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Replies: 26 / Views: 1,606 |
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Bedrock Of The Community
10479 Posts |
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Quote: Thus advice to collectors of all levels ... don't skimp on the literature. Regularly set aside a portion of your stamp budget for buying information. It will pay for itself quickly by identifying bargains to snap-up and pitfalls to avoid. Excellent advice. I might add that it is not even so much about identifying less common varieties but identifying the basic issues correctly in the first place. Kind of THE fundamental of stamp collecting. What do I have? |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
8920 Posts |
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The four for studying W/F are "The Expert's Book" and "How to Detect Damaged, Altered, and Repaired Stamps" both by Paul W. Schmid, Volume one of United States Postage Stamps of the 20th Century by Johl, and the Micarelli book mentioned above. |
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Edited by revcollector - 04/21/2023 10:40 pm |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1164 Posts |
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Rev, IMO, even better than the Schmid book, is Martin A. Armstrong's "Washington Franklins 1908-21".
Either will give the student what they need to know, however IMO, Armstrong's book is laid out so well, it almost reads like a novel. You can actually read this book, and it offers a couple of unanswered questions (6c coil that was printed, but has never been found). This book is also out of print, and very difficult to find.
Hope this helps, Ray
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
1690 Posts |
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One way to address this issue is to amend the forum rules to ask users to use "Id Service:" at the start of the topic subject line when they want a free ID and don't want to learn or hear about identification resources. Many of these threads go sideways because the OP just wants a free ID. Other users would be free to answer, or not, and read, or not, and there would be no guessing about the scope of the thread. |
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
8920 Posts |
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Bedrock Of The Community
10479 Posts |
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So, to the original question, what is it, we await watermark confirmation. |
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Valued Member
United States
6 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
116 Posts |
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This is good stuff. I to have had my problem in identifying Washington/ Frankland stamps. The small differences in types make you have to thing and investigate referring to reference books. I think it is the hardest set to make and complete of any US Stamps. |
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Pillar Of The Community

United States
1163 Posts |
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I've been a Washington/Franklin collector for around 25 years. It gets easier over time but you do need good reference sources and some good reference copies to really learn them. I agree with rogdcam, by appearance its most likely 482. |
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Valued Member
United States
449 Posts |
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Rogdcam, apologies as I just saw your post awaiting watermark confirmation. As I stated in an earlier response, it is unwatermarked. Thanks to you and Al E. Gator for identifying it as a 482. I appreciate both of you for taking the time to figure this out!
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Pillar Of The Community
5149 Posts |
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I agree with the conclusions of this thread. The pair was going to be either 409 or 482 depending on the watermark testing. On a tangent to identifying the other types, and as opposed to buying the literature, which some consider pricey, or is challenging to locate, here is a example lot currently on ebay, which would provide an ID'd set of the offset printings to use as a reference guide. And it's almost always better to use actual stamps for comparisons than the illustrations in the catalogs.  The link to the listing is: https://www.ebay.com/itm/225589289520 |
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Edited by John Becker - 06/01/2023 10:42 am |
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Replies: 26 / Views: 1,606 |
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