someity attend a commemorative event marking the 500-day countdown to the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, Japan, March 12, 2019. /VCG Photo

"I like the mascots," said Yu Anami, who had come to the station early to get her hands on the stamps.
"I think that there are few stamps with illustrated designs, so this would be a good memorial item."
Designer Akira Tamaki shows off the sheets of commemorative stamps for Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games before the stamps went on sale, in Tokyo, Japan, March 5, 2019. /VCG Photo

Designer Akira Tamaki shows off the sheets of commemorative stamps for Tokyo 2020 Olympic and Paralympic Games before the stamps went on sale, in Tokyo, Japan, March 5, 2019. /VCG Photo

The designer of the stamps, Akira Tamaki, said he had taken inspiration from the commemorative stamps made for the 1964 Tokyo Olympics and Paralympics, when Japan last held the Summer Games.
"I was inspired not only by the (1964) stamp design itself but rather by the fact that it was a national project and people were all excited for it," Tamaki said.
"I saw the power of the era and I believe that is something I should strongly sense and inherit."
Source(s): Reuters