The stamp has a thin dark inner border line just inside the perforations, framing all content. Below this inner border line, there is a flat white horizontal strip spanning the full bottom width of the stamp, sitting inside the perforated edge. In the bottom-left of this white strip: the movie title in large heavy bold grotesque sans-serif font (similar to Franklin Gothic), in solid black. In the bottom-right of this white strip: the most accurate and natural Japanese kanji translation of the title or central theme of the movie in large bold black text, with small text above it reading “NIPPON 郵便”, and two lines of tiny black text below it — the first line showing the most iconic or recognizable location from the movie in all caps, and the second line showing the country where the movie was produced followed by a · and the year the movie was released — all right-aligned.
Mimikyu made waves online when it was first introduced 10 years ago because, frankly, it has one of the saddest backstories of any Pokémon. It's actually a tiny ghost whose true form we never really see, hidden under a shoddy, low-effort Pikachu costume. The reason it wears the costume? To make friends, of course, given Pikachu's massive popularity and the presumed ugliness of Mimikyu's true self.
,详情可参考safew官方版本下载
High-frequency (64B × 20000)
Read the full story at The Verge.