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Mexicana A320-231 (XA-RJY)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1213 are available. The aircraft was XA-RJY in 1992 but eventually became XA-MXW in 2009 and was that when Mexicana ceased operations in August, 2010. Grades: 1
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MVA – Mississippi Valley Airlines, Shorts SD3-30 (N335MV)
Four of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ476 are available. The aircraft was deregistered in 2005 when nobody returned the legal form. Grades: 1
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New York Air Connection, Beech 1900C (N1900C)
At the time, operated by Colgan, which eventually retired this type of aircraft. Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ596 are available. Grades: 1
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Northeastern International Airways, A300 (F-ODRE)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ576 are available. Northeastern was the third user of this aircraft: it began with Lufthansa in 1976 as D-AIAC, then Northeastern got it in 1984. After that, but not long after, it went to Indian Airlines where it became VT-ELW and was scrapped in 1986. The postcard calls this the plane’s “final livery” but we know that’s not the case. Grades: 1
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Northeastern International Airways, Boeing B-727-21 (N355QS)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1214 are available. Grades: 1
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Northwest Airlines, Airbus A320-211 (N306US)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1215 are available. The aircraft was stored in 2005 and scrapped in 2006. Grades: 1
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Northwest Territorial Cargo, L-188CF Electra (C-GNWC)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ672 are available. We don’t know what happened to this aircraft but the registration number is now with a Cessna 335. Grades: 1
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Piedmont Airlines, Martin 4-0-4 (N40433)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1217 are available. This airplane’s final home (of six, in total, including TWA) was with Knight Airlines, which scrapped it sometime on or after September, 1979. The registration number is now assigned to a balloon! Grades: 1
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RAI – Reseau Aerien Interinsulaire, DHC-6 Twin Otter (F-OCLV)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ478 are available. All we know about F-OCLV is that it was built in 1968, wound up with Air Polynesie, and eventually de-registered. Grades: 1
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Republic Airlines, Boeing B-757-2S7 (N606RC)
Republic got this aircraft in May 1986, and five changes later it may still be active, as N906AW, with American Airlines. Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1221 are available. Grades: 1
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Royal Nepal Airlines, Pilatus PC-6/B2-H2 Turbo Porter (9N-ABJ)
Rarely is a registration number so clear in a photo, and even more rarely our need to report a sad ending. On 19th November 1981 this aircraft crashed in Biratnagar, killing ten persons. Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ479 are available. Grades: 1
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Sierra Pacific Airlines, Boeing B-737-2T4 (N703S)
Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ1223 are available. Starting with Air Florida in 1981 as N51AF, this aircraft made its way through several changes in registration and might–as of this writing–still be in active use with Sierra Pacific of Tucson, AZ. Grades: 1
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U.S. Air Force, Boeing E-4A
It’s a “highly modified Boeing 747 … would serve as a Command Center for the President … in case of a National Emergency”. Two of these unused Mary Jayne cards MJ413 are available. Grades: 1
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Los Angeles, LAX “Jet Age” International Air terminal
Unused Western Publishing card L-111, showing the “Skyhigh Restaurant & Cocktail Lounge” on top and a Convair Jet 880 on the bottom. Grade: 1
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Hello (HB-JIA), MD-90-30
At one time, this aircraft with registration HB-JIA was with Hello. But it’s also been with Cyprus Turkish, THY Turkish, AMC, Blue Line, and now Delta (as N917DN). As for the postcard, mailed from Russia in 2014, with four different stamps and two large postmarks. Grade: 1
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Schöne Grüße aus München, Flughofen München (Germany)
Mailed in 2014, with stamp, trilingual Priority label, and postmark. Grade: 1
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LACSA (TI-LRA), Curtiss Comando C-46A
Unused private card. Grade: 1
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Bauru – SP – multiple views (Brazil)
Unused card with four views identified in the reverse caption: international airport, Igreja Tenrikyo de Dendotnyo, a shopping center, and Estadio Alfredo de Castilho (E.C. Noroeste). So you have several categories to choose from. Grade: 1
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Avioes (Maximum Cards) (set of four) (Azores)
Issued in 2014, an unused set of four cards. Grade: 1
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EVA AIR – Hello Kitty playing cards (not postcards)
Three unopened packs of playing cards (not postcards), demonstrating EVA AIR’s fascination with our second-favourite feline, Hello Kitty. Each of the three packs comes in a different colour, and all are still sealed as they came from the airline. Price is per single pack. Implied Grade: 1
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Japan Airlines, Boeing 777-300ER
We have a few of these unused cards. Grades: 1
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EVA AIR, B747-400
We have a few of these unused cards. Grades: 1
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China Airlines, Songshan-Fuzhou route
These might have been issued in detachable book form as they have perforated upper edges. Unused. Grades: 1 (ASK US TO VERIFY AVAILABILITY)
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China Airlines continues to provide e-service (Taiwan)
These were probably issued in detachable book form as it has a perforated left edge. Unused. Grade: 1 (ASK US TO VERIFY AVAILABILITY)
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China Airlines, 777-300ER Premium Business Class
These might have been issued in detachable book form as they have perforated upper edges. Unused, but each with smudging on the back, and/or mild creasing. Grades: 2
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China Airlines, NexGen VIP Lounge in TPE Terminal One
This might have been issued in detachable book form as it has a perforated upper edge. Unused. Grade: 1
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China Airlines, Love & Hug
The caption says: “China Airlines helps propel Taiwan’s cultural and creative talent onto the world stage.” This is clever, and a step way beyond other major airlines like United that have stopped issuing postcards altogether. We have a few of these unused cards available. Grades: 1
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China Airlines, “Love & Hug” liveried airplane (Taiwan)
Unused card. Grade: 1
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Japan Airlines, Fly into tomorrow (not a postcard)
This is not a postcard, but a folded greeting card. On the top of the scan is what you see if you unfold and open the card. At the bottom of the scan is what you see if you unfold the card and lay it down face up. We have two of these, in their original logo-ed envelopes, both unused. Grades: 1
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Trelew (Chubut), Vistas centricas de la ciudad y aeropuerto (Argentina)
Unmailed Grafica card 4347 (4″ x 7-1/8″) with the location and date (1990) inked on the back. Grade: 4
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Londrina – PR – multiple views (Brazil)
Apart from the airport and city view, the card shows a stadium. The printed caption says it is Estádio Vitorino Gonçalves Dias, but long ago someone crossed that out and changed the name to Estádio do Café. (They would know better than we do. No guarantees!) Unused card, highly aged, photo corner album marks, and a round green chop mark of what might be a football club logo. Grade: 4
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Square in Quito, Ecuador (Panagra)
Unused, aging “Sky Card” from Panagra, an acronym for Pan American-Grace Airways, a joint venture between Pan American World Airways and Grace Shipping Company. This airline went through several mergers and acquisitions, and covered much of South America, but only the card survives. Grade: 2
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First in Flight, #1 Tar Heels (North Carolina, USA)
Mailed in 2014 with stamp and Raleigh postmark. Grade: 1
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70 Years of the Convention on International Civil Aviation (PR China)
Pre-printed postage. What you see is what you get, as there’s nothing printed on the reverse. This is item JP 196. Grade: 1
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Airplane on skis (Russia)
Internet card mailed in 2013 with six stamps (one is large, and unaccountably of a Sunbeam Alpine car) and two large postmarks. Grade: 1
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Amsterdam Airport (Netherlands)
Otherwise known as Schiphol, on a card mailed in 2014 with stamp and partial Amsterdam postmark. Grade: 1
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We (heart) New York – Continental Airlines (Germany)
The U.S.-based airline is now gone, but the card lives on, printed in Germany and mailed from there in 2014 with three stamps, trilingual Priority label, and address label affixed. Grade: 4
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Airbus A319-112
Internet (photoFabrique) card mailed from Ukraine in 2013, with three stamps and postmark. Grade: 3
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Dallas Ft. Worth Regional Airport At Night
Unused card calling DFW “the nation’s largest airport,” and a trip to Google will leave you none the wiser. That might not be true now. Curteichcolor 7EK-188 (D.27). But who are we to know? Grade: 1
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São Paulo – SP – Guarulhos Airport and RaiaDrogasil (Brazil)
This card of Sao Paulo’s main international airport is apparently a collaboration as an ad card with the pharmaceutical company RaiaDrogasil. The message is pre-printed, and the card was mailed with stamp and two airport postmarks in 2014. The address is on an attached label. Grade: 4