That is the purpose of postage, to allow you to mail letters to anywhere in the world. The stamps of the country of origin of the mail are used for postage.
No, you have to use stamps from the country of origin of the mail. In this case you will have to use Italian postage stamps.
As long as you have the correct postage you can use 'regular stamps' to post to anywhere in the world. If I want to send a letter and it costs $2:40 then I know I need 4 stamps @60c value each , which is the domestic rate in NZ. Otherwise I go to the Post Office and buy a $2:40 stamp.
No. The stamps used must be those native to the country in which the items are posted.
It was 5 cents for the first half ounce of mail.
The person who received the mail.
No, you must use US postage stamps.
I don't seem to have enough change for postage.
Stuart Rose has written: 'Royal Mail stamps' -- subject(s): Postage stamp design, Postage stamps
The entire purpose of the Forever Stamps was that you can use them for one ounce of First Class Postage forever. No additional postage is necessary.
They are still valid for use as postage as long as they add up to the proper postage. If you check USPS regulations Postage due, special delivery and certified mail stamps are NOT valid as payment for postage.
Yes, that is what postage stamps are for, to mail letters from your post office all over the world. Being that the US Post Office is going to get the mail to Great Britain, the US Post Office should get paid. The Universal Postal Union provides for the compensation between countries.