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Replies: 19 / Views: 4,459 |
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New Member
United States
3 Posts |
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Hello all. I'm fairly inexperienced with stamp identification. I have these National Parks imperf 756-765 stamps and they are very nice looking. Clear and beautiful colors. Since they are not gummed and not perforated, and they have no gutters or borders and are not pairs, is there a fairly simple way to tell whether or not they are authentic? If this has been covered before I apologize.
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Pillar Of The Community
1849 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
240 Posts |
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Hello and welcome, They have many sites that cover the stamps most likely to be faked, most of them being high dollar items. Since I'm not allowed to insert a link right now I would try putting "stamp fakes" in your browser and checking out the different sites they have covering this stuff. You have a very nice set of stamps there. The value is in the history of what they signify. Hope this helps. Maybe one of the senior members can insert a link for you. Cheers. Gary |
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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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kevin504 is right ... not likely to be faked .
You can find an imperf set gummed. As in 1935 collectors /consumers could return them to the P.O. for " gumming " . If you have an imperf "used set" with a cancel before march 25 1935 if memory serves ... (i.e. January 12, 1934 )the cancel is a fake or the perforations were removed. Scott specialized US catalog has more details on these sets and their idiosyncrasy.
Keep viewing the forum as I will post some pics of a specialty collection of the 1934-35 parks issues . I assembled this collection 20 years ago and have different examples of these issues in different varieties ( pairs, arrow blocks , plate singles, FDC w/ different cancels and cachets , etc.
Best John
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| Edited by petrucellij - 10/29/2013 8:30 pm |
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New Member
United States
3 Posts |
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I realize there wouldn't be must use in faking them. It just seemed to me that they would be easier than most to fake. I was just curious if there was some naked eye kind of "test" to know for sure. These stamps are interesting to me just in the way that they look. |
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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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If you have a genuine set of 740-9 lightly used you can compare them . Compare ink , paper and size of the vignette.
john |
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New Member
United States
3 Posts |
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That, of course, makes sense petrucellij :). I do not have those currently but soon will. I would assume similar paper was used for both sets. |
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Pillar Of The Community
1545 Posts |
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My guess is they are trimmed Farley reprints from what your describing. Farley reprints weren't gummed. Hope I understood you correctly.
Welcome!
-IBFS |
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All science is either Physics or Stamp Collecting. -- Ernest Rutherford |
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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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I break for stamps : In the Scott specialized catalog there is a foot note that a collector who purchased the 1935 imperf print at that time in 1935 may send their purchased sheet back to the post office to be gummed . There are copies of these imperf stamps which have gum .
rittermitfahrer: wants a way to determine if he has a forged set . The commonality of these sets makes it highly unlikely there any would be forged sets around .
These 1934 -35 Parks set sets contain many collectible varieties one of which is gummed examples of the 1935 imperf set.
Best John
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Rest in Peace
United States
7097 Posts |
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Are these what your talking about? These are just the ones I had handy in my Vario sheets. I'll scan the ones in my album later on. Happy Halloween!








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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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Rest in Peace
United States
7097 Posts |
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I would highly advise you NOT to pay 199.00 bucks for those. You see you could buy a set of these and send them out to be gummed. I think it's noted in Scott's. |
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Bedrock Of The Community
United States
10586 Posts |
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They cannot be sent out to be gummed today, only for a limited time back then, and only in full sheets. Gummed imperfs are a collectable variety listed in Scott with a decent premium. The fact that full sheets of imperfs could be sent out to be gummed is part of what makes expertizing the real errors (the imperf between pairs of various values) so difficult to do at times. |
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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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I_Love_Stamps : Thanks for the advise ... The ebay listing was for illustration purposes .... That set gummed catalogs for $100.00 and I would not purchase them with out PSE or APS certification . https://goscf.com/t/34834 |
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| Edited by petrucellij - 11/01/2013 4:16 pm |
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Valued Member
213 Posts |
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Quote: The fact that full sheets of imperf could be sent out to be gummed is part of what makes expertizing the real errors (the imperf between pairs of various values) so difficult to do at times. Yes , What you are saying is it is very hard to determine gum applied by the printer (Post office ) and that applied by a collector to an imperf stamp or sheet . On a perforated gummed stamp or sheet (gummed or re gumming) "build up" will show up on the teeth or holes of the perforations. This is due to the fact that the application of gum occurs prior to the perforation process . Good discussion revcollector ! |
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Bedrock Of The Community
United States
10586 Posts |
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It's not the gum that is the problem with the imperf between issues. There are more than enough genuinely gummed imperfs out there as source material. The problem is that imperf pairs have been reperforated, and sometimes it was a very good job, and real skill is needed to tell when this is the case. |
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Replies: 19 / Views: 4,459 |
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