A van of the postal department, painted with colourful artwork, drives down a road in the province of Ontario.—AFP
A van of the postal department, painted with colourful artwork, drives down a road in the province of Ontario.—AFP

OTTAWA: Andrew Lewis is bringing bright colours to Canadians to counter their pandemic gloom one parcel at a time — delivered by postal trucks wrapped in his psychedelic design.

In 28 cities across the country, a fleet of 37 delivery vehicles — splashed with a big yellow sun and an image of a traditional red, white and blue Canada Post truck riding a rainbow across a multicoloured landscape emblazoned with the words “Thanks / Merci” — have hit the road to bring smiles door to door.

“I thought, what’s fun and happy and is going to connect with people,” to ease the melancholy and despair felt by many over the past year.

“I understood that people had been going bananas isolated at home without their usual social connections,” Lewis said in an interview from his London, Ontario studio.

“From a design standpoint, to convince a corporation like Canada Post to do this with one of their vehicles — remember this is their brand ambassador — is a triumph,” he said.

“No postal service in the world has done this in terms of this degree of playfulness and such a screwy idea.” The final design was submitted last September and trucks started rolling out in December. But Lewis himself first spotted one on a local street only last week. It was “bright and really different,” he said.

Postal carriers from across Canada have been snapping photographs of the delivery trucks and sharing them on social media.

Lewis’s own letter carrier, he recounted, banged on his door one recent morning to say he had seen one and “thought it was fantastic.”

The idea was born out of a proposed stamp intended by the postal service “to express gratitude and appreciation” to its 64,000 workers for dealing with a massive surge in parcel volumes during the pandemic, according to a message from chief executive Doug Ettinger to staff.

Since March 2020, said Canada Post spokeswoman Nicole Lecompte, “the sudden increase in online shopping boosted the volumes going through our network to the levels we normally observe only during the (Christmas) holiday season.” More than one million parcels were delivered each day for 181 consecutive delivery days last year, compared to 67 days leading up to Christmas in 2019, for example.

“It’s not just the volumes that increased, but also the number of larger household items, like mini-fridges, patio furniture and barbecues coming through our network,” Lecompte added.

Canada Post reached out to Lewis — one of the world’s top poster artists — to design the stamp.

Published in Dawn, March 15th, 2021

Opinion

Editorial

Parliament’s place
Updated 17 Sep, 2024

Parliament’s place

Efforts to restore parliament’s sanctity must rise above all political differences and legislative activities must be open to scrutiny and debate.
Afghan policy flux
17 Sep, 2024

Afghan policy flux

AS the nation confronts a major militancy problem in the midst of poor ties with Kabul, there is a dire need to...
HIV/AIDS outbreak
17 Sep, 2024

HIV/AIDS outbreak

MULTIPLE factors — the government’s inability to put its people first, a rickety health infrastructure, and...
Political drama
Updated 16 Sep, 2024

Political drama

Govt must revisit its plans to bring constitutional amendments and ensure any proposed changes to judiciary are subjected to thorough debate.
Complete impunity
16 Sep, 2024

Complete impunity

ZERO per cent. That is the conviction rate in crimes against women and children in Sindh, according to data shared...
Melting glaciers
16 Sep, 2024

Melting glaciers

ACCELERATED glacial melt in the Indus river basin, as highlighted recently by the National Disaster Management...