The problem some people are having is that I went and did a bunch of pages, people printed them (which costs money. ink and paper aren't cheap) and then I went and redesigned them all.
Collecting stamps that use a non-Latin alphabet is a challenge for people in Europe and the Americas. I include pictures of every page because You are never going to patch up a title with a stamp unless you can read Cyrillic.
I have always felt that catalog number on pages are important. Since I am a natural born American, my first choice is to use Scott numbers. Scott turned me down. They wouldn't let me use them for free, and they wouldn't let license them for a fee.
Michel was choice #2 for 2 reasons:
1. Russian and Soviet stamp collectors use MICHEL
2. The website of the Ukrainian Post Office used MICHEL numbers before they came up with their own numbering scheme.
I emailed MICHEL, the mailed me a license. I signed it and sent it back and the rest is history.
Though others may disagree with me, I believe in using the numbering system most prevalent for a country. For US, I use Scott. For Ireland I use Stanley Gibbons, and for Ukraine I use MICHEL.
I've had a lot of Irish collectors tell me I should be using Hibernian. And I challenge them to find me a single
ebay or bidStart listing with a Hibernian number.
I put up a zip file with what I call the "Scribus source." My pages are all designed in an open source desktop publishing app called Scribus that anyone can download for free and install. All the fonts are freely available. If you don't like something on the page, you can go edit it and save it out as a PDF.
That being said, I've been at this for a while. Editing pages can be seriously time consuming. I have a full time job, and a 12 and 14 year old I need to drive to Boy Scout meetings, school activities etc. I can't tell you how many times I thought I was done and going to go to bed and suddenly start screaming 4 letter obscenities in my head cause I forgot to make A4 size pages. When its' 11:30 at night and you just want to go to bed, adding another 15 minutes of work is really annoying.
The only reason Ukraine is technically done is because all I need to do it deal with 1918-1922 and 1992-present.
I can totally understand why someone wants to just download and print. It's far less work.
As for descriptions.....
It boggles my mind that the more expensive and album is, the less likely it is to have descriptions. Stamps are a glimpse into another countries history and culture. I want to learn about the countries I collect, and having stamp descriptions is the best way to do that.
Thank you everyone for your kind words. I do the best I can with the time that I have. It's been insane with back to school and getting into the new routine, so I haven't done much with stamps since the summer.
My wife is out at Coach Bag Bingo. My 14 year old is at a Force of Will tournament (card game like Magic The Gathering), my 12 year old is on the Xbox.
You'd think I'd be doing something stampy, but instead I'm chatting with you guys while I listen to Volbeat and Neil Diamond on headphones.
Sometimes it's good to sit there and do nothing...