Blog

Danish West Indies

If the European imperialist designs for Africa that occurred in the late Nineteenth Century are called, because of its frenzied quality, the scramble for Africa, then the colonization of the West Indies that occurred in the early Seventeenth Century could be called the scramble for sugar. Sugar cane and beet are not native to Europe […]

Danish West Indies Read More »

Greenland

There is a rule in determining philatelic popularity and it states that countries are collected in proportion to the popularity of stamp collecting in the home country. This accounts for the widespread philatelic popularity of say the United States or Great Britain or Germany. And it accounts for the relative philatelic unimportance of say Haiti

Greenland Read More »

Iceland

Some countries have small populations, stable domestic politics and little international impact but yet are philatelically very popular and important. Two countries that fit this model are Liechtenstein and Iceland. Both are part of a larger philatelic collecting group (in the case of Liechtenstein it is the Swiss-German area and for Iceland it is the

Iceland Read More »

New South Wales

One of the most interesting of the “classic” countries to collect is New South Wales. Now part of the Australian federation, New South Wales (NSW) is Australia’s most populous state and was an independent country until 1901 when the seven component states of Australia joined to create one country. The stamps of NSW have always

New South Wales Read More »

Making Collectors?

The growth of Asian philately has undermined traditional thinking about where new collectors come from. The traditional model has been the evolutionary model- children (usually boys) introduced to the hobby and collecting in their youth become re enamored with stamps in middle to old age. This paradigm has described the traditional collecting arc in the

Making Collectors? Read More »

Mint vs Used US

The relative popularity of mint and used United States stamps has been constantly changing during the history of our hobby. The first generation of collectors had little relish for mint stamps. Philately was hardly more than a diversion then and few collectors had the seriousness of purpose to seek quality let alone mint. These collectors

Mint vs Used US Read More »

Imperfect Stamps?

Cognitive dissonance is a concept in psychology which states among other things, that the disconnect between what we do and what we believe creates discomfort and to deal with that internal discomfort we alter our perceptions of what we do to be more in line with what we want to believe about ourselves (that is,

Imperfect Stamps? Read More »

Dominican Republic

One of the most interesting countries to collect is the Dominican Republic. The first issues are crudely printed from domestically produced plates and the major varieties of the first thirty or so stamps are not design types but paper varieties. Philatelist have traditionally treated major paper types as grounds for a major catalog number. The

Dominican Republic Read More »

Shades

Another area of catalog inconsistency concerns shades. Generally speaking, Scott lists all shades of a stamp as minor (that is “a”) numbers. If a stamp is issued in rose, the major catalog listing is for rose and all of the shades of rose from dark rose to scarlet are listed as minor numbers. Only when

Shades Read More »

Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top