Failụ si na nke mbu(2,132 × 1,248 pixel, ívù akwukwo orunótu: 5.29 MB, MIME nke: image/png)
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Mmẹkụwátá
NkówáStamp-US-1970-Woman-Suffrage.png
English: Commemoration of the 1970 anniversary of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; the amendment was ratified in 1920 and provided for women's suffrage. Stamp collectors likely often refer to the stamp as U.S. Scott 1406.
Ǹgụ́ụ̀bọ̀chị̀
Mkpọlọ́gwụ̀
United States Postal Service or the predecessor postal agency of the U.S. government of the time
The design includes the words "WOMAN SUFFRAGE", "50TH ANNIVERSARY", "1920-1970", "VOTES FOR WOMEN", and "RIGHT TO VOTE". The left image in the stamp appears to represent part of a demonstration in or before 1920; among the women is one man, in the car driver's position. The right image appears to represent a modern (ca. 1970) woman casting a vote at a lever-operated voting machine. The whole image was made from an actual mint stamp that I owned when I scanned it. An oblique line at the top left, across the "W", the line made from overlaying a thread, is for legal compliance for more flexibility with reproductions of a postage stamp. Scanning relied on Photoshop in Professional scanning mode on a Windows platform Apr. 27–28, 2011; settings included RGB rather than CMYK etc., 32 bits, 1200 pixel/inch, and 1200 dpi 24-bit; these data may seem self-contradictory but I think some was from Photoshop itself and the rest from the scanner driver. Subsequent file preparation was with Gimp 2.6.2 software on a Linux platform before uploading and did not include any modifications or repairs to the whole image; any image defects were left intact. Horizontality adjustment was not necessary and was not attempted due to a risk of lowering the resolution.
{{Information |Description ={{en|1=Commemoration of the 1970 anniversary of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution; the amendment was ratified in 1920 and provided for women's suffrage. Stamp collectors likely often refer to the stamp as U.S. Scot
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