Legendary Canadian jazz singer Eleanor Collins was honored by the Canada Post with her very own stamp, CTV News reports.

The unveiling of the stamp for the “Canadian First Lady of Jazz" took place in a virtual ceremony on Friday.

"How do I feel? I feel wonderful and honored," Collins said during the ceremony, according to CTV News. "To really have someone affirm your work and life on a postage stamp, that is something. There's only one word for that. That is surreal."

In addition to her own stamp, Collins, 102, collected another accolade for her accomplishments. She was given a star on British Columbia’s Entertainment Hall of Fame in Vancouver. The singer also received an Order of Canada, which acknowledges "people who make extraordinary contributions to the nation," according to the governor general of Canada.

"You know, at 102 years old, one doesn't expect to be remembered. But I am grateful," Collins said.

"But to really have someone affirm your work and life on a postage stamp? Oof, that is something," she told the Canada Post.

Collins was born in Edmonton, a city in Alberta, Canada. She started singing after she won a talent show at 15. She eventually settled into British Columbia in pursuit of her jazz interests during the late 1930s.

Collins went on to perform on television and radio while building a name for herself. She would eventually gain opportunities to take on the U.S., but opted to keep her career on Canadian soil.

She made history in 1995 when she became the first Black woman headliner for a North American TV show called The Eleanor Show.

When Collins, her husband and children moved to an all-white neighborhood in Burnaby, British Columbia, they were met with discrimination after a petition was written to keep the family from residing in the area.

Collins said her family has contributed to the wealth of years she’s lived on earth. She also said her level of gratitude for living in the present day has been a part of her path.

“It all has been a real blessing,” she said.