Design a 4:5 premium stamp collection poster for the city of Banyuwangi, where the entire composition is one monumental luxury stamp that fills the frame from edge to edge like a rare national artifact. The stamp should dominate the canvas with large, tactile perforated edges, elegantly engraved borders, and an immersive, object-focused composition.Style: Hand-drawn gouache illustration combined with the aesthetics of screen-printed posters, editorial travel art, and museum-quality print minimalism. The artwork should capture the true atmosphere of the city through its architecture, the rhythm of the skyline, the 2011 Grand Innova Grey as a means of transportation, the landscape, cultural motifs, climate, geometry, and neighborhood identity—interpreted in elegant graphic form rather than a clichéd tourist postcard.The composition should feel dynamic and asymmetrical. One dominant city element should appear diagonally through the stamp while secondary shapes flow around it to create depth and movement. Maintain deliberate negative space for a subtle, premium feel. Avoid clutter and overly detailed realism.Typography is a key part of the design. The city name should appear large and integrated directly into the stamp design like a lavish headline, interacting in part with the illustration through masking, overlap, or depth. The typographic style should adapt naturally to the city's personality—a subtle serif for a historic city, a sleek modern grotesk for a futuristic city, softer, flowing shapes for a coastal or tropical city, and expressive hand-drawn lettering for an artistic city.Keep all secondary typography minimal and authentic: the small denomination number, AIR MAIL/POST text, DenayuTrans text, year of issue, serial number, microscopic postmark, engraved information strip, and subtle cancellation details integrated into the border without cluttering the composition.The lighting should feel like a premium collectible print photograph: soft directional light that reveals the texture of the matte paper, embossed ink edges, subtle print pressure, subtle shadow depth around the perforations, and subtle ink density. No dramatic, cinematic lighting.The color palette should intelligently adapt to the city while remaining restrained, elegant, and atmospheric:• Coastal → Turquoise, coral, muted beige• Desert → Terracotta, saffron, pale pink• Neon metropolis → Cobalt, magenta, navy• Historic → Olive, parchment, burgundy• Tropical → Emerald, mango, navy• Snowy north → Ice blue, muted pine, silver grayThe final result should feel like an ultra-rare commemorative stamp sold in a luxury museum design store—sophisticated, tactile, immersive, collectible, and timeless.Negatives: Generic travel posters, floating landmarks, souvenir aesthetics, busy collages, over-the-top typography, faux vintage worn effects, stock vector icons, random gradients, low-detail illustrations, centered layouts, generic stamp mockups, noisy textures, excessive realism.