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Favorite Cut To Shape

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Valued Member
United States
214 Posts
Posted 03/11/2022   3:24 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this topic Add Clovnfire to your friends list Get a Link to this Message
Do we hold these for some reason ?
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United States
1434 Posts
Posted 03/11/2022   4:34 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add classic_paper to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Why would anyone over the age of 12 do that?
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United States
214 Posts
Posted 03/11/2022   8:26 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Clovnfire to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Well umm, when I was 11 , I had developed a slight case of Trypophobia . jk .. I am impressed with the intricate effort . Should I send it for Expertizing or just enter a cts contest ?
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United States
661 Posts
Posted 03/11/2022   9:14 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Cephus to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Well, it was a nice stamp once.
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Bedrock Of The Community
12569 Posts
Posted 03/11/2022   9:52 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add rogdcam to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Lang would call it a rare experimental essay and price it at $2,999.00 plus $5.99 shipping.
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1328 Posts
Posted 03/12/2022   01:23 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add DrewM to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
In their enthusiasm to dismiss this, maybe some people do not know that in the earliest days of stamp collecting there was no accepted standard for how stamps were to be collected. Cut "squares" were not always cut out as squares but often cut out around the embossed area as circles or whatever they were. Stamps sometimes got the same treatment with collectors wanting the image but not the perforations and so forth. This may be from that era. I doubt it's a modern collector who did this. I'd definitely save this and mount it in an album with a brief explanation of how stamps once were sometimes collected this way. It's not a good idea to dismiss old things if you're not familiar with history, in this case the history of collecting.
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Edited by DrewM - 03/12/2022 01:25 am
Valued Member
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Posted 03/12/2022   09:49 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Clovnfire to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
This guy needs a haircut . So maybe the trimming was not lingering Trypophobia , but a somewhat normal activity in collecting .
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United Kingdom
8582 Posts
Posted 03/12/2022   10:04 am  Show Profile Check GeoffHa's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add GeoffHa to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
As rev says, in the early days of stamp collecting, the interest lay in the image. That of a stamp was similar to that of any other scrap cut out to go in a scrap-book or early stamp album. The obsession with ancillary matter such as perforations etc was a shift away from this simplicity. These two examples are rather creative.
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Posted 03/12/2022   10:13 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add 51studebaker to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
And in the early days of medical care in Europe, people had holes drilled in their heads to relieve headaches and insanity. Luckily, we have learned more now.
Don
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Posted 03/12/2022   10:15 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Clovnfire to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Isn't there a technical medical term for perforation obsession ? Enthusia specificus ..
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Posted 03/12/2022   10:39 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add 51studebaker to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
No, but we like to encourage good stewardship in this community.
Don
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Bedrock Of The Community
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Posted 03/12/2022   11:38 am  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add rogdcam to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
I have handled a lot of intact 19th century albums and can say that I have never seen this done to a stamp with a frame as part of the design or a perforated stamp. You will find it rarely done to imperforate stamps that have no frame and Scott actually gives a catalog value for these "cut to shape" stamps. The 1847-48 Queen Victoria stamps of Great Britain are probably the most familiar. Scott #5 for example has a used intact cv of $1000 and a used cut-to-shape cv of $20.
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Posted 03/12/2022   12:04 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Clovnfire to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
Thanks for the historic and humorous replies . Is the 1 c Magenta also a cut-to-shape ?
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Posted 03/12/2022   12:09 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add 51studebaker to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Is the 1 c Magenta also a cut-to-shape ?


No. Cut-to-shape would mean that someone cut it right up to the edge of the design.
Don
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United States
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Posted 03/12/2022   3:16 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add Clovnfire to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply
This may be the back side of the 1c Magenta cut ?
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Posted 03/12/2022   3:27 pm  Show Profile Bookmark this reply Add 51studebaker to your friends list  Get a Link to this Reply

If it were cut-to-shape it would look like this...


Don
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