Friday 10 May 2013

About the United Nations' Postage

The United Nations is the only organization in the world which is neither a country nor a territory that is permitted to issue postage stamps. The first United Nations stamps were issued in U.S. dollar denominations on United Nations Day, 24 October 1951.
UN's first First Day Cover released on October 24, 1951. 
UN's first First Day Cover released on October 24, 1951. 

More UN FDC can be found here:



UN's First Day Cover released on October 24, 1952.
It is the only postal authority to issue stamps in three different currencies, namely U.S. dollars, Swiss francs and Euro. United Nations stamps are issued simultaneously at UN offices in New York, Geneva and Vienna . Each issue carries a related design theme, with different denominations for each office. They are valid for postage when used on mail from the UN offices in New York, Geneva and Vienna.

UN's First Day Cover released on April 24, 1953.
Under its guidelines, the United Nations Postal Administration commemorative issues are released each year and remain on sale for 12 months only. After that date, any remaining stocks are destroyed. They are never reprinted, even if they are sold out before the end of the 12-month sale period. Definitive stamps have an indefinite sale period and carry denominations necessary for general postal needs. Definitive stamps can be reprinted as necessary.


Alll UN FDCs on this post are owned by Jonathan Blaza. Thanks Joe for sharing this amazing collection!

If you have wonderful stamps, covers, and FDCs you wanted to share on this blog just let us know through our Facebook page so we can have a look.

Saturday 4 May 2013

Stamp Collecting Guide


Enjoyment

Collect what pleases you or what interests you. If you are smitten by the colorful new stamps of some offbeat island, collect them regardless of their future worth, postal validity or philatelic prestige. If you cannot afford to obtain all that’s available in your field, limit yourself to what intrigues you the most. No law says that your collection must be absolutely complete.

Many fine, award-winning collectors follow that path, collecting stamps or covers just for the fun of it. F. Burton Sellers, a prominent collector, works hard on the stamps of Haiti, Panama and United States possessions. For sideline enjoyment, he likes a topical, “wine on stamps.” He delights in another collection called simply, “Cuz I Like ‘Em,” a potpourri of stamps with unusual cancels, odd shapes and advertisements printed on their gummed sides.

Ernest M. Cohn, who owns one of the worlds top-notch collections of the Paris Balloon mail of 1870-71, can’t wait for the postman to arrive. He’s looking for mail properly stamped and addressed to him, but which the post office has misdirected and delayed. Cohn collects plenty of these postal “goofs” right at his front door.

The late Emerson Clark, a past president of the American Philatelic Society, specialized in the stamps of Canada and Mexico. For a philatelic dessert, he doted on something he called “Libations, Liver Pills and Loose Ends.” This melange consisted of advertising covers from breweries, vintners, distilleries and liquor merchants; patent medicine stamps and covers; and such wild items as envelope ads reading, “Electric Beans For Tired People,” and “Stansfields Unshrinkable Underwear.”

The message from these prominent collectors is clear: You can be serious about stamp collecting and have fun at the same time. These fine collectors are saying you may do what you please, without worrying about cataloging, organization or whether anyone else collects that way. Collecting stamps and their related material is probably the least structured hobby in the world; you can do exactly as you wish.

You can find interesting stamps to collect on this site below:

Common Sense

Be aware of your financial limitations, and beware of unbelievable bargains and outrageous pricing. Most
beginning collectors attempt to try for too broad a stamp spectrum. Collecting every U.S. postage stamp is now almost an impossible dream. Counting all available varieties of U.S. stamps, only one or two complete U.S. collections are thought to exist.

Collecting stamps issued within a time span was more popular decades ago than it is now. Our grandfathers often tightened their collecting to a set period: a few years or a couple of decades. Even today, many serious stamp collectors will limit themselves to one stamp, with all of its varieties, essays, proofs and postal usages; one set of definitives or commemoratives; or just a year or two worth of issues.

Tightening your collecting goals will allow you to become more knowledgeable about what you do collect. With that focused knowledge comes price sagacity, better selectivity and, very possibly, more enjoyment. All of that leads to another point.

Authoritative Sources

Let yourself be guided by any and all reliable sources. Read avidly, seek information and assistance in your stamp searching, follow the philatelic press, and never be afraid or too proud to ask for help from fellow collectors and dealers who know your collecting field.

Join a local stamp club or start one if none exists in your community. When it comes to stamp collecting, camaraderie and knowledge just seem to go together. International, national and regional societies now embrace almost every collecting phase and stamp-issuing country. Seek them out. Many societies publish data about specific collecting fields in newsletters, papers and journals. Some maintain libraries whose books are available to members.

Tightening your collecting goals will allow you to become more knowledgeable about what you do collect. With that focused knowledge comes price sagacity, better selectivity and, very possibly, more enjoyment. All of that leads to another point.

Techniques

Learn as much as you can about the stamp hobby, its tools, language and methods. Good basic catalogs will give you much of this information; their introductions often can educate you on terms, printing methods and stamp design. Read them, though they may seem complex at first. A thorough knowledge of these will help you attain your collecting goals. When you realize, for example, that a tiny variance in perforations can mean the difference between a common stamp and one of great value, you will appreciate the wisdom of a quest for philatelic knowledge.

Although you have been advised to limit your collecting goals, don’t apply that rule to your accumulation of knowledge. As with antique and art collecting, knowledge and discernment are the keys to common-sense approaches and the enjoyment of your hobby. With those caveats in mind, what are the major choices when it comes to collecting stamps?

Source: Philpost