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I think there was some discussion of "classic" a while ago. The term, which used to be used to refer to the first thirty years or so of stamp issues, now encompasses an awful lot for some people. Up to 1900 seems OK to me, but extending it to WWII is really buying into the "Classic" catalogue approach of publishers, which prinicpally reflects the fact that relatively few punters would buy a catalogue from the genuine classic period.
i'm with you on this Goeffha, the turn of the century is a good mark. the first 100years of stamp production is not classic, it's just a milestone in my book and in many countries (including most scandinavian) we're well into the mentioned, mass production.
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I am confused. We already have two classic sections, one for US and one for world. If we added a topical 'classic' section how would people decide which 'classic' section' to post in?
Don
51Studebaker, you misunderstood. i'm just saying there's too much modern material being posted in the classic section, these go well beyond 1940's - which in my book is already pushing the term classic too much.
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I think the title of this section of the forum says everything. If you only take things to 1900, say, you miss out "classics" like the GB Seahorses, all of the Soviet Union stamps, all the independent Baltic States, all KGVI, etc. Some of these take us beyond the 1940 arbitrary cut-off, but may be classics nonetheless.
using your definition (same as dictionary) classic is concerning price and quality. but you often see modern stamps getting higher prices than "classic" stamps, but that does not make them classic?
the seahorse, I know is pricy depending where they were printed, but that does not make it classic, the first 2-3-4 emissions of a country is what kickstarted their stamp area, a seahorse is just a new design at some point, popular - yes, classic - no?
denmark has that popular postbuilding in 1912-1915, never heard it being called classic.
germany have some pricy mini sheets during the hitler era, china has some well into the 50's 60's? but I wouldn't class those classic?
i agree, it's really as individual as color and how you interpret those - but still worth a debate from time to time I think.
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The two sections are fine ,just the way they are . The classic period is 1847 until 1940 . The golden age would be 1941 to 1970 . Very very few worldwide collectors purchase stuff after 1970's .If it comes in with earlier stuff then fine collect it
Floortrader, how do you know the classic period is 1847(1840)-1940? I know the section is so named - but where is it so clearly defined? I haven't been able to find a clear definition anywhere, I even tried different collectives from coins to cars (no help there)
i also never heard of "the golden age" what is that?
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but 1970 and after it is 2 cent mixture stuff to me
Floortrader, I feel most after 1900 is just 2 cent with a few exceptions of course. but that wasn't the point, I never referred to value or rarity at any point.. classic and mass production can't go hand in hand in my world.
ideally a stamp is made to match the needs of postal rates, local, cross country, registered, money transfer and what not. as long as these rates are the same, no new stamp is needed - right?
in every country around the world, you'll see, at some point, many different stamps with the same value even though the postal rates are the same.
at that exact point I think you've left the classic era and went to "the golden age" at least for the postal service. :)
exciting to hear how everyone feels - might spark a few tensions, but might also form a few new synapses across the world.