Showing posts with label Error. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Error. Show all posts

21 September 2014

Egypt stamp with wrong picture of Suez Canal

 

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Egypt issues stamps to mark new Suez Canal - but uses pictures of the Panama Canal instead

Egypt issues stamps to mark new Suez Canal - but uses pictures of Panama Canal

Here is an interesting new stamp issue from Egypt.

A set of three stamps were issued by Egypt Post  to mark the announcement of the New Suez Canal project. but however, instead of Suez Canal, mistakenly the image of Panama Canal was used. This mistake was noted only after a day of issue and these were withdrawn and a new set of three stamps were issued again after few days.

The stamps which were sold on first day and withdrawn now sells over multiple price than its face value.

 

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The stamps feature images of a map of the Suez Canal, along with photographs of a waterway in a desert setting which do indeed appear to come from Egypt. However they also show another two lane waterway in a green, fertile landscape which bears an uncanny resemblance to the Panama Canal – the 48 mile Central American passage which links the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Read More…

New stamp issue after the withdrawal of above stamps

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: Kasinath R. - Tanjore

Club News

CHAMUNDIPEX 2014

South Karnataka Regional Level Philately Exhibition will be held from 24 – 26 September 2014. A special cover will be released on 25th September 2014.

Venue : Auditorium Postal Training Centre, Nazarbad, Mysore

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: Sreejesh Krishnan – Trivandrum

New Special Cover

On 13 September 2014 Tamil Nadu Postal Circle released a Special Cover on Asan Memorial Association, Chennai.

Asan Memorial Association, Chennai

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12 April 2014

International Day of Human Space Flight

 

 

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Yuri Gagarin, the world's first cosmonaut to have travelled in outer space

The United Nations (UN) celebrates the International Day of Human Space Flight on April 12 each year. The day remembers the first human space flight on April 12, 1961.

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April 12, 1961, was the date of the first human space flight, carried out by Yuri Gagarin. This historic event opened the way for space exploration. In 2011 the UN declared April 12 as the “International Day of Human Space Flight” to remember the first human space flight and to promote the exploration and use of outer space for peaceful purposes and to the benefit of humankind.

Club News

From the Readers…

Error Variety on 2012 India - Israel Joint Issue Stamp

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While going through the recent stamps, I noticed an error in the Diwali stamp of 2012 - India Joint Issue with Israel stamp issue.

I name it as 'Ring of Fire' variety - a small ring in yellow color above the letter 'A' in 'INDIA' .This stamp is from the full sheet, which means, it is not from the sheetlet.

I am not sure whether this is a constant error (i.e. similar stamp can be found in each sheet at the same position of this stamp in row and column). so, stamp collectors can check and see if they find any similar stamp in their collection.

- Kasinath R. - Tanjore

 

New pictorial cancellation from Germany

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On May 8th a new pictorial cancellation (FDI-postmark) will be issued at 53113 BONN. The cancellation is featuring the head of a White-tailed Sea Eagle(Haliaeetus albicillia). Interested philatelists may please contact: Wolfgang Beyer, Vice Chairman of the German Philatelic Collector Group ARGE ZOOLOGIE. Mail: Wolfgang.beyer1@aol.de. Postage rates:
2,90 Euro Registered AIRMAIL( Registered mail possible only).

Courtesy: Mr.Wolfgang Hölzl from the IG New Guinea(www.i-ng.org.)

11 September 2013

USPS reissues Inverted Jenny ….

 

jenny

Date of Issue  : 22 September 2013

This souvenir sheet features a new version of perhaps the most famous error in the history of U.S. stamps: the Inverted Jenny, a 1918 misprint that highlights the ways a single stamp can turn history upside down.

Nearly a century after it was first issued, America’s most famous stamp — the misprinted 24-cent Inverted Jenny — will be reprinted as a $2 stamp as part of the Stamp Collecting:  Inverted Jenny souvenir stamp sheet. The sheet of stamps will be issued Sept. 22 to coincide with the Smithsonian’s National Postal Museum opening of the William H. Gross Stamp Gallery — the world’s largest stamp gallery.

This souvenir sheet features a new version of the most famous error in the history of U.S. stamps:  the Inverted Jenny, a 1918 misprint that mistakenly showed a biplane flying upside down. Reprinted with a $2 denomination to make them easily distinguishable from the 24-cent originals, the Inverted Jennys on this sheet commemorate the many ways a single stamp can turn a moment in history upside down. The original engraved dies to produce the 1918 Inverted Jenny are being used in the design to produce the new stamps.

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The 24-cent Curtiss Jenny invert error


In 1918, to celebrate the first Air Mail flight, the Post Office Department had the 24-cent Curtiss Jenny stamp produced.

Because the design required two colors, sheets were placed on the printing press twice — a process given to human error — as stamp collectors at the time well knew. One collector, William T. Robey, was on the lookout for stamps with printing errors on the morning of May 14, 1918, the first day of issuance for the stamp and the day before Air Mail service began.

To Robey’s amazement, a postal clerk handed him a 100-stamp sheet of the new Air Mail stamps mistakenly showing the biplane upside down within its frame. “The clerk reached down under the counter and brought forth a full sheet,” Robey recounted 20 years later, “and my heart stood still.”

Robey would soon learn that he had purchased the only sheet of misprinted Jenny stamps to fall into public hands. Within days, he sold the sheet to a stamp dealer, who immediately resold it to another collector. The sheet was broken up and the stamps were sold individually and in blocks of four.

For nearly a century, stamp collectors, referred to as philatelists, have chased the Inverted Jennys, accounting for nearly all 100 of them — even as the stamp became one of the country’s best known philatelic treasures. One of the remaining originals recently sold at auction for $625,000.

Source : United States Postal Service

01 July 2013

Olympic Gold Postbox tour of Oxford Postman..

 

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110 postboxes were painted gold in 2012 to celebrate the achievements of Olympians and Paralympians

Hi !

I am sharing here a news about an Oxford Postman’s tour of golden post boxes published by BBC . The tour by this Postman is for a noble cause…. I am also sharing here a discussion on stamp errors published in Sandafyre. 

A postman from Oxford is visiting all of the gold postboxes on the UK mainland that celebrate Britain's Olympic and Paralympic champions. Gary White, 29, began his 3,200-mile tour of 104 boxes at Kirkby-in-Ashfield in Nottinghamshire.

He aims to complete his journey on 25 July at the Olympic Park, east London. At each location, the nomadic postman said he would photograph the postbox and send a postcard to himself to document his journey.

Andy Murray

He plans to use the corresponding commemorative Olympic stamps produced by Royal Mail during the 2012 Games. At Dunblane, the stamp will feature Andy Murray, recognised for his gold in the men's singles tennis.

Gary White

Postman's holiday: Gary White hopes to complete his tour on 25 July

The postman's tour is raising money for the Motor Neurone Disease (MND) Association in memory of his stamp-collecting aunt, Christine Goodall, who lived in the US.

Mr White said: "I have chosen the MND Association as my charity because my aunt sadly died last year, after battling with this disease for five years - she was only 56 years old.

"I had bought all of the special gold medal stamps with the intention of using them to send her a postcard... sadly, time passed too quickly for me to do this.

"I thought that this event would be a good way to raise money and awareness for this disease, to continue the helpful, happy and charitable mood that was present during London 2012, and to use up some of those stamps for a good cause."

He believes he is the first postman to undertake such a tour.

Courtesy : BBC News

Discussion

Why do Stamp collectors like errors ?

Sometimes discovering philatelic errors is easy, particularly when examples have been identified and are accurately described. This is not always the case and many hours can be spent searching philatelic material to find that illusive mistake. Such items are keenly sought by collectors who need to satisfy a unique personal desire.

why do we find printers mistakes so alluring? It was around the turn of the last Century that the so-called “French Method” of collecting became fashionable, no longer did the best collections simply aspire to total completion but the proofs, drawings, subtle colour changes, plate alterations & damage, and all the other fascinating stuff that makes our hobby so interesting became de rigueur in the highest collecting circles, but errors were already popular long before then...

THE RAREST ERROR is widely considered to be the world second most valuable stamp. The Swedish 1855 3 skilling-banco printed in yellow instead of the correct green colour. It was discovered in 1885 by a Stockholm stamp dealer who bought the stamp from an unsuspecting schoolboy. The stamp has been shrouded in controversy but it has been a famous error for over 100 years and it is generally accepted that a single 3sk cliché had found its way into a printing of the 8sk orange- yellow. Back in those early days of stamp production anything was possible!

DIFFERENT TYPES OF ERRORS exist, mistakes made by the printer are the most dramatic, perhaps the most well- known of these is the American so-called “INVERTED JENNY” stamp. The United States issued a set of Air Post stamps in 1918, the top value was a splendid 24c depicting a Curtiss Jenny biplane in blue within a red frame. The day after issue a stamp collector, Mr William T. Robey visited his local post office to purchase a sheet each of these first airmail stamps. He didn’t like the centering of the sheets available so at the suggestion of the clerk he returned later that day and was amazed to find a complete sheet of 100 24c values with the plane upside- down!

This discovery, perhaps more than any other in philately convinced collectors to carefully check newly issued stamps for printing errors! A block of four from this sheet is currently the most valuable philatelic item.

DESIGN ERRORS CAN BE FUN (AND DANGEROUS) as they are often mass- produced the mistake can be available to thousands of collectors, a typical example would be the Monaco 1947 Air Post stamps depicting President Roosevelt inspecting his stamp collection – look closely and you will see he has been given SIX fingers by the engraver! Sometimes design errors can be a lot more serious, for example the Peoples Republic of China issued, during the height of the Cultural Revolution an 8f stamp known as “the Whole Country is Red” depicting workers with a map of China coloured red – however Taiwan was left in white, a terrible mistake (albeit accurate as the Communists never controlled the island). The stamp was withdrawn after 2 days and is a renowned rarity. There is no record of what befell the hapless designer...

During the 1960s many other countries saw exciting (and less dangerous!) new concepts in stamp production with modern multi coloured artistic designs. Printing errors occurred and many collectors specialise in locating examples from this period including missing colours & and incorrect values (to name just a couple). The choice is virtually endless. Perhaps one of the most infamous errors from that period would be the Falkland Island 1964 6d stamp depicting HMS “Glasgow” instead of HMS “Kent”. Examples of the error are extremely rare with only seventeen known to exist. The committed collector will still seek to find number eighteen!

Collectors follow their desires. Psychologists have identified a need in many of us to acquire and collect. Philatelic errors probably fulfill those who may possess that particular gene! This could be just one of the many reasons why stamp collectors like errors but there must be many other reasons. Compulsive collectors cannot bear distractions, just as my friend focused on the details of the Australian discovery, they are immersed in their subject and driven by the need to accumulate and acquire. Philatelic errors offer just such an opportunity. Human nature relishes and thrives on the search, the hunt, the hope of finding something unique, the use of the “sharp eye” and discovering the unexpected. This alone makes the subject more exciting, dramatic and also challenges the dull image that is often associated with stamp collecting !

Read More….

18 April 2012

Indian Themes on foreign stamps……

 

Sher Shah Suri

Suri

Sher Shah Suri (1486- 1545) also known as Sher Khan  was the founder of the Sur Empire in northern India, with its capital at Delhi. An Afghan (Pathan) by origin, he defeated the Mughals and took control of North India in 1540. He first served as a private before rising to become a commander in the Mughal Army under Babur and then as the governor of Bihar . He is also remembered for purportedly killing a fully grown tiger with his bare hands in Bihar.

Suri

In 1537, Sher Khan turned against his master and overran the state of Bengal to establish the Sur Empire. A soldier of fortune, Sher Khan also proved himself a gifted administrator as well as an able general. His reorganization of the empire laid the foundations for the later Mughal emperors, notably Akbar the Great, son of Humayun. During his five year rule from 1540 to 1545, he set up a new template for civic and military administration. He conquered Bihar in 1534 & Bengal in 1538. In 1539, Sher Khan faced Humayun in the battle of Chausa. He forced Humayun out of India. Assuming the title Sher Shah, he ascended the throne of Delhi.

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He adopted a tri-metal coinage based on copper, silver and gold coins and re-organised the postal system in his kingdom. The system of tri-metalism which came to characterize Mughal coinage was introduced by Sher Shah. While the term rūpya had previously been used as a generic term for any silver coin, during his rule the term rūpiyacame to be used as the name for a silver coin of a standard weight of 178 grains, which was the precursor of the modern rupee.

Suri 1

Sher Shah rebuilt the longest highway in South Asia. The highway was called the Shahrah-e-Azam (also Sadak-e-Azam, Badshahi Sadak and later Grand Trunk Road by the British). It is still in use in present-day Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Punjab region Punjab, Delhi, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar and Bengal. Mughals extended Grand Trunk Road westwards: at one time, it extended to Kabul in Afghanistan, crossing the Khyber Pass. The road was later improved by the British rulers of  colonial India. It was extended to run from Calcutta to Peshawar (present-day Pakistan). Over the centuries, the road acted as a major trade routes in the region and facilitated both travel and postal communication.

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Sher Shah built monuments including Rohtas Fort (now a UNESCO World Heritage Site in Pakistan), many structures in the Rohtasgarh Fort in Bihar, Sher Shah Suri Masjid, in Patna, built in 1540-1545 to commemorate his reign.Qila-i-Kuhna mosque, built by Sher Shah in 1541, at Purana Qila, Delhi, a Humayun citadel started in 1533, and later extended by him, along with the construction of Sher Mandal, an octagonal building inside the Purana Qila complex, which later served as the library of Humayun. 

Sher Shah died from a gunpowder explosion during the siege of Kalinjar fort on May 22, 1545 fighting against the Chandel Rajputs. His death has also been claimed to have been caused by a fire in his store room.

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His mausoleum, the Sher Shah Suri Tomb (122 ft high) stands in the middle of an artificial lake at Sasaram, a town that stands on the Grand Trunk Road.

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Suri 6

India (1970) & Pakistan (1991) released stamps to honour him.

Suri 4

 

- Kenneth Sequeira, Dubai ( UAE)

email : kenneth.sequeira@hotmail.com


My recent Covers

Poland

Easter……

Picture 012

Andrzej Bek, Poland

Germany

 Picture 012

Wolfgang Beyer, Germany

Copy of thanks

From our Readers……

Color and Perforation Error on MS

 error4rrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

: Ashwani Dubey - Gorakhpur

15 March 2012

New Stamp from India…

 

Civil Aviation Centenary

civilavi

Date of Issue : 14 March 2012

India Post  issued a set of  four stamps and a Miniature Sheet on 14 March 2012  to commemorate 100 years of civil aviation in the country.Indian Civil Aviation completed 100 years on 18th February, 2011. 

courtesy : Mansoor B., Mangalore

 

Interview

image Recently Etv Gujarati had taken Interview  of renowned philatelist of Ahmedanad Mr Praful Thakkar.  It could be viewed  on following URL.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cBjjz5i7Iqg&context=C40d6959ADvjVQa1PpcFMCT2VUYjT5FZCAdOQNUyPCUOVkNeApiuA

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Praful Thakkar, the renowned philatelist of Gujarat is Limca Book Record Holder in 2009 for Autographs & Canteen Tokens and  is a collector of autographs, stamps, First Day Covers (FDCs), coins, medals, tokens, badges , badge plates etc. and many more collectibles of India since last more than 45 years. He has written several books on these subjects of Hobbies. His recent book is on autographs. Mr Praful Thakkar may be contacted at e mail : pkthakkar@yahoo.com

Error on stamps

Error_DOOT Error_in_Stamp_of_DOOT_back_side_Gum_Missing

Gum missing

Screenshot_3 : Vijay Modi, Himmatnagar ( Gujarat)   email : vijay_idom@rediffmail.com

 

Request to contributors

The contributors are requested to send small files for publication. As due to unavoidable reasons I am unable to download heavy files.

My  broadband connection is not working for the last 15 days due to Big Road repair project on Shamshi - Kullu  highway and all telephone lines of BSNL have been broken down in whole Shamshi area   for unlimited period . This has caused lot of problem for Internet connectivity in offices and home. Now I am using another 2G connection which takes time to download heavy files. So plz do not send  your mails with heavy files.

24 October 2011

New stamps on Birds…

 

 

Slovakia

 

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Great Bustard

Slovakia Post  has issued a new stamp featuring Great Bustard. Great Bustard (Otis tarda) is Slovakia's heaviest flying bird. It grows up to more than one meter with a wing span of up to 2.5 meters and the heaviest individuals can weigh up to 22 kg. This, originally a steppe bird, inhabits the agricultural landscape at an altitude up to 300 m above sea level. It feeds on both plant and animal food and harder seeds to a small degree. The plant food includes, in particular, leaves, buds, and flowers, whole plants of field crops and weeds.

 

Peru

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The Peruvian Postal Service has announced two new postage stamps featuring two of world’s most endangered birds.

   Austria

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Austria Post issued a  new stamp featuring  pair of nesting storks. The issue also celebrates 90 years of Burgenland as part of the Republic of Austria.

Club News

Pride of India Collection

Pride of India Series includes  25 best selected stamps jointly launched by India Post & Hallmark Group.Each stamp is gold plated replica of the stamp made of pure Silver. For more details log on to : http://www.prideofindiacollection.com/

 

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View complete series of Pride of India Collection on

http://www.setenantsofindia.blogspot.com/

From our Readers….

Army Postal Service Covers – Part- 5

- P. Ramakrishnan

201 HQ AREA DELHI 01/06/1995
202 CORPS OF MILITARY POLICE 23/09/1995
203 SUB HONARY KARAM SINGH PVC 14/10/1995
204 FLYING INSTRUCTOR'S SCHOOL 12 SQUARDON 26/10/1995
205 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 11 30/10/1995
206 THE BIHAR REGIMENT 3 01/11/1995
207 THE NAGA REGIMENT 01/11/1995
208 THE RAJPUT REGIMENT 09/11/1995
209 CAVALARY 45 21/11/1995
210 ARMY ORDANCE CORPS 08/12/1995
211 ARMY SERVICE CORPS 08/12/1995
212 THE BRIGADE OF THE GUARDS 14 13/01/1996
213 THE MECHANISED INFANTRY REGIMENT 13/02/1996
214 EVOLUTION OF SIGNAL COMMUNICATION 15/02/1996
215 ARMY MEDICAL CORPS 15/03/1996
216 MILITARY COLLEGE OF ELECTRONICS AND MECHANICAL 15/07/1996
217 MILITARY COLLEGE OF TELE COMMUNICATION ENGINEERING 01/10/1996
218 THE MARATHA LIGHT INFANTRY 14 04/10/1996
219 THE SIKH REGIMENT 2 07/10/1996
220 THE MECHANISED INFANTRY REGIMENT 4 (1 SIKH) 12/10/1996
221 FIELD REGIMENT 16 01/11/1996
222 THE ASSAM REGIMENT 04/11/1996
223 SQUADRON AIR FORCE 27& 114 13/11/1996
224 CENTRAL PROOF ESTABLISHMENT 18/11/1996
225 THE RAJPUTANA RIFELS 11 25/11/1996
226 THE MECHANISED INFANTRY REGIMENT 24 (20 RAJPUT) 04/12/1996
227 THE GORKHA RIFLES 1 04/12/1996
228 THE KUMAON REGIMENT 15 05/12/1996
229 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 10 05/12/1996
230 THE PUNJAB REGIMENT 18 06/12/1996
231 BANGALORE MILITARY SCHOOL 07/12/1996
232 HQ DIVISION 20 10/12/1996
233 THE MARATHA LIGHT INFANTRY 1 11/12/1996
234 HORSE 4TH STANDARD PRESENTATION 12/12/1996
235 ENGINEER REGEMENT 38 27/12/1996
236 TRISHNA - GOOD WILL ADVENTURE SAILING EXPEDITION 10/01/1997
237 DEFENCE SECURITY CORPS 25/02/1997
238 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 03/03/1997
239 THE MAHAR REGIMENT 9TH REUNION 11/03/1997
240 ARMY EDUCTION CORPS 01/06/1997
241 HQ NORTHERN COMMAND 17/06/1997
242 ARMY AVIATION 15/08/1997
243 THE SIKH REGIMENT 4 12/09/1997
244 HQ WESTERN COMMAND 15/09/1997
245 CENTRAL BASE POST OFFICE 1 24/10/1997
246 AIR HQ COMMUNICATION SQN 31/10/1997
247 ASC SCHOOL, BAREILLY 06/11/1997
248 PARA 3 BATTLE HONOUR SRINAGAR, (SHELATANG) 07/11/1997
249 SQUARDRON AF 29 & 41 07/11/1997
250 MILITARY HOSPITAL SHILLONG 10/11/1997
251 NATIONAL CADET CORPS 23/11/1997
252 FIRST BATCH OF REGULAR ARMY OFFICERS OF INDEPENDEN 04/12/1997
253 THE GRENADIERS REGIMENT 8 10/12/1997
254 VETERINARY CORPS 8TH REUNION 14/12/1997
255 ARMY POSTAL SERVICE CORPS 17/12/1997
256 FIELD ORDNANCE DEPOT 13/01/1998
257 THE SIKH REGIMENT 17 01/02/1998
258 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 8 01/02/1998
259 THE GORKHA RIFLES 6 BN 5 04/02/1998
260 THE GORKHA RIFLES 6/8 04/02/1998
261 THE GORKHA 3&9 21/02/1998
262 PARA 3 18/03/1998
263 THE MAHAR REGIMENT 5 23/03/1998
264 AIR DEFENCE REGIMENT 19 01/04/1998
265 THE JAMMU AND KASHMIR LIGHT INFANTRY 15/04/1998
266 ARMED FORCES MEDICAL COLLEGE 01/05/1998
267 THE GORKHA RIFLES 11/5 08/05/1998
268 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 14 01/07/1998
269 THE SIKH REGIMENT 18 01/07/1998
270 THE SIKH LIGHT INFANTRY 4 12/07/1998
271 THE DOGRA REGIMENT 15 15/07/1998
272 THE FIELD REGIMENT 42 01/08/1998
273 AIR DEFENCE REGIMENT 45 01/09/1998
274 AIR DEFENCE REGIMENT 46 01/09/1998
275 HQ DIVISION 4 28/09/1998
276 ARMED ENGR REGIMENT 114 13/10/1998
277 MOVEMENT CONTRAL UNIT AIR FORCE 23/10/1998
278 THE KUMAON REGIMENT CENTRE 27/10/1998
279 THE MAHAR REGIMENT 6 30/10/1998
280 THE PUNJAB REGIMENT 15 01/11/1998
281 THE MARATHA LIGHT INFANTRY 11 REUNION 02/11/1998
282 THE GORKHA RIFLES 1 05/11/1998
283 THE GORKHA RIFLES 4 19/11/1998
284 THE JAMMU AND KASHMIR RIFLES 8 REUNION 26/11/1998
285 INDIAN MILITARY ACADEMY 10/12/1998
286 AIR DEFENCE ARTILLERY 23/12/1998
287 PARA (1 KUMAON) 3 25/12/1998
288 THE MECHANISED INFANTRY REGIMENT 3 (1/8 G R) 19/02/1999
289 MEDIUM REGIMENT 268 15/03/1999
290 UN PKO SEMINAR 17/03/1999
291 THE BRIGADE OF THE GUARDS 26/03/1999
292 THE JAMMU AND KASHMIR RIFLES 5 28/03/1999
293 THE MECHANISED INFANTRY REGIMENT 9 (7 GRENADIERS) 01/04/1999
294 SURYA SAINIK INSTITUTE 01/05/1999
295 DIRECTORATE GENERALL ARMED FORCES MEDICAL SERVICE 16/05/1999
296 AIR DEFENCE REGIMENT 105 24/08/1999
297 TERRITORIAL ARMY 09/10/1999
298 AIR DEFENCE REGIMENT 144 16/10/1999
299 THE PARACHUTE REGIMENT 1 17/10/1999
300 CORPS OF MILITARY POLICE 20/10/1999

P. Ramkrishnan may be contacted at email : pramakrishnan1@royalenfield.com

 

2nd Africa – India Forum Summit 2011

Miniature sheet -color error

22222222222222222222 

22222222222222222222

: Ashwani Dubey - Gorakhpur

08 August 2011

K2 (Godwin Austen) stamp…

 

Godwin_Austin

Date of issue : 19 May 1988

On stamp : Godwin Austin, the correct name of peak is Godwin Austen

Wrong spelling of peak on stamp

India Post issued a set of 4 postage stamps on 19 May 1988 on Himalayan Peaks.Many collectors might not be aware of the fact that the stamp with Rs 4 denomination issued on K2 (Godwin Austen) bears the wrong spelling of the peak. On stamp the designer has inserted Godwin Austin which should have been Godwin Austen.K2 is the second-highest mountain on Earth, after Mount Everest. With a peak elevation of 8,611 m (28,251 feet) and India’s highest mountain peak. The name Mount Godwin-Austen was suggested, in honour of Henry Godwin-Austen, an early explorer of the area.

Discussion

What is an approppriate maxim Card ?

Here  is a scan of Maxim card sent by Mr Sanjiv Jain of Dehradun. I publihed two cards prepared by him with cancellation from Bilaspur (CG)  in my last post. After the publication I received mails from some philatelists of Bilaspur as they were anxious to know how a collector from Dehradun could get max cards cancelled at Bilaspur. For all  those who are keen to know is just to inform them  that  a person has  liberty to get cancellation from any place of his choice if he can approach that  place ….

However in case of these Maxim Cards the choice for  place of cancellation is not appropriate. It should have been  New Delhi where Rashtrapati bhawan is located and easier to obtain for a collector from Dehra Dun.

Here is another card from Mr Jain with four stamps on it. As per FIP rules and regulations there should be ONE stamp on the view-side of the card. The card with more than one stamp cannot be considered as Maximum Card.

fcv

maxim back side

06 July 2011

Club News….

 

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Indian Errors major interest at SG Auction

Stanley Gibbons June auction demonstrates the strength of Indian and Chinese stamps with a bidding frenzy for rare Indian errors and 60% of China lots selling for double estimate or more.

15th June saw collectors and investors from across the globe focusing their attention on the Stanley Gibbons bi-annual public auction, held at 399 Strand, London as more than 1000 world lots went under the hammer.

Starting with foreign countries, the auction got off to a strong start with all Chinese lots finding buyers. More than 60% of Chinese lots went for double or more their pre-auction estimate including lot 19; the ever popular 1964 Chinese Peonies 2y miniature sheet (SG MS2199a) fine u/m, which sold for £2,760.

The highlight of the foreign section however, was lot 57; A 1862 (April 9) Neapolitan Provinces cover to Glasgow franked with the 1861 1g, 2g, 5g and 20g which were cancelled by two Napoli al Porto cds’s. This superb quadruple franking cover with two other covers sold for £16,100 after a long battle between room and telephone bidders.

The highlight from the British Commonwealth offering was a very strong section of India, where errors were strongly fought over. Lot 271, a 1976 Wildlife 25p with black omitted (SG 825a) fine u/m with a catalogue value of £500, reached £1,610, but this was quickly outshone by the very next lot; a 1992 Birds of Prey error of value (SG 1525a) fresh and fine u/m which realised £11,500 against a catalogue value of just £1,000.

The Great Britain session held in the afternoon saw lot 1092, a collection of approximately 350 RAF Covers in seven volumes, most being signed by such as William Reid VC, Douglas Bader and Sir Barnes Wallis, realising more than double its pre-auction estimate, at £2,530.

Interestingly for a philatelic auction, one of the final items to go under the hammer, lot 1183, a mixed accumulation of coins, achieved more than five times its pre auction estimate, selling for £506.

Source: Stanley Gibbons

 

Poster Stamp Festival

West Delhi Philatelic Society is going to organize a stamp Festival in Delhi from 24 – 25 September 2011 at Ambedkar Bhawan, Rani Jhansi Road New Delhi. For more details Mr Vinod Sabharwal may be contacted at email : vksabharwal@gmail.com or indianstampghar@gmail.com  Ph : 9818148338, 9810241363

 

For Autograph Collectors

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For the lovers of Autographs, Autograph Club of India is a registered Club in Kolkata.The club promotes and guides the study of autographs and organizes exhibition of autographs.  For more details Mr Santosh Kumar Lahoti,  may be contacted at email : sklahoti@gmail.com  Website : www.autographindia.com 

 

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