Commemorative Cover for the Announcement of Engagement Prince William & Kate Middleton
Celebrating the announcement from Clarence House on 16th November 2010 of the engagement of HRH Prince William of Wales and Miss Kate Middleton.
This cover bears the Prince William stamp from the Queen Mother's 100th birthday miniature sheet together with a Buckingham Palace handstamp on the day of the announcement.
Benhams was recently acquired by Stanley Gibbons for GBP 1.5 million - See Article
Source: http://www.benham.co.uk/Products.aspx?G=s&Pcode=ROY10337
Welcome to our Boscastle Supplies Stamp Collecting Blog! This blog supports the biggest online stamp supplies and coin supplies store at www.boscastlesupplies.com. We're greeting visitors from all around the world! On this Web site we're publishing all the latest Stamp Collecting, Philately and Postage Stamp news and information for your enjoyment and hobby interests. Also visit our Web site at www.boscastlesupplies.com for all your stamp collecting supplies and accessories.
Friday, November 19, 2010
Thursday, November 18, 2010
10% off all Stamp Collecting Supplies!! Buy Now For The Holidays!
We have our Annual Stamp Supplies and Accessories Sale now happening at www.boscastlesupplies.com.
You can get 10% off the retail price for stamp albums, stamp album pages and supplements, tongs, stockbooks, mounts, hinges, 2011 catalogues, watermark detectors, perforation gauges, magnifiers and digital microscopes.
We have all the top brands, so we should have something for everyone - Lindner, Lighthouse, Stanley Gibbons, DAVO, SAFE, Unisafe, Hagner, Prinz, ... and many more.
Order now as this offer will close in just a few weeks. Simply apply the special coupon code 2244 when you check out of www.boscastlesuppplies.com and you will save 10% off the retail price! Happy Holidays!
10% off everything at www.boscastlesupplies.com |
You can get 10% off the retail price for stamp albums, stamp album pages and supplements, tongs, stockbooks, mounts, hinges, 2011 catalogues, watermark detectors, perforation gauges, magnifiers and digital microscopes.
We have all the top brands, so we should have something for everyone - Lindner, Lighthouse, Stanley Gibbons, DAVO, SAFE, Unisafe, Hagner, Prinz, ... and many more.
Order now as this offer will close in just a few weeks. Simply apply the special coupon code 2244 when you check out of www.boscastlesuppplies.com and you will save 10% off the retail price! Happy Holidays!
Revival of Stamp Collecting in China
Once banned by Mao Zedong as a bourgeois activity, stamp collecting has become increasingly popular in China in recent years.
While early collectors were from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the international Chinese diaspora, some important Mainland Chinese collectors are today “repatriating” stamps, in the same way that others are bringing back Chinese artworks.
“I would say presently that half of my buyers are from Mainland China and half are from outside China,” said Louis Mangin, owner of the auction house Zurich Asia. “Many Westerners also buy Chinese stamps. It is seen as a diversification and investment into China.”
Mr. Mangin, who has been collecting Chinese stamps for 10 years, said prices had risen strongly in the last two years, though not uniformly.
“The 1960s and 1970s issues have risen on average between 150 percent and 200 percent over the last two years,” he said. “On the other hand, 1930s and 1940s issues have probably risen 50 percent on average over the same period.”
He added that stamps dating from the Qing Dynasty had also risen, on average about 50 percent over the last two years.
A franked version of a 1968 stamp that Robert Schneider, a principal with the auctioneer InterAsia Auctions in Hong Kong, called “the most iconic stamp of the People’s Republic of China,” sold at auction in August for 345,000 Hong Kong dollars, or about $44,500.
The stamp, titled “The Whole Country is Red,” depicts a group of workers holding Mao’s “Little Red Book,’ with a red map of China in the background. It was pulled from circulation on the day it was issued, however, officially because the map omitted the Xisha and Nansha Islands, although probably a more important omission was Taiwan.
Some of the stamps had been sold before the order to pull them came.
Mr. Schneider says that in recent years, rare examples printed during the decade of the Cultural Revolution, from 1966 to 1976, have become the most popular stamps from modern China.
Nick Salter, who runs Philatelic Investor, a British Web site that provides financial advice to stamp collectors, confirmed that the Cultural Revolution era was in particular demand. “Very broadly,” Mr. Salter said, “the Chinese appear to be buying as collectors, whereas Westerners are more likely to be buying for investment, in the anticipation that they can sell on into the Chinese market at a later date.”
China’s first stamps, the “Large Dragons,” were printed in Shanghai in 1878 when the city was controlled by foreigners. The stamps were inscribed “China” in Latin letters and Chinese characters, and denominated in candareens, a unit of weight then used to describe a unit of imperial currency.
A set of the three basic stamps from this first issue would sell at auction now for less than $1,000, Mr. Schneider said. In contrast, the most sought-after stamps from the Qing Dynasty era, which lasted until 1911 — the 1897 “Red Revenues” — can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
In 1897, China changed its currency: but new stamps ordered from Japan failed to arrive on time, Mr. Schneider said, so the government overprinted some unissued “3 cent” Red Revenue stamps with the new currency.
One of this series, called the “Small One Dollar” because a “1 dollar” value is also marked in smaller type, is today acknowledged as the rarest of all regular-issued Chinese stamps. Only 32 recorded copies are in existence, one of which sold in January at Interasia for 5.52 million Hong Kong dollars, a world record for a Chinese stamp.
Collecting stamps dating from the Qing Dynasty tends to appeal to more traditional, “classic stamp” collectors, Mr. Schneider said, and “many often require a little bit more expertise and knowledge.”
Mr. Mangin recommends that new collectors buy the older imperial issues from the Qing period, which he says are underpriced compared with modern stamps, issued from 1949 onward.
“I estimate that the market capitalization of the older issues is 1 percent of the modern issues,” he said, “and they therefore have the potential to rise tenfold very easily.”
But Mr. Schneider notes that the modern Chinese stamps have bolder colors and designs that are more interesting, often depicting historic events or popular themes like animals and landscapes “and thus have strong appeal to new collectors.”
Stamps printed by the People’s Republic of China started with a four-stamp set in October 1949, depicting a lantern and the Gate of Heavenly Peace.
Today, the most coveted Chinese stamps of the period are those dating from the early years of the Cultural Revolution, which are somewhat pricier than the later Cultural Revolution issues.
The colorful stamps from that period, often depicting patriotic scenes, were printed in great numbers and most remain relatively inexpensive. But four unissued stamps, now known as the Four Treasures, can fetch six-figure dollar prices at auction. One of them, the 1968 “Great Victory of Cultural Revolution” stamp, shows Mao with his then-ally, and later enemy, the Communist military leader Lin Biao. It sold for 900,000 Hong Kong dollars at Interasia’s summer auction on July 31 and Aug.1.
Some more recent issues are also highly sought, including those related to the animals of the Chinese zodiac. A complete sheet of 80 “Year of the Monkey” stamps from 1980 went for a record 1.265 million Hong Kong dollars at the same sale, “a remarkable price for a regularly issued stamp only from the last 30 years,” Mr. Schneider said.
The black monkey on a red background, a color seen as auspicious in Chinese culture, was issued in the year of the Golden Monkey, a particularly lucky year in the Chinese zodiac that comes around only once every 60 years.
“It’s hard to say what will increase in value over time,” Mr. Schneider said, “but one rule of thumb is that common stamps will always remain common.” He added, “The condition of the stamps is also an important factor.”
Asian stamp collectors face two main problems: humidity and forgery. If exposed to humidity, stamps may rust or oxidize, “what we call ‘toning’ in philately,” Mr. Mangin said.
Keeping them dry, he said, “can be achieved with a dehumidifier or placing salt bags in the safe or cupboard where the stamps are stored.”
Forgery is a big problem for investment-grade stamps, especially when traded on the Internet.
“A lot of forgeries are made in China,” Mr. Mangin said, “but the experts can generally spot them easily. It is very difficult to replicate stamps that are 100 years old because the type of paper, inking and printers no longer exist.”
“However, there are forgeries of the 1980 Red Monkey that I can barely distinguish,” he said. “These fakes are printed with paper and ink which are still available today! However, the fakes have not dented the rise in price of the genuine.”
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/19/fashion/19iht-acagstamp.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1
While early collectors were from Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the international Chinese diaspora, some important Mainland Chinese collectors are today “repatriating” stamps, in the same way that others are bringing back Chinese artworks.
“I would say presently that half of my buyers are from Mainland China and half are from outside China,” said Louis Mangin, owner of the auction house Zurich Asia. “Many Westerners also buy Chinese stamps. It is seen as a diversification and investment into China.”
Mr. Mangin, who has been collecting Chinese stamps for 10 years, said prices had risen strongly in the last two years, though not uniformly.
“The 1960s and 1970s issues have risen on average between 150 percent and 200 percent over the last two years,” he said. “On the other hand, 1930s and 1940s issues have probably risen 50 percent on average over the same period.”
He added that stamps dating from the Qing Dynasty had also risen, on average about 50 percent over the last two years.
A franked version of a 1968 stamp that Robert Schneider, a principal with the auctioneer InterAsia Auctions in Hong Kong, called “the most iconic stamp of the People’s Republic of China,” sold at auction in August for 345,000 Hong Kong dollars, or about $44,500.
The stamp, titled “The Whole Country is Red,” depicts a group of workers holding Mao’s “Little Red Book,’ with a red map of China in the background. It was pulled from circulation on the day it was issued, however, officially because the map omitted the Xisha and Nansha Islands, although probably a more important omission was Taiwan.
Some of the stamps had been sold before the order to pull them came.
Mr. Schneider says that in recent years, rare examples printed during the decade of the Cultural Revolution, from 1966 to 1976, have become the most popular stamps from modern China.
Nick Salter, who runs Philatelic Investor, a British Web site that provides financial advice to stamp collectors, confirmed that the Cultural Revolution era was in particular demand. “Very broadly,” Mr. Salter said, “the Chinese appear to be buying as collectors, whereas Westerners are more likely to be buying for investment, in the anticipation that they can sell on into the Chinese market at a later date.”
China’s first stamps, the “Large Dragons,” were printed in Shanghai in 1878 when the city was controlled by foreigners. The stamps were inscribed “China” in Latin letters and Chinese characters, and denominated in candareens, a unit of weight then used to describe a unit of imperial currency.
A set of the three basic stamps from this first issue would sell at auction now for less than $1,000, Mr. Schneider said. In contrast, the most sought-after stamps from the Qing Dynasty era, which lasted until 1911 — the 1897 “Red Revenues” — can sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
In 1897, China changed its currency: but new stamps ordered from Japan failed to arrive on time, Mr. Schneider said, so the government overprinted some unissued “3 cent” Red Revenue stamps with the new currency.
One of this series, called the “Small One Dollar” because a “1 dollar” value is also marked in smaller type, is today acknowledged as the rarest of all regular-issued Chinese stamps. Only 32 recorded copies are in existence, one of which sold in January at Interasia for 5.52 million Hong Kong dollars, a world record for a Chinese stamp.
Collecting stamps dating from the Qing Dynasty tends to appeal to more traditional, “classic stamp” collectors, Mr. Schneider said, and “many often require a little bit more expertise and knowledge.”
Mr. Mangin recommends that new collectors buy the older imperial issues from the Qing period, which he says are underpriced compared with modern stamps, issued from 1949 onward.
“I estimate that the market capitalization of the older issues is 1 percent of the modern issues,” he said, “and they therefore have the potential to rise tenfold very easily.”
But Mr. Schneider notes that the modern Chinese stamps have bolder colors and designs that are more interesting, often depicting historic events or popular themes like animals and landscapes “and thus have strong appeal to new collectors.”
Stamps printed by the People’s Republic of China started with a four-stamp set in October 1949, depicting a lantern and the Gate of Heavenly Peace.
Today, the most coveted Chinese stamps of the period are those dating from the early years of the Cultural Revolution, which are somewhat pricier than the later Cultural Revolution issues.
The colorful stamps from that period, often depicting patriotic scenes, were printed in great numbers and most remain relatively inexpensive. But four unissued stamps, now known as the Four Treasures, can fetch six-figure dollar prices at auction. One of them, the 1968 “Great Victory of Cultural Revolution” stamp, shows Mao with his then-ally, and later enemy, the Communist military leader Lin Biao. It sold for 900,000 Hong Kong dollars at Interasia’s summer auction on July 31 and Aug.1.
Some more recent issues are also highly sought, including those related to the animals of the Chinese zodiac. A complete sheet of 80 “Year of the Monkey” stamps from 1980 went for a record 1.265 million Hong Kong dollars at the same sale, “a remarkable price for a regularly issued stamp only from the last 30 years,” Mr. Schneider said.
The black monkey on a red background, a color seen as auspicious in Chinese culture, was issued in the year of the Golden Monkey, a particularly lucky year in the Chinese zodiac that comes around only once every 60 years.
“It’s hard to say what will increase in value over time,” Mr. Schneider said, “but one rule of thumb is that common stamps will always remain common.” He added, “The condition of the stamps is also an important factor.”
Asian stamp collectors face two main problems: humidity and forgery. If exposed to humidity, stamps may rust or oxidize, “what we call ‘toning’ in philately,” Mr. Mangin said.
Keeping them dry, he said, “can be achieved with a dehumidifier or placing salt bags in the safe or cupboard where the stamps are stored.”
Forgery is a big problem for investment-grade stamps, especially when traded on the Internet.
“A lot of forgeries are made in China,” Mr. Mangin said, “but the experts can generally spot them easily. It is very difficult to replicate stamps that are 100 years old because the type of paper, inking and printers no longer exist.”
“However, there are forgeries of the 1980 Red Monkey that I can barely distinguish,” he said. “These fakes are printed with paper and ink which are still available today! However, the fakes have not dented the rise in price of the genuine.”
Source: http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/19/fashion/19iht-acagstamp.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Noble Investments buys assets of stamp dealer Leo Baresch
Coin and stamp dealer Noble Investments has bought the stamp inventory, reference library and client database of Leo Baresch Ltd for an undisclosed sum, to be funded from its current cash balance.
Noble says Leo Baresch is probably the foremost British dealer in Swiss, Austrian and Liechtenstein stamps. It was formed in the 1990s following the death of founder Leo Baresch, who had been dealing since the 1950s.
Noble MD Ian Goldbart said the assets would be absorbed into the company's stamp division, Apex Philatelics, enhancing its stamp inventory and enlarging its customer database.
Story provided by StockMarketWire.com http://www.nobleinvestmentsplc.com/index.lasso
Noble says Leo Baresch is probably the foremost British dealer in Swiss, Austrian and Liechtenstein stamps. It was formed in the 1990s following the death of founder Leo Baresch, who had been dealing since the 1950s.
Noble MD Ian Goldbart said the assets would be absorbed into the company's stamp division, Apex Philatelics, enhancing its stamp inventory and enlarging its customer database.
Story provided by StockMarketWire.com http://www.nobleinvestmentsplc.com/index.lasso
Monday, November 15, 2010
1847 china japan gold traders stamp sold for 1.6 million dollars in Nepal
First non-governmental issued stamp, World's First private stamp printed in the year 1847 sold for a big 1.6 million dollars per stamp in NEPAL! Only 10 stamps known to be in existence worldwide which makes it more rare...
A very rare and oldest stamp dated 1847 'China Japan gold traders stamp' was sold for US $1600000 i.e 1.6 million dollars in Thamel, Nepal on 13 November 2010.
These stamps were recently discovered in January 2010 from Dr Philip Presley collection in London and are considered as world's most valuable and rare stamps.Only 10 copies of those stamps are said to be available in existence worldwide which makes it more rare and expensive.
A buyer from Spain purchased it from a local stamp store for a price of 1.6 million dollars in Thamel, Nepal. Thamel is a top tourist spot destination in Kathmandu, Nepal here everyday thousands of tourist comes to visit, roam, purchase antiques, arts and precious collectibles.
According to Dr Presley who is also a member of philately society in UK reports-"In the year 1847 China and Japan gold traders printed 15 stamps for gold postage to and from China/Japan. 5 stamps were used by the gold traders after which the use of stamp was immediately stopped and was never used again".
Also, this stamp is world's first private and non-governmental stamp ever issued or printed in stamps history worldwide.
Source: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7335982-1847-china-japan-gold-traders-stamp-sold-for-16-million-dollars-in-nepal
A very rare and oldest stamp dated 1847 'China Japan gold traders stamp' was sold for US $1600000 i.e 1.6 million dollars in Thamel, Nepal on 13 November 2010.
These stamps were recently discovered in January 2010 from Dr Philip Presley collection in London and are considered as world's most valuable and rare stamps.Only 10 copies of those stamps are said to be available in existence worldwide which makes it more rare and expensive.
A buyer from Spain purchased it from a local stamp store for a price of 1.6 million dollars in Thamel, Nepal. Thamel is a top tourist spot destination in Kathmandu, Nepal here everyday thousands of tourist comes to visit, roam, purchase antiques, arts and precious collectibles.
According to Dr Presley who is also a member of philately society in UK reports-"In the year 1847 China and Japan gold traders printed 15 stamps for gold postage to and from China/Japan. 5 stamps were used by the gold traders after which the use of stamp was immediately stopped and was never used again".
Also, this stamp is world's first private and non-governmental stamp ever issued or printed in stamps history worldwide.
Source: http://www.allvoices.com/contributed-news/7335982-1847-china-japan-gold-traders-stamp-sold-for-16-million-dollars-in-nepal
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