Friday 16 November 2012

Some relatively uncommon items

It is probably a bit boring this week showing some early items which are relatively uncommon especially in good overall condition.

It is hard to understand the need for this stamp unless it was for revenue purposes. The other is the peculiarity of design. There are seven oars protruding from the side of the ship on this stamp whereas there are eight oars in the 1c stamp. Note the white dot above the right side of "N" in "BORNEO". It might give some idea to its position on a sheet of 50. There was only one transfer used in the printing process.

The 1886 1 cent orange is similar in design to SG1 but perforated 14.  There was only one transfer used during printing as there was little need for a stamp of this value for postal purposes which accounted for its rarity as used items.

The same stamp as above but imperforated. It is normally priced as a pair mint or CTO.

This forgery is actually not that common. It looks rouletted instead of the usual perforations. It probably originated from Italy. Well known forgers such as Nino Imperator of Genoa and Erasmo Oneglia of Turin would be among the prime suspects. 
When compared to the 4c stamp just below, one can see that the colour is the wrong shade and the details are less well defined. The main giveaway is the chinese characters on the right. For some reason, it was wrongly inscribed 2 cents in chinese instead of 4c. This error is present in all the forged values of this issue.

The 3 cents provisional of 1886 was hardly justified unlike the 5 cents which was the rate for newspapers to the UK and also the rate per 2 oz for sending books and printed material, again to the UK. The 3 cents has the the very rare variety small "3" which occurred on one stamp per sheet of 50, as the fourth stamp on the third row, stamp number 24 or R3/4.

This is the perf 12 variety. The condition of the perforations on this stamp is actually quite good in comparison to similarly perforated stamps of this 1883 issue. This is a used item with the Sandakan 14 bar cancel which was normally used to frank used stamps on cover during this period. The town postmark was usually elsewhere on the envelope. However, this item also has part of a red Sandakan postmark, invariably a D3.

This untidy looking perf 12 specimen has the undated dumb cancel from Singapore which signified use for overseas mail. It is an uncommon cancellation on this stamp.

Another perf12 stamp which I find rarely in a used condition. I would have preferred some sort of cds but it would do for the time being as my dealer friend let me have it for £45, a very deep discount to the £350 SG catalogue value.

1 comment:

  1. Thank you for such detail.Keep up the good work.My blog is http://philatelyandpostcards2012.blogspot.com/

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