TD,
I'm wondering if a narrow green and shorty par-3 qualifies #12 at Augusta as a Postage Stamp.
But it seems the angle of the putting surface orientation to the tee has quite a bit to do with the challenge.
After coming in 2 under par in a qualifier and making having to roll in a snake for a tidy quintuple bogey, #13 at SB now gets played as a par 3.5. In other words, I aim for the front left because I carry scar tissue - and the pin is always back right for some reason.
I'll take a 3-jack bogey over another Mr. Creosotic embarrassment - while my playing partners tap their foot and the group ahead is already halfway to the green on #14. Give it whatever cutesy-patootsie name you want, I'm terrified of it - especially in the wind.
Thinking about it, #12 at Augusta seem perpendicular if anything.
I find it amusing that Jack wanted the putting surface tilted slightly away at Sebonack. One of my major gripes with Nicklaus courses (having played 28 of them) is what seems a repetitious string of elevated green complexes, surrounded by death bunkers, offering on a narrow ribbon of cement as the target.
Which might be why the Postage Stamp has not become a "template."
Except, maybe it has . . . . . and we are just not grokking how many of them are out there.
P.S. Standing on the Postage Stamp at Troon last time, I was thinking of being an Armenian Gene Sarazen, but it was not to be. However, I beat Rory's train wreck by one. Cold comfort in a 40 knot wind.