Showing posts with label Year of the Snake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Year of the Snake. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Year of the Snake 5.1.2001



Two commemorative stamps issued by Canada Post celebrate the Year of Snake, commencing January 24, 2001 and ending February 11, 2002. Many artists collaborated to create this issue, including designer Marlene Wou, jade sculptor Lyle Sopel, and calligrapher Yukman Lai. Wou chose a jade sculpture as the background because the semi-precious stone has long been valued by the Chinese culture. The stamps, were issued on January 5, 2001 and launched in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
The most celebrated of all Chinese festivities, the lunar new year is a time of gathering, cleansing, celebrating, feasting and renewing. January 24, 2001 marks the beginning of the Year of the Snake - the sixth of twelve animals governing the period of one lunar year in a twelve-year cycle. Canada Post joins Asian communities around the world in paying homage to this ancient tradition through the issuing of two commemorative stamps ($0.47 and $1.05).  
The snake represents power and divinity, and is second only to the dragon in the mystical intrigue it holds for the Chinese. A prominent figure in ancient stories and legends, the snake may be good or evil. People born in the year of the snake are said to be deep thinkers, graceful, and soft-spoken. Snakes learn fast, and can be prudent and shrewd in business. Elegant in speech, dress, and manners, their inner strength allows them to maintain a presence of mind in times of hardship - qualities that deem them appropriate to become philosophers, theologians, politicians, and financiers. One's fortune is not dictated by year of birth alone…the relationship of each of the twelve zodiac signs with the five elements of the universe - gold/metal, wood, water, fire and earth - has an impact on how a person will fare in life. The year 2001 belongs to the element metal, and metal snakes are endowed with a calculating, intelligent mind and forceful willpower - making them the most secretive, evasive and confident of all snake types.
Chinese-Canadian Marlene Wou was responsible for the creative direction of all Year of the Snake design. Together with jade sculptor Lyle Sopel and Chinese calligrapher Yukman Lai, she set out to portray the snake in a positive manner while capturing its fluid form and decorative body patterns. By stylizing the form of the snake and embellishing its body with ornate patterns, this goal was achieved.
Thank you Hemant for this nice FDC with the lovely stamp (one of a set of two).

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Year of the Snake - 2013 4.1.2013

2013 in the Chinese New Year is the Year of the Snake, which begins on February 10, 2013 and ends on January 30, 2014.  The Snake, also called Junior Dragon, is the sixth sign of the Chinese Zodiac, which consists of 12 Animal Signs.  Ancient Chinese wisdom says a Snake in the house is a good omen because it means that your family will not starve.  People born in the Year of the Snake are keen and cunning, quite intelligent and wise. They are great mediators and good at doing business.  
Therefore, you should have good luck if you were born in the Year of the Snake.
There are a total of 12 animal signs in the Chinese calendar based on five cycles of 12 years each, with each cycle tempered by one of the five Chinese elements of Metal, Wood, Water, Fire and Earth. According to Chinese astrology and belief, the traits of these zodiac animals not only shape the personalities of people born under the respective sign but also their lives and the events of the year. Apart from the Snake, the other Chinese zodiac animals are the rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, horse, goat, monkey, rooster, dog and pig.

The intelligent, analytical and graceful Snake, sixth in the Zodiac Cycle, starts off yet another New Year on the Chinese zodiac calendar in 2013. Three graphic illustrations of this powerful Snake ushering in the new Lunar Year 2013 are shown in this set of stamps of 1st Local, 65c and $1.10 issued by Singapore.