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Brixton Chrome

Canada #586/593vi 1c-8c Orange - Royal Blue Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II, 1973-1978 Caricature Issue, 12 VF Used Blocks of 4 & 6 With In-Period CDS Town Cancels, Various Papers

Canada #586/593vi 1c-8c Orange - Royal Blue Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II, 1973-1978 Caricature Issue, 12 VF Used Blocks of 4 & 6 With In-Period CDS Town Cancels, Various Papers

Regular price $6.00 CAD
Regular price $10.00 CAD Sale price $6.00 CAD
Sale Sold out

12 VF used blocks of 4 & 6 of the 1c-8c orange - Royal blue Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II from the 1973-1978 Caricature Issue with in-period CDS town cancels, various papers. Includes the following: (1) 1c orange block on contaminated DF paper with moderate tagging and February 10, 1975 Arborg, Man CDS; (2) 2c green on unlisted NF/DF2 vertical ribbed paper with light tagging and February 23, 1977 Rivers Man, CDS; (3) 8c royal blue on MF/MF vertical ribbed paper, with invisible tagging and March 19, 1975 Pincer Creek CDS (4) 1c orange block on NF/NF smooth paper with light tagging; (5) 1c orange block on DF1/DF1 rough paper with moderate tagging; (6) 4c block on DF2/LF smooth paper with moderate tagging, cancelled with March 3, 1977 Delta BC Postal Station A CDS (LL stamp with surface thin); (7) 5c rose lilac UR plate block on DF1/DF2 smooth paper with moderate tagging; (8) 6c deep red block on NF/DF2 horizontal ribbed paper with invisible tagging, cancelled with October 1, 1975 Kamsack, Sask CDS's. (9-10) 8c blocks on NF/DF1 smooth paper with invisible tagging, cancelled with December 9, 1975 Kindersley, Sask and July 27, 1976 Portage La Prairie CDS's; (11) 8c block on HF9/HF9 smooth paper with invisible tagging, cancelled with January 29, 1976 St. Jean Baptiste Man, CDS; (12) 10c UL Plate 1 block on DF1/DF2 smooth paper, with invisible tagging, cancelled with 1987 Woodstock NB CDS.

Unitrade values this at $10. The blocks offered here grade 75-80 as follows:

Centering/Margins: 35/60, 40/60

Paper Freshness: 5/5

Colour: 5/5

Impression: 5/5

Absence of Visible Paper Flaws: 5/5

Perforations: 10/10

Cancellation: 8/10 and 10/10

The low value caricature stamps were printed by both BABN and CBN. BABN produced most printings of the 7c and 8c, and all the booklet stamps. CBN produced all the other stamps. Unitrade has made a good attempt at classifying the printings of these stamps, but there are some fluorescent front/back combinations that are NOT listed. In addition, there are three aspects that they have completely ignored, which deserve attention by specialists. The first of these are shades. Most of the stamps exist in at least two, or sometimes three subtle shades of the basic colours. The second aspect that is worthy of attention is the appearance of the tagging, in terms of how dark the bands are on the stamps in normal light. On the CBN printings, the tagging ranges from light, which is almost invisible, to dark, where the bands are deep brownish yellow. On the BABN printings, the tagging ranges from invisible, to visible but colourless, to azure or rose, where the ink has coloured the taggant. The third aspect, that deserves some study is the paper texture. On the CBN printings, there is smooth paper, which has an almost plate glazed appearance on the print side. Then there is a semi-smooth paper, which is not ribbed, but is somewhat rough on the printed surface. Then, there is the horizontal ribbed paper, that is listed in the catalogue. Then, there is a vertical ribbed paper. The ribbing on this paper is not obvious, but is visible when the paper is viewed through backlighting. The BABN printings exist on this paper also. There is also a vertical ribbed paper on some of the BABN booklets where the ribbing is on the gum only. Finally, there is a vertically ribbed paper with a rough surface, which is most commonly found on the plate 3 printings of the 6c. In terms of pricing, Unitrade is hopeless on this set. There are varieties, such as the 1c on HF paper and the 7c on MF paper that I have NEVER seen before this sale, even after breaking down advanced collections of this issue. In this sale I am offering the first ever example of the 7c on HB paper: one that is mint no gum, and a VF used 1c on HF paper. Then, there are others, such as many of the NF papers, DF papers and HF papers on other values, where you will only find a small handfull after going through hundreds or thousands of stamps. I ask you: how can they be worth 35 cents or 50 cents? By far the most common paper, which will account for 80-90% of the mint stamps is a low fluorescent to MF paper (LF3 to MF6) on both sides. Everything else is scarce to very scarce, and most stamps should really be worth a minimum of $5 per stamp, with some as much as $25 (the 1c HF and 7c MF for example).

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