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Replies: 49 / Views: 2,612 |
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Valued Member
Bulgaria
398 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
Netherlands
6526 Posts |
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No, this stamp never had a control number.
There may have been some foreign matter on the plate that caused an ink spot.
Those cut perforations at the lower right are suspicious.
edit: There would have been a stamp with check letters TD to the right. So, there could never have been any sheet margin printing in that position as there only was a sheet margin at the foot of this stamp. |
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| Edited by NSK - 04/03/2023 08:54 am |
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Pillar Of The Community
United Kingdom
8578 Posts |
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Pillar Of The Community
Netherlands
6526 Posts |
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You mean at the centre? You might be correct. The frame there and near the 'G' in postage sure look like someone has done something with it.
@post_pe, does this stamp have its gum? |
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Pillar Of The Community
United Kingdom
8578 Posts |
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Yes, that's it - possible ink residue around the "T" of postage, then the surface-wear in the "AG" area. |
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Bedrock Of The Community
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Pillar Of The Community
United States
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Might that be an "S" as the start of "souvenir" or some such thing?
Anyone have a Vol. 1 Specialised close at hand? I won't be back with mine for more than a week. I'm wondering if C - T is a valid letter combination? (T seems sort of high?)
ETA: I do see a lower marginal C - T elsewhere on the web, so, probably a dead end. |
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| Edited by Cjd - 04/03/2023 10:18 am |
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Moderator

United States
5094 Posts |
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My used version of this stamp is D-O, but no marks such as this one has. Also, I notice a dot on the left side of the OP's stamp:  |
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Pillar Of The Community
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Pillar Of The Community
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@Partime: DO is not a check-letter combination that is genuine. Are you reading left, top to bottom; i.e., did you mean OD? |
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Pillar Of The Community
Netherlands
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@cjd,
The height is the same as that for a normal stamp, the width is three normal stams. So 20 x 12 (AA .. TL) becomes 20 x 4 (AA..TD). There is a horizontal gutter between rows 10 and 11 (J and K).
Always read letters from left to right at the bottom. TC is a valid combination. |
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Moderator

United States
5094 Posts |
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Quote: @Partime: DO is not a check-letter combination that is genuine. Are you reading left, top to bottom; i.e., did you mean OD? I guess I wasn't reading this correctly. Bottom first would be OD.  |
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| Edited by Partime - 04/03/2023 3:24 pm |
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Pillar Of The Community
Netherlands
6526 Posts |
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Nice. Yes, that is OD, row 5 of the lower pane, fourth stamp from left (and last stamp in row). |
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Pillar Of The Community
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First, you need to test for genuineness. And that is whether this has a genuine watermark or not. There are fake watermarks printed in white or in oil that are incorrectly shaped on forged stamps. If you don't have an accurate reference for the watermark, please post a view of the stamp in watermark fluid.
The dirt at top is just that, typical grubby stamp collector paws hinging the stamp in an album at one time. You see this often enough. It might be removed with careful use of a soft eraser like a Mars Staedtler one.
If you compare with Partime's used stamp, alignment of perf holes is not perfect for this stamp. The hole size and spacing (but not alignment) matches top and bottom on the OP stamp from what I can see. If the stamp is genuine, then the perfs are okay to me.
Still, let's establish whether this is a genuine stamp or not first. |
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| Edited by hy-brasil - 04/03/2023 4:27 pm |
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Bedrock Of The Community
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Quote: The hole size and spacing (but not alignment) matches top and bottom on the OP stamp from what I can see. If the stamp is genuine, then the perfs are okay to me. It is not about the hole alignment or spacing. The perfs exhibit no fibers from being torn which could lead a skeptic to state that the simple answer is scissor cutting. It would have to be one crazy pair of scissors to make that wavy-gravy line. No, the perfs are not OK by a long shot. |
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Pillar Of The Community
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Quote: The perfs exhibit no fibers from being torn which could lead a skeptic to state that the simple answer is scissor cutting. They are cut at the bottom and not in a straight line. The cuts are reminiscent of those you see on stamp books and coil stamps. Those are cut with a blade. If the bottom of the stamp had been cut with a blade or guillotine cutter, that waviness would not have been there. The leftmost perforations at the bottom are torn. There, definitely, is something strange about it. The size of the stamp, only, would allow for reperforating if it had been part imperforate between stamp and bottom margin. That would have been a bad decision. |
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Replies: 49 / Views: 2,612 |
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