1:32, the allied military postage issue was created jointly by the United States and Great Britain for civilian use, in 1943, in allied occupied areas in Italy. 1:55: The French colonial Navigation and Commerce omnibus issue was created in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s for each colony. The colony to which each stamp belongs is identified in the panel under the numeral of value. The black stamp on the left belongs to Guadeloupe. The green stamp on the right is harder to read, but it looks like Senegambia & Niger. 2:55: It is true that German inflation stamps are worth more postally used, than unused. However, due to fact that CTO’s are very common on these issues, expertization is required to prove postal use. CTO’s are valued the same as unused. The mystery stamp at 3:08 is either Yugoslavia Scott 3LJ1 or 3LJ8; depending on the height of the numeral of value. At 4:44, the two stamps on the left (top and bottom) are Peoples Republic of China (East China) 5L62 and 5L63. The stamp on the lower right is Japan 636A. The four characters at the upper right on this stamp is what identifies this stamp as being from Japan. 5:26: The word “comunicaciones” identifies stamps issued from 1870-1899 as being from Spain. Spain did not put the country name on stamps issued during those years. The stamp shown is Spain 166. The 3 bar cancellation was applied to remainders and usually reduces the value of the stamp. 5:59: It is correct that this is a war tax stamp. It is Spain MR5. 6:02. This stamp is Spain 252 and was valid for both postage and telegraph use. It was also issued during the period when Spain didn’t put the country name on its stamps.
An interesting selection. My favorite is the French stamp with a Chinese overprint. The red five at 3:10 is Scott: YU 3LJ1 I believe, an issue from 1919 for Slovenia from the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. I don't know the stamp from 6:15 but it's definitely not Dutch, since it says 'Y telegrafos' and '15 centimos'. My guess is it's Scott #ES 252. An intangible tax is a tax levied on intangible property such as bonds, stocks and savings accounts.
Thank you for taking the time great explanations on the watermarks and the differences in the red or carmine Washington's. Very simple and the close ups helped greatly! Thankyou!
One of the 4 stamps you are identifying as Chinese is actually Japanese - the 30 Yen reddish temple in the lower-left corner. Of the three Japanese stamps in the next batch, the 1-1/2 sen on the left has a nice Nagasaki cancel on it with a clear date of 3.3.17 (year.month.day) which is 3/17/1914. The year dates are from when the emperor took the throne so year 3 of Emperor Taisho is 1914.
can you show us what you throw out? Post more. Also where do people sell valuable stamps. Lets say I find a gem - it seems there are either high end auction houses or ebay....
1:32, the allied military postage issue was created jointly by the United States and Great Britain for civilian use, in 1943, in allied occupied areas in Italy. 1:55: The French colonial Navigation and Commerce omnibus issue was created in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s for each colony. The colony to which each stamp belongs is identified in the panel under the numeral of value. The black stamp on the left belongs to Guadeloupe. The green stamp on the right is harder to read, but it looks like Senegambia & Niger. 2:55: It is true that German inflation stamps are worth more postally used, than unused. However, due to fact that CTO’s are very common on these issues, expertization is required to prove postal use. CTO’s are valued the same as unused. The mystery stamp at 3:08 is either Yugoslavia Scott 3LJ1 or 3LJ8; depending on the height of the numeral of value. At 4:44, the two stamps on the left (top and bottom) are Peoples Republic of China (East China) 5L62 and 5L63. The stamp on the lower right is Japan 636A. The four characters at the upper right on this stamp is what identifies this stamp as being from Japan. 5:26: The word “comunicaciones” identifies stamps issued from 1870-1899 as being from Spain. Spain did not put the country name on stamps issued during those years. The stamp shown is Spain 166. The 3 bar cancellation was applied to remainders and usually reduces the value of the stamp. 5:59: It is correct that this is a war tax stamp. It is Spain MR5. 6:02. This stamp is Spain 252 and was valid for both postage and telegraph use. It was also issued during the period when Spain didn’t put the country name on its stamps.
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Great Easter weekend to you and family a lot off different countries stamps 🇦🇺😎
Great format. love it!
An interesting selection. My favorite is the French stamp with a Chinese overprint.
The red five at 3:10 is Scott: YU 3LJ1 I believe, an issue from 1919 for Slovenia from the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
I don't know the stamp from 6:15 but it's definitely not Dutch, since it says 'Y telegrafos' and '15 centimos'. My guess is it's Scott #ES 252.
An intangible tax is a tax levied on intangible property such as bonds, stocks and savings accounts.
Thank you for taking the time great explanations on the watermarks and the differences in the red or carmine Washington's. Very simple and the close ups helped greatly! Thankyou!
The first unknown stamp is a Jugoslavia postage due for Slovenia, the second is from Bulgaria
excellent postage stamps. there's a lot to choose from.
Awesome video!
Great content mallard thanks
One of the 4 stamps you are identifying as Chinese is actually Japanese - the 30 Yen reddish temple in the lower-left corner.
Of the three Japanese stamps in the next batch, the 1-1/2 sen on the left has a nice Nagasaki cancel on it with a clear date of 3.3.17 (year.month.day) which is 3/17/1914. The year dates are from when the emperor took the throne so year 3 of Emperor Taisho is 1914.
Stocks, bonds, bank accounts for intangible tax. Take care
can you show us what you throw out? Post more. Also where do people sell valuable stamps. Lets say I find a gem - it seems there are either high end auction houses or ebay....
thank yoi for sharing