Wednesday, December 7, 2016

U.S. Stamp: Lillian M. Gilbreth



Lillian Evelyn Moller Gilbreth is a pioneer in industrial engineering and scientific management. She and her husband Frank Gilbreth, developed new practices and ideas to increase labor efficiency and worker satisfaction. They created Gilbreth, Inc. to work in motion studies, a business efficiency technique intended to increase productivity while decreasing worker fatigue. 

The books Cheaper by the Dozen and Belles on Their Toes (written by their children Ernestine and Frank Jr.), and the films based on the autobiographical books, tell the story of their family life with their twelve children, and describe how they applied their interest in time and motion study to the organization and daily activities of such a large family.

Monday, December 5, 2016

Philippine Stamp: Intramuros




Intramuros (lit. within the walls) is the historic centre and oldest district Manila, Philippines. It is also called the Ciudad Murada (Walled City) because of its most famous feature: a nearly three-mile-long circuit of massive stone walls and fortifications that almost completely surrounds the entire district. At the time of the Spanish Colonial Period, it was synonymous to the city of Manila itself. It was the seat of government when the Philippines was a component realm of the Spanish Empire. Districts beyond the walls were referred as the extramuros (lit. outside the walls) of Manila.

German Stamp: Hambacher Schloss





Hambach Castle is located on the mountain Schlossberg in the eastern outskirts of the Palatine Forest in Germany. 

It is considered a symbol of the German democracy movement. The Hambach Fest, a German national democratic festival and one of the main public demonstrations in support of German unity, freedom and democracy during the Vormärz era, was celebrated in the castle. The festival ran between May 27 and 30 in 1832. 

Sunday, December 4, 2016

German Stamp: Nofrette Berlin



The Nefertiti bust was discovered by a German archaeological team led by Ludwig Borchardt in 1912 in Thutmose's workshop in Amarna Egypt. It is currently on display at the Neues Museum in Berlin, where it was originally displayed before World War II.