Wilding series

The Wildings were a series of definitive postage stamps featuring the Dorothy Wilding photographic portrait of Queen Elizabeth II that were in use between 1952 and 1967 until they were replaced by the Machin series.

Contents

History

The stamps reproduced a portrait of Queen Elizabeth II taken during a photographic session on 26 February 1952 by Dorothy Wilding, who had been working at the Royal Court since 1937.[1] 75 designs were considered to frame the portrait and five basic designs by Edmund Dulac, Enid Marx, Mary Adshead, Michael Farrar-Bell and George Knipe were selected.[2] Four symbolic flowers of each country of the United Kingdom were also depicted, imitating one of the definitive stamp designs of King George VI's reign.

Dorothy Wilding's photograph depicts The Queen wearing a diamond diadem made for George IV in the 1820s which was designed to be worn outside a Cap of Maintenance. This diadem was also worn by Queen Victoria on stamps such as the Penny Black. The original photograph was re-touched to bring the diadem further forward on The Queen's head.[3]

The replacement of the Wildings was caused by stamp designers Michael Goaman and Faith Jacques. In a letter sent to the Post Office in April 1961, they expressed the difficulty of including the large Wilding portrait in their designs for commemorative stamps and the fact that the Queen was half turned to the viewer was also felt to be unsatisfactory. They proposed an image that would represent the monarchy more than the person of the queen.[4] In 1963, comparing the Wilding portrait with Jacques' proposed design, the Stamp Advisory Committee acknowledged the need for a replacement,[5] and in 1967 the stamps were replaced by the Machin head.

Innovations

In the domain of automatic mail sorting, the Wildings were also the only British stamps on which graphite lines were used between 1957 and 1960, and the first on which phosphor bands were printed from 1959.[6]

Commemoration

In 1998, a commemorative booklet was produced by the British Post Office containing new Wilding stamps in decimal currency, and in 2002 and 2003 miniature sheets were issued each containing stamps in the Wilding style.

References

  1. ^ "The Life of Dorothy Wilding", Stamp Magazine website, retrieved 21 November 2007. Archived here.
  2. ^ Royal Mail (2003). The Wilding Definitive Collection II. Royal Mail. 
  3. ^ The British Postal Museum & Archive. "The Dorothy Wilding portrait". http://postalheritage.org.uk/exhibitions/onlineexhibitions/elizabeth?slide=6. Retrieved 2009-07-24. 
  4. ^ Letter kept by The British Postal Museum & Archive (code POST 122/10703), quoted in Muir, Douglas (2007). A Timeless Classic, chapter 2, "A Portrait with problems", pages 15-17.
  5. ^ Muir, Douglas (2007). A Timeless Classic, pages 17-19.
  6. ^ "Great Britain" in Commonwealth & British Empire Stamps 1840-1970, Stanley Gibbons, 2008, page GB17-18.

External links