Incidentally, two stamps he has been searching for over the last many years are Cape Juby, Scott #48-49 (Edifil #64-65). I'm certain Mr. Limaye would be very happy to hear from anyone who can help him locate these two stamps.

The famous stamp collector Josiah Lilly said that there were 100,000 postage stamps he wanted for his collection and he succeeded in acquiring 77,000. My considerably easier target is 35,000 of the more common stamps from 1840-1940 contained in the Scott Blue International Album Volume 1. This blog will record my progress, provide general information about Classic era philately and hopefully encourage other "Blue" collectors.
Monday, October 15, 2012
Another complete (almost) Scott Volume I
Thursday, October 4, 2012
Changes in the Scott Classic Catalogue for 2013
I'm always more interested in improvements in coverage than valuations and this year Portugal's Ceres stamps have been reorganized (which has involved some renumbering). The 2014 edition will extend this treatment to the Portuguese Colonies. I remember early on finding some marked differences in coverage for the various colonies so this is good news. (This is of some importance to the Blue Volume 1 collector as it helps explain the differences in what is included in the album.)
Along with Portugal, there are also improvements in the Tiger Heads of Afghanistan. Airmail semi-Official stamps for Bavaria and Germany appear for the first time, as do the five-ring numeral cancellations for Baden. New Zealand has 45 new minor varieties, Alaouites 37 and Bolivia 22.
Thursday, September 6, 2012
Fifty Shades of Blue (and Brown), Part 4
[Previous parts in this series: Part 1, Part 2, Interlude, Part 3]
The Brown Internationals (what I am calling Type A1 and A2) were the flagship of Scott's worldwide album line for some seventy years. Even so, Scott had long been aware of the need for an intermediary album that went beyond their beginner albums.
Scott's first attempt to fill this niche was an Abridged International published in 1897. I have no other information about this album beyond that it apparently was not successful.
In 1914 Scott released the Junior International Album which was able to shoehorn the world into one volume by omitting what the editor considered "rare and high-priced stamps." Scott released new versions every year or two for almost forty years. Until the late 1930s there were no supplements so each new edition superseded the previous ones. The initial versions were hardbound, although there were usually several options on type of binding. Editions are often found with a blue binding, hence the "Blue Internationals" sobriquet.
I had originally planned on providing a detailed list of editions, but as I've posted this elsewhere, I think that what might be most useful at this point is a series of summary statements:
--The editions between 1914 and 1943 are named Junior Internationals and largely differ from each other by adding the latest new issues. They are mostly hardbound although Scott started issuing annual supplements around 1938 to get collectors to 1940 without having to buy a new album.
--The 1947 was the first edition which dropped Junior from the title; it is otherwise identical to the 1943 edition.
--The 1955, 1964 and 1969 editions eliminated hundreds of stamps and even some countries that had been in the album but also added some stamps not in previous editions.
--The 1979, 1985, and 1991 editions were published in two parts; these dropped even more countries and stamps that had been in previous editions (although again there are a few stamps that appear in these editions for the first time)
--1994. I have not seen this edition so I do not know if it was in two or four parts.
--The 1997 edition was split into four parts and is the one available today from Scott/Amos Publishing. This edition brought back many of the stamps dropped by the two part versions although there are still hundreds of stamps missing that were in the 1969 and earlier editions. Every country and almost all subgroups of issues (e.g., semipostals or airmails) begin on the front of a page to allow easy integration with International volumes 2 and beyond. The quality of reproduction is inferior to earlier editions but the paper is heavier and of archival quality.
I also want to emphasize what is probably the biggest point of confusion for persons coming to the Internationals for the first time. The splitting of the Volume 1 into two and now four parts was a move by Scott to cover increased printing costs or increase their profits or both. It does not mean that they were more comprehensive.
Although not apparent from the above, there were years at a time when Scott allowed various International volumes to go out-of-print. Scott is now using on-demand printing technology which hopefully means the Volume 1 will always be available for purchase, although you might have to wait while your copy is reprinted.
In the future, I will do a post on considerations in choosing an International edition for your collection.
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Thirty Thousand Stamp Blue Volume One for Sale
Before 1940 everyone who collected stamps had a World Wide collection. They may have specialized in US or Great Britain but they maintained a general foreign collection that had been their starter collection and which, for most collectors, was still the major appeal that philately had for them.
Thursday, August 9, 2012
More on Just How Many Stamps Are There?
Below is the table prepared by Mr. Stiles of stamp types by decade from 1840-1930. As the author explains, the rows total correctly across, but the Grand Totals at the bottom don't because there can be overlap between types (i.e., you could have an airmail stamp that was also overprinted and thus is counted in both categories). Mr. Stiles' total of 79,500 at first seemed high to me but he then I remembered he is counting minor as well as major varieties which I certainly didn't do.
1840-49 | 1850-59 | 1860-69 | 1870-79 | 1880-89 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Overprints | 0 | 25 | 606 | 1219 | 3062 |
Air | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Bisects | 5 | 59 | 111 | 70 | 99 |
Commemorative | 0 | 0 | 1 | 4 | 33 |
Inverts | 0 | 13 | 58 | 233 | 458 |
Military | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Newspaper | 0 | 30 | 44 | 142 | 53 |
Occupation | 0 | 0 | 0 | 161 | 43 |
Official | 34 | 59 | 74 | 379 | 561 |
Parcel Post | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 23 |
Pebiscite | 0 | 0 | 0 | 7 | 7 |
Postage Due | 2 | 3 | 82 | 230 | 376 |
Semi-Postal | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Spec'l Deliv'y | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
Tete beche | 8 | 29 | 57 | 53 | 51 |
Registration | 0 | 4 | 10 | 12 | 9 |
War Tax | 0 | 0 | 0 | 33 | 0 |
Grand Total | 181 | 1830 | 4211 | 5010 | 6980 |
1890-99 | 1900-09 | 1910-19 | 1920-30 | Totals | |
Overprints | 4541 | 6390 | 10362 | 10611 | 36,816 |
Air | 0 | 0 | 27 | 965 | 992 |
Bisects | 52 | 19 | 84 | 6 | 505 |
Commemorative | 530 | 396 | 803 | 2680 | 4,447 |
Inverts | 608 | 729 | 1065 | 595 | 3,759 |
Military | 5 | 96 | 204 | 17 | 322 |
Newspaper | 206 | 62 | 195 | 111 | 843 |
Occupation | 4 | 155 | 1847 | 633 | 2,843 |
Official | 1035 | 915 | 908 | 1300 | 5,265 |
Parcel Post | 32 | 109 | 129 | 292 | 585 |
Pebiscite | 0 | 22 | 0 | 453 | 489 |
Postage Due | 657 | 819 | 1164 | 1808 | 5,141 |
Semi-Postal | 16 | 35 | 1017 | 1418 | 2,486 |
Spec'l Deliv'y | 7 | 34 | 78 | 135 | 256 |
Tete beche | 41 | 31 | 39 | 72 | 381 |
Registration | 46 | 59 | 32 | 31 | 203 |
War Tax | 16 | 14 | 198 | 2 | 263 |
Grand Total | 10342 | 13438 | 16470 | 20915 | 79,377 |
Saturday, August 4, 2012
Why stop with the Blues when you can complete the Browns, too?
Now before you stop reading and reach for your checkbook, I should note that there is no U.S. (which I assume also means no Confederate States, Hawaii, et al). And there are at least 600 empty spaces, ranging from expensive rarities to at least a handful of cheap stamps. (What's up with those?)
So I have a few questions. Who is the collector? How many stamps are included (using Keijo's count of worldwide stamps, I assume close to 600,000)? Are there really Minkus albums covering the world in depth? (If I had to guess, I would assume this is some combination of Minkus Specialty albums with their Global/Supreme Global supplements.)
There has been a nice discussion about this on Stampboards.
You can find more information on the collection at the Harmer-Schau website.
If anyone reading this blog buys this collection, please let me know! My guess is that it won't sell whole, but that offering it as such is the first step before breaking it up by country. Maybe if that happens we'll see some photos and learn more.
P.S. I hope to find time to work through the list of the 600 missing stamps and report back here.
Update 8/11/12: I converted the wantlist to Excel so I could more easily play with it and have posted the results in the StampBoard thread linked above. If anyone wants a copy of the Spreadsheet, let me know. Bottom line is that there are more like 1200 stamps missing with a total 2007 catalog value in excess of $5 million USD. Fortunately, there are a couple at 20 cents that I could afford.
Monday, July 23, 2012
Fifty Shades of Blue (and Brown), Part 3
[Previous parts in this series: Part 1, Part 2, Interlude]
By the mid-1940s Scott had sold all remaining stock of the Type A2 Brown albums. As there was no satisfactory substitute for the Browns on the market, out-of-print volumes remained sought after in auctions and other venues. In 1994 the now defunct company Vintage Reproductions of Notre Dame, Indiana, reprinted, with Scott's permission, the albums through mid-1938 on one side of 70-pound acid-free 10" x 11.5" paper. The pages were cut and drilled to fit the "Blue" International Binders making it easy to integrate with subsequent volumes of the "Blue" International Series (Type C).
1994 Volume 1 1840-1900 (815 pages);
1994 Volume 2 covers 1901-1919 (1159 pages);
1994 Volume 3 covers 1920-1929 (1058 pages);
1994 Volume 4, 1930-1934 (799 pages);
1994 Volume 5, 1935-1938 (709 pages);
1996? Volume 6 covers 1939-1940 (612 pages).
I have seen but apparently lost the press release which says when Subway Stamp Company acquired the rights to the albums. They originally sold copies in three versions: one matched the original International paper size punched for two post binders; the second was punched for #3 2-post Scott Speciality album binders, and the third for #3 3-Ring Binders.
While it is possible that the 1939-1940 volume was reproduced from an album edited by Scott, it was never advertised or published as part of its International series. Although it isn't proven, I believe Vintage Reproductions used the last two Scott Annual Albums to cobble together their Volume 6 so collectors could expand the set past 1940 with the "Blue" Internationals. However, I have never seen the annual volume that would have covered stamps through 1940, so I can't be certain that this is what Vintage Reproductions used.
You can purchase the Vintage Reproduction reprints from Subway Stamp Company. You will see examples very rarely on eBay, both with and without stamps.
The easiest way to tell loose pages of the Vintage Reproductions from original Browns is that "Vintage Reproductions Page" is printed in the left hand margin of every page.
Images
(1) Example of the left margin of the Vintage Reproductions
(2) The mysterious Volume 6