Royal Mail is marking the centenary of Flying Scotsman with a set of special stamps - including some in Yorkshire locations. 

The stamps will be the final set to feature the late Queen’s silhouette, with Elizabeth II’s image appearing on the stamps.

The commemorative set features 12 stamps depicting the National Railway Museum’s famous steam locomotive in various locations across the UK, including crossing the Ribblehead Viaduct in the Yorkshire Dales National Park, and at Pickering Station on the North York Moors Railway.

A further miniature set of four stamps feature images of the Flying Scotsman and London North Eastern Railway poster artwork from the 1920s and ’30s, when it first began travelling on British rails.

David Gold, director of external affairs and policy at Royal Mail, said: “Flying Scotsman is a national treasure of engineering and design that conjures up the golden age of steam travel.”

He said the “remarkable locomotive epitomises the romance of rail travel and is loved” by people all over the world.

He added: “We are honoured to mark this landmark milestone with a set of special stamps.”

The Flying Scotsman stamp issue will be the last depicting the late Queen, whose silhouette has been featured on special stamps since 1966.

Stamp illustrator David Gentleman is responsible for the design, adapted from Mary Gillick’s original, which has been in constant use on British stamps since 1968.

Future special stamps will feature a silhouette of the King, the Royal Mail said.