Geoffrey Michael Goaman (1921–2009) was a graphic designer and illustrator, who designed a number of British commemorative postage stamps starting with the 4d stamp in the set for the Coronation of Elizabeth II in 1953, and then many in the 1960s.
[1] Goaman was born on 14 February 1921 in East Grinstead, West Sussex, England.
[2][3][4] In retirement, Sylvia and Michael worked together to design a stained glass window, to commemorate the Millennium, for St Peter's Church, at Bramshaw.
[1] Along with Faith Jacques, Goaman was critical of the Wilding design of monarch's head used on British postage stamps in the 1950s.
[7] His own stamp designs include these for the United Kingdom's General Post Office: He also designed stamps, often working with Sylvia, for forty or more other countries and territories, including Nigeria, Saint Vincent Sierra Leone,[2] the British Antarctic Territory,[15] and Herm.