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An Post gets Spooky with Stamps for Hallow’een

21 October 2022

Free scary postcards for youngsters to decorate and post to family and friends this mid-term break 

An Post celebrates Hallow'een with two super spooky new stamps showing ‘Balor of the Evil Eye’, who according to legend, cast his eye across a Donegal glen, poisoning it and making trouble for the ‘Tuatha Dé Danann’, a supernatural race in Irish folklore. 

 

The ‘N’ (National) stamp shows Balor's evil eye staring out, weeping tears of toxic, neon-green venom, while the ‘W’ (World) stamp features the landscape of Donegal’s ‘Poisoned Glen’ which to this date retains the name from its infamous past. The glen is filled with a green poison, oozing and steaming.  

 

The striking stamp designs by renowned Irish visual artist Aideen Barry and graphic design by Oonagh Young are inspired by the idea of a ‘poisoned pen letter’ and are accompanied by a purple First Day Cover envelope showing a surreal screaming mouth beneath the stamps.   These are available from selected main post offices and anpost.com/shop (with free delivery), along with free postcards for children to decorate and post with a new spooky postage stamp to family and friends during the mid-term break. 

 

“We know that children love decorating postcards and they’ll have plenty of time over mid-term to work on their scariest drawings and post them off with these new spooky stamps to their friends and family in Ireland and abroad”, said An Post Irish Stamps manager, Aileen Mooney.  

 

Hallow’een, also known as Samhain in Ireland, has ancient Irish origins as a festival marking the end of the autumnal harvest season and the beginning of Winter. Myths and Legends, is the theme of this year’s EUROPA European Post Office stamp issue, in which all European postal companies produce their own interpretation of a common topic. Aideen Barry’s striking designs provide a fresh insight into a lesser known, ancient Irish myth.   

 

Aideen said: “This truly is the dream commission. An Post has a long track record of commissioning artists for our national stamps and I follow in the footsteps of my heroes like Francis Bacon, Evie Hone, Mainie Jellett and Patrick Scott. The stamps tell the story of Balor and Cró Nimhe as Contae Dhún na nGall. Rinne Balor ana dtriobloid sa contae seo. Is duine uafásach e sin. The supernatural being or Fomorian is supposed to have looked upon this beautiful land and poisoned it with his toxic stare. Though in actuality it is one of the most gorgeous spots in Europe and I highly recommend you visit it to see it for yourself!”  

 

An Post has previously issued mythology themed stamps in 1997 and 2012, featuring scenes from well-known stories including Diarmuid and Grainne, The Salmon of Knowledge, The Story of Setanta, Óisin and Niamh and The Children of Lír. 

 

Note to the editor: 

In true horror style, things do not end well for Balor, as his weapon was also his downfall. The myth tells us that when his grandson, Lugh, flung a spear into his eye, he began crying his toxic tears and drowned in a lake of his own poison.  Not a pretty end.  

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