Thursday, September 25, 2014

some more faroes

















I've been working with Faroe Islands stamps again today. Like most Scandinavian stamps they are very well designed and appropriate. Most of my stock of Faroes is used but I do have some mint as well.

Wednesday, September 24, 2014

faroe islands













A very popular collecting area is the Faroe Islands, which lie to the north of the Shetlands. They are Danish islands but have a large amount of self rule and their own language.

Stamps are well designed and all are appropriate to the islands, with just a few issues each year. They are also surprisingly cheap in used condition considering how few people live on the islands!

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

the british seaside



With the latest issue from the PO showing various British seaside scenes this stamp harks back to 2008 when another series was produced.

This is the die-cut version from the booklet issued on 13.5.2008. Although only catalogued at 80p this is the first I've ever found!

I'm currently listing mainly modern GB commemoratives which are getting harder and harder to find. They sell amazingly fast with about half of them selling on the same day they are listed! We are now offering postage/packing and insurance at just 50p anywhere worldwide!

If you haven't visited the website lately why not take a look? A LOT of new material has been added  recently ranging from GB through Commonwealth to modern Europe.

Thursday, June 19, 2014

Pitcairn Facebook group



Another Stamp Thing Facebook group has just been launched, for the Pitcairn Islands. If you have an interest in this collecting area please join and add pictures, stories etc.

Austria new issue 14.6.2014

20th anniversary of the referendum that resulted in the accession of Austria to EU

Facebook Stamp Thing - Austria

20th anniversary of the referendum that resulted in the accession of Austria to EU

14.06.2014

On 06.12.1994 the Austrian people was asked to join the European Union and 66.6% voted “Yes”. On 1.1.1995 was admitted to the EU. Austrian Post is dedicated in cooperation with the Economic Chamber Austria this event a special anniversary brand.

For a long time Austria’s accession to the European Community, especially from neutrality legal reasons, had been unthinkable. Today, there is wide consensus on the benefits that are associated with the membership: From the free movement of people, a free educational mobility as well as various grants and research projects benefiting countless people in Austria. Not only an unrestricted access to the EU single market, a common currency, but also the EU’s eastward expansion a boost and internationalization of the domestic economy was a result of the accession.

For the design of the special stamp Austrian Post and Austria Chamber of Commerce held a competition in which all pupils of the country could participate. The design of Moritz Dittrich, Raphael Strasser and Jacob Chisté Class 3c of Brigittenauer Gymnasium in Vienna was able to convince the jury and won the first place.

Alderney new issue 18.6.2014

Alderney celebrates 25 years of issuing stamps

Alderney celebrates 25 years of issuing stamps

18.06.2014

The third-largest of the Channel Islands, this year Alderney celebrates 25 years of issuing stamps. As it might be expected, the first set of definitives – 17 of them – gave the world a pictorial look at the island, courtesy of the designer, Gordon Drummond. The illustrations ranged from a map to some beaches and from a lighthouse to a lifeboat.

Since that first issue, the stamps have continued to reflect the character of the island, with subjects including its military history (regiments that were garrisoned there and the forts which they manned), ships (both naval and civilian) and wildlife (mainly birds, but also marine life).

This year a set of commemoratives based on the first definitives was issued, with the designer revisiting the sites chosen by the original artist, but capturing the images on camera.

In addition to these, a £5 definitive and £5 silver stamp replica, a wafer-thin piece of solid silver– a first for Guernsey Post and the British Isles were produced. Bold and clear-cut, the design of both the paper stamp and the silver stamp replica features nothing but the lion rampant from the island’s flag (along with the standard features: value, Queen’s head and the island’s name, of course).

The lion has been redrawn by the designer, Andy Fothergill, who has brought a contemporary touch to it without straying too far from tradition. This is a handsome beast, a crown on its head and holding a sprig of broom.

The lion is a popular inclusion in coats of arms, national flags etc, and the reason for that is simply its reputation as the king of the jungle, the mightiest of all creatures and therefore a symbol of strength and power with which people generally want to be associated.
In addition to being a common plant in Alderney, broom has great significance in British heraldry. Its medieval name is plantagenista, which is the origin of Plantagenet, the family name given to descendants of Geoffrey of Anjou (father of Henry II of England), who is said to have worn a sprig of broom in his hat when going into battle, so that his troops could see where he was. The plant was also adopted as the badge of Brittany.

Spain new issue 18.6.2014

General Bodies of State Administration are to be honored with a new Spanish stamp

General Bodies of State Administration are to be honored with a new Spanish stamp

18.06.2014

Under the generic title General Bodies of State Administration, two stamps are being issued, dedicated respectively to the Body of Civil and Port Engineers and the Body of Agricultural Engineers.

In the reign of Isabel II, when Manuel Alonso Martínez was Minister of Public Works, the Body of Agricultural Engineers came into being following the royal decree of 1855, which established the Central School for Agriculture on the La Flamenca estate, belonging to the Royal Estate of Aranjuez (Madrid). A royal decree in 1876 introduced a new admissions system and the institution was renamed the College of Agricultural Engineering, at the same time as the School of Agricultural Technicians was created.

Over the years, different fields of study and agricultural training specialities have been established, and research is now considered to be one of the activities at the School of Agricultural Engineering.

Tuesday, June 10, 2014

St Vincent





Postage stamps and postal history of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1938 stamps of St. Vincent.

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, a British colony in the Windward Islands has produced stamps since 8 May 1861. The stamps featured either the British monarchs head on them or ER and crown until around 1970. Note that the stamps were printed with just St. Vincent until 1992 when it became St. Vincent and the Grenadines.

Since around 1988, the country has been a client of the Inter-Governmental Philatelic Corporation


Early Issues (1861-1912)

The islands first began to issue stamps in 1861 and featured Queen Victoria. They were followed by the stamps of King Edward VII by 1902, which featured his portrait, then those of King George V in 1912.

King George V, King George VI and early Elizabethan issues (1912-1970)

The King George V of 1912 had just only featured his portrait, later ones featured his portrait with island scenes.

They were followed by stamps of his silver jubilee in 1935.

Coronation issues of King George VI followed in 1937, along with the new King George VI stamps, the following year (pictured above).

This was followed by the Victory Stamps of 1946, featuring the king's portrait, along with the Tower of Westminster; as well as the Royal Silver Wedding of 1948.

By 1953 stamps of the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II were introduced, along with stamps showing her portrait and island scenes.

1970-1988

By around 1970 the portraits and the royal ciphers of the Queen were removed. A number of issues had increased since the 1960s and 1970s, showing both local (such as Carnival events) and International events (such as the American Independence Bicentennial of 1976).

Stamps featuring the American Independence Bicentennial in 1976 and the Silver Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II in 1977 featured portraits of the past presidents and monarchs of UK and USA.

By 1983 the stamps began to show a series of automobile and locomotive stamps, which continued until 1986. As well as showing footballers on the 1986 stamps honouring the 1986 World Cup, as well as cricketers on the 1988 stamps.

IGPC years (1988-present)

Around 1988 the country became a client of the Inter-Governmental Philatelic Corporation, which the island began to issue stamps of baseball players from 1988 until the mid-1990s, such as Babe Ruth on the 1988 issue. It was followed by Disney Christmas stamps of 1988, featuring Mickey Mouse and his friends on Christmas Trains.

By the early-1990s an excessive number of issues arose. In 1994 it began issuing stamps on Japanese football players and teams (such as JEF United) as well as the 1994 World Cup in the USA.

In 1996 it became one of the first countries to issue stamps featuring Star Wars. The following year it began to issue stamps on Star Trek: Voyager

By 2001-2 it issued stamps featuring Pokémon. As well it was also the first country to issue stamps on Elvis Presley since 1987, which in recent it has dominated its recent issues. Even characters from Popeye and Betty Boop.



Thursday, June 05, 2014

Today from GB



Sustainable Fish Stamp Set

Issue Date: 5 June 2013
Catalogue code: AS07A
Beautifully painted by David Miller, the Mint Stamps feature ten sustainable fish species: Herring, Red Gurnard, Dab, Pouting and Cornish Sardine; and five threatened species: Common Skate, Spiny Dogfish, Wolffish, Sturgeon and Conger Eel. The stamps also feature the name and status of each species. 

Sustainable species 
Pouting This small, fast-growing relative of the cod likes to lurk on seaweedswathed reefs and around shipwrecks, and it is sometimes accidentally caught in bottom trawls targeting larger fish. Chefs say the pouting’s firm flesh should be enjoyed when very fresh.

Herring The life cycle of the herring once influenced how we lived. Shoals would appear in spring off the coast of Scotland and swim south; the fishermen then followed the herring and their nomadic wives and children followed the fleet, processing the catch onshore. Herring are rich in omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil), proven in clinical studies to be beneficial to health.

Dab Rapid growth and early mating habits protect dabs against overfishing. Though flavoursome, these delicate flatfish were under-appreciated in the past, but today you will find them more and more on the supermarket fish counters and on restaurant menus.

Cornish sardine An ancient favourite – the Cornish sardine has been fished off the south west of England for a thousand years, and annual catches once topped 10,000 tonnes. Fewer were caught by the beginning of last century as tastes changed, but happily they are now back in fashion as a health food.

Red gurnard The wily gurnard crawls on finger-like fins across the sea floor, stealthily taking prey such as unwary crabs, fish and worms. It has also done well in today’s tough seas, its communities expanding north as waters warm up and flourishing where larger fish have suffered from overfishing. 

Threatened species
Common skate Unfortunately the skate no longer lives up to its name – it is now very uncommon indeed in the seas around Britain. Once you would have found it everywhere, and it was caught in its thousands. But this huge fish is also a sensitive one, ill-suited to mass exploitation. Today it hides in terrain too rough for bottom trawling.

Wolffish Consumers have been misled by false claims that the fearsome-looking wolffish is a sustainable alternative to cod. In fact it is now much rarer than cod, after the extension of bottom trawling fishing methods across British seabeds caused a surge in wolffish catches. 

Conger eel Habitually haunting shipwrecks, conger eels used to be far more abundant and widespread, growing to three metres and weighing in at a robust 150kg thanks to their copious diet of shellfish and fish. But modern commercial fishing has slashed their numbers. 

Sturgeon Hunted for thousands of years, the prehistoric-looking sturgeon with its bony scales was an awesome sight, five metres long and often weighing half a tonne. It would seasonally travel from ocean to rivers, but has been a rarity since the Middle Ages when rivers were dammed to power mills, blocking the sturgeon’s route to spawning grounds. 

Spiny dogfish A small shark that grows over a metre long, the dogfish made for a popular meal in the early 20th century – grilled dogfish fillets and chips. The population has plunged due to overfishing, which has prompted sea anglers to campaign for the dogfish’s protection.

Special Stamps Technical Specifications 
Design Kate Stephens 
Stamp format /size Landscape 37mm x 35mm 
Printer International Security Printers 
Print process Lithography 
Perforation 14.5 x 14.5 
Phosphor All over 
Gum PVA 
Number per sheet 25/50

Friday, April 04, 2014

concentration camp post

The Litzmannstadt Ghetto stamps


Few stamp designs give us so much history.

Under German occupation the Polish city of Lodz was renamed "Litzmannstadt" and very quickly the Jewish population of around 250,000 came under pressure as the Ghetto, located in the poorest part of city was closed and all personal interaction with the outside world was forbidden.

The Germans chose Chaim Mordechai Rumkowski as head of the Jewish Council, granting him apparent autonomy. Rumkowski established post offices and ran a contest for stamps to be used for correspondence within the Ghetto. It is likely he saw the opportunity to raise precious funds from collectors, perhaps even those amongst the occupying forces.

Chaim Mordechai Rumkowski (February 27, 1877 - August 28, 1944) was himself a Polish Jew and believed that by organizing the ghetto as an industrial site he might ensure Jewish survival. The winning stamp design tells much of the ghettos tragic tale. The head is that of Rumkowski himself and the industrial imagery spoke largely to the German overlords who would, it must have been hoped, value the ghettos industriousness.

Before the Nazi German invasion of Poland, Rumkowski was director of an orphanage. On October 13, 1939, the Nazi occupation authorities appointed him the Judenälteste ("Elder of the Jews”). In this position he reported directly to the Nazi ghetto administration headed by Hans Biebow, a ruthless administrator concerned with the ghetto's productivity and his own personal gain. Directly responsible for staring the ghetto's population and he assisted the Gestapo in rounding up Jews.

In 1944, following Russian advances, the Germans proceeded to liquidate the ghetto and Biebow arranged for large burial pits to be dug for the few hundred remaining Jews. In August, Rumkowski and his family voluntarily joined the last transport to Auschwitz and were murdered there the same month. Many had come to see Rumkowski as chief collaborator and it has been suggested that fellow inmates murdered him. History may judge him in a slightly better light, the Lodz ghetto survived two years longer than the Warsaw ghetto and a few thousand inhabitants ultimately survived.

The first Ghetto stamps were issued on March 9, 1944. Soon after the Germans decided the stamps wouldn't be permitted, and only a few were sold and very little mail bearing them survived. The real tragedy isn’t philatelic of course. As Jews were shipped in to the ghetto the population swelled to over 200,000 - but by the time the Russians liberated the area only 877 remained alive.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

tomorrow's rarities?




 
It's amazing just how difficult it is to source fine used GB these days. Even common definitives are hard to find, but the commemoratives are even harder.
 
There are several reasons for this. The first is simply that many POs don't even stock commemoratives, and many others claim to be too busy to sell them. I once needed some in a hurry and used a different PO than usual. They explained that they did have some commemoratives, but that it would take their safe at least a half hour before it would open! It is ridiculous that stamps designed to publicise and promote the UK are hidden away in dark corners and most returned to be destroyed. In the sixties there would be queues outside post offices every time a new commemorative set came out BECAUSE PEOPLE WANTED TO USE THEM!! Whenever I leave parcels at my village PO other customers love the stamps I use for the postage and wonder where they can get them from! There is not even a poster publicising new issues! The modern PO does not have a clue about marketing - they would rather sell everything via the Philatelic Bureau because the accounting is easier!! Yet they have thousands of outlets throughout the country with many customers who would lap up the stamps if only the knew about them and were easily available. This is almost free money for the PO, and would be a great boost to stamp collecting.
 
The second reason is that even where commemoratives are available in many cases they receive a stupid killer postmark or, worse, no postmark at all. And how many POs still have nice hand cancellers and how many PO staff have the pride  in their job to actually apply neat postmarks? I am very lucky that my local PO at Pensford love my business and always try to postmark my boxes and letters well. It may well be that the Pensford postmark will be one of the few genuine ones that collectors will find on the small amount of fine used material on the market. 
 
The third reason of course is that whatever does go through the post needs to survive intact! I protect my packages with plastic over the stamps but a lot of dealers these days don't bother, some even use couriers or scrap recycled stamps.
 
Some of the very rarest issues of all will be the prestige booklet panes (almost miniature sheets in themselves). Prestige booklets sell at a premium but are listed by Gibbons as the earlier ones didn't. They are of course mainly collected in mint condition. Ask yourself just how many actually see real use! I do use them occasionally on the larger kiloware lots and sometimes I'm lucky enough to get to buy them back! Needless to say when I do get them they sell very quickly - the one above with the 3 Festival of Stamps 1st and 3 £1 values sold within a minute or so when I listed it this morning! But how many are out there, with genuine postmarks used to send a real package? Ten thousand? A thousand? A hundred? Ten??

Friday, September 13, 2013

kiloware

 
 
 
Kiloware - you either love it or hate it! I've always dealt in kiloware, it's a nice entry level product that gives people a great deal of fun and, occasionally, a real find!
 
I sell kiloware from all over the world but 95% of what I sell is GB, the market for this has gone through the roof in recent years, just as many charities gave up collecting it! Result - price has risen from around £5 to £50 a kilogram, and I could sell ten times what I do if only I could find the stock!
 
My secret is to leave it exactly as I find it. I'm never tempted to dip in and pick out the 'best' stuff. For this reason my customers tend to quite happily pay upfront for lots they won't even get for 5 or 6 months!
 
I also sell country lots, mainly in 100 gram bags. But I also have a wonderful world mix that is always surprising with loads of high values, airmails and older material. If you're a general collector, or want to start trading, there's nothing better! I usually have reasonable supplies of this and there's no need to order up front! 

My rules - ALL kiloware is always untouched with nothing taken out (or added!) by me. I always use good stamps for the postage which receive CDS postmarks from my local PO. 1 kg lots are also protected with plastic, so 9 times out of 10 you'll have lovely scarce genuinely postally fine used GB to sell on ...

Thursday, September 12, 2013

Japan








 
 
One of my favourite countries for collecting (but not listing!) is Japan. The stamps are very well designed and fairly inexpensive. They also give us a window into a very different culture.
 
 
But listing them is a nightmare! Few are dated or have English text that gives a clue! It often takes a fair bit of searching to find them before listing them on the website. An additional complication are the prefectural issues, similar to the UK's regionals, which aren't obviously any different than the normal Japanese stamps but are listed separately.
 
But I'll keep going - I have a couple of hundred more to list which will probably take a week or more to do. Always worth a look if you collect, are considering collecting - or simply if you want to look at stamp design at its best!
 

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

approvals

 
 

Do you remember approvals? I think most of us that grew up in the 50s and 60s either received them or were at least aware of them. You'd send off for a free gift, usually a packet of mixed colourful stamps, and you'd be hooked. Every 2 or 4 weeks you'd get a couple of approval books full of sets of stamps at 1 or 2 shillings a set, you got discounts and other teasers. At their peak there must  have been 100,000 books going out every week! Quite a business and really an excellent way of getting people into stamps.

I got thinking about approvals because there was a letter in this month's Stamp and Coin Mart about them.

First of all I was surprised they still existed! The market has changed completely and surely nowadays almost every collector buys from the Internet, auctions or stamp fairs? The closest thing I thought to approvals that were still going were the circulating club books. But it does appear that there are still a few dealers that find it worthwhile to keep going in this much diminished market.

I do think approvals are an excellent idea because it gives collectors the chance to get up close and personal to the stamps they are actually buying. But the economics is all wrong - the cost of secure postage both ways is, realistically, around £5. Okay, a dealer could use good GB commems on the return package and perhaps recoup some of the costs, but there are no guarantees. But realistically it means any sale under about £20 is a loss maker.

The letter in the magazine was from a collector who had been receiving approvals but had them stopped because his average purchase was £9. You can understand why, but it's a shame. High postage costs will almost certainly be the death of approvals.

My own website has a minimum purchase of £5, but this is not usually an economic level when you consider the time to make up a small order etc. But I feel collectors should be able to access stamps as easily as possible, and if they stay with me for years (most do!) then it's worth it.

I bought from my last approval selection in about 1970, I sent out my last selection in around 1995.

Sunday, December 09, 2012

vanuatu

 
Recently listed - Vanuatu, Fiji, Tuvalu etc.

Thursday, December 06, 2012

vanuatu


Currently listing Vanuatu on the website!

Sunday, July 22, 2012

website looking better


(100 Uruguay packet listed today)

If you haven't visited the website lately you'll be in for quite a surprise as it's had a total redesign, there is also a much wider variety of material on offer, including almost 16,000 individual stamps and sets, 4,000+ packets and an expanding range of kiloware.

Sunday, June 03, 2012

Sunday, March 25, 2012

recipe for disaster


I didn't have any parcels to post this weekend so I popped into our local post office to get some commemoratives to stamp next week's lots.

'Sorry, we don't have any. We always send them straight back.'

Unbelievable. One of the best ways for the PO to make money is to sell stamps to collectors - it's almost all pure profit. And one sale leads to many others. This is business suicide. Okay the main business of the PO is to deliver items, but the collectors side is a nice little extra earner.

By doing this one aspect of the PO is sabotaging the other.

On a similar theme a year or so ago I phoned re setting up a Key Account with the philatelic bureau, which gets you a 5% discount when you spend over £5000 pa. When I explained I wanted to use the stamps for postage they said 'we didn't hear that'. Ridiculous!

The PO needs a panel of professional philatelist that can be consulted on all philatelic matters, because at the moment they look like they are working blindfolded.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

couldn't resist


Couldn't resist putting this on. From the same source as the Belgian gems below these magnificent and rare items are on eBay with a starting price of a mere £4.99!!!!! The blurred photo (these idiots all have yet to discover either scanning or modern digital cameras) reveals enough detail to show that these are a) dead common and b) stained with poor perfs.

The seller says he's neither a collector or dealer. That much is obvious! No bids of course!

gems!


I never fail to be amazed by some of the absolute rubbish people try to sell on Ebay. Why do they bother? Nobody is ever going to buy these two monstrosities, hiseously damaged and stained if you can make them out through the blurred photo (rather than scan).

What are they thinking?

99p start on these by the way. No bidders as yet and less than an hour to go. It amazes me that people have the time to waste! Or do they think we were all born yesterday?

Thursday, December 22, 2011

oh dear!



I'm a stamp dealer. I make my living selling stamps. I assume other dealers do the same!

But take a look at this. It's a stamp auction catalogue but the firm sending it has so little respect both for their business and mine that they can't even be bothered to use stamps! Just a preprinted frank on the envelope. Okay, they may save a few pence, but I would have stamped this with an array of nice commemoratives or scarcer booklet stamps etc that would have been nicely postmarked and would have sold for more than the face value.

Consequently I won't even be opening this package - it'll be going straight in the bin.

This is not the way to do business when times are good let alone when they are bad!
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