Imagine Getting a Stamp of this Value on a Package Sent to your Home
Imagine Getting a Stamp of this Value on a Package Sent to your Home Read More »
Few people today understand the technical revolution that the invention of the postage stamp produced. In many ways, stamp invention had as great an effect on 19th Century communication and commerce as computers and electronic communication has had on ours. Ease of contact facilitated business and social interaction. Business was enhanced. Newspapers and book readership
Rowland Hill-The Progressive Read More »
Philatelists are well aware of how interests change throughout life. The games of childhood give way to the pressures and duties of adulthood which in turn meld into the aspirations of old age. Most collectors have seen this. They collected as kids, found their interest in philately wain during their active work and parenting years, and
The Scott catalog prices for most countries after 1940 is for stamps in mint Never Hinged condition. This is for three reasons. First, most post-1940 stamps are more common in NH than in hinged condition (especially as you come closer to the current period in time). Second, most collectors have been trained to believe that they
What Effect Does Hinging Have on Price? Read More »
2014 may be the year when the sales tax exemption that most philatelists enjoy when they add stamps to their collections ends. The current sales tax code in most states does not formally exempt postage stamps from sales tax but rather exempts sales of products that travel across state lines when the merchant lacks a
Philately and Sales tax Read More »
If there is ever a date that goes into history books to mark the demise of printed books in the battle with electronic information on the Internet, it may well be March 14, 2012
Today’s Access to Information Makes our Hobby Easier Read More »
Gum has had a long relationship with printing on postage stamps. In the pre-1930 days, flat press printing meant that sheets of paper were fed into the press one by one and then the printed sheets were hung up to dry, gummed, and weighted at the corners so that as the gum contracted the stamp
For over thirty years, from 1965 to 1987, my grandfather, Earl Apfelbaum, published a weekly column in Linn’s Stamp News called “Apfelbaum’s Corner.” In the very first article, he said that his model for the articles were a series of car columns that had run in the Philadelphia Bulletin in the 1930s and 1940s called
Earl Apfelbaum’s Writings Read More »
One of the most interesting and specialized areas of philately is the Italian area. Italian philately comprises several main areas of interest
Italy and Area Pricelist Read More »