Lot 526 St. Helena #115-117 1d-3d Myrtle Green - Bright Ultramarine King George VI & Queen Elizabeth, 1937 Coronation Issue, 3 Fine & VFOG/NH Corner Blocks Scarce, As Most Were Broken Up
Lot 526 St. Helena #115-117 1d-3d Myrtle Green - Bright Ultramarine King George VI & Queen Elizabeth, 1937 Coronation Issue, 3 Fine & VFOG/NH Corner Blocks Scarce, As Most Were Broken Up
VFOG/NH corner blocks of the multicoloured King George VI & Queen Elizabeth from the 1937 Coronation Issue scarce, as most were broken up. The blocks are hinged on the bottom 2 stamps and are NH on the top 2 stamps.
2022 Scott Classic values this at $6.9 for VFNH singles. Our estimate of the value for blocks is $12. The blocks offered here grade 70-80 as follows:
Centering/Margins: 40/70, 45/70, 50/70
Paper Freshness: 5/5
Colour: 5/5
Impression: 5/5
Absence of Visible Paper Flaws: 5/5
Perforations: 10/10
The 1937 Coronation Issue common designs were printed by De La Rue and Bradbury Wilkinson. The Perf. 11 stamps are Bradbury Wilkinson and the perf 14 issues are De La Rue. Both printers used several versions of the same ink, so that shades can be found on most of the colours used. The most common colours used by both printers are: dark green, honey brown, carmine red, and ultramarine. These four account for well over half of all the stamps in the set. As a general rule, there is more colour consistency in the stamps printed by Bradbury Wilkinson then there is in the De La Rue stamps, with the De La Rue issues existing usually with 2-3 shades each, which correspond to the three printings made of each set. Gibbons lists only a few of the variations on a couple of the De La Rue sets, being the brown-lake/carmine difference on the Malta issue and the Myrtle green/deep green distinction on the Turks & Caicos set. However, my research into this issue appears to suggest that these differences exist on many of the other colonies as well. There are also a number of plate flaws to be found on this issue, at least some of which are constant. Again, most of these are not listed in Gibbons, but further study should prove to be quite rewarding, as the number of these varieties appears to be quite manageable. In terms of colour, De La Rue's carmine really is more of a red or a scarlet red, with those shades tending towards true carmine being quite scarce. There are many, many shades of the carmine ink. Bradbury's carmine is fairly consistent, but some variations can be found in the amount of red contained in the mix. De La Rue's green varies in the amount of blue contained in it, with the bluish ones being Myrtle and those lacking blue beign a true deep green. Bradbury's green varies mostly in intensity and is generally a Myrtle green. The honey brown shade for both printers varies in the balance between brown and yellow in the shade. Both printer's ultramarine show a high degree of consistency, with De La Rue's generally being brighter and Bradbury's being closer to pure blue and generally duller. Variations of both can be found where there is more blue than ultramarine. The other colours, such as dark browns, violets, purples, oranges, olive yellows, slates, greys and blacks all show variation, and although some appear quite similar, it becomes clear after studying them, that they were intended specifically for the colony on which they were used. So, it is possible that there may exist errors of colour, in which the ink used is the wrong one, but it appears close enough at first glance to go unnoticed. Both the shade variations and the plate varieties are generally quite scarce, and you may have to buy many sets before you find any. This is one of the main reasons, I believe, why little to no specialist research has been done on this issue. As a result, my estimates will often differ quite significantly from the basic Scott values, which are, of course for the common shades, without any plate variety. Generally, shades resulting from different intensities of ink are less scarce, but those that are an entirely different tone or shade are much scarcer and worth much more than the basic stamps.