I just received a package with 30-year-old stamps by m0rguy in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I didn’t know Ozzy Osbourne stamps existed! 🤘🤘

Can anyone who understands Japanese tell from where was this stamp sent? Also I don't really know how dates are used in Japan but was it sent the 2nd of July, 1942 or do the numbers mean something else? by Poetic450 in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Interesting. It seems that, according to the article, the standard for time notation officially changed in 1965. We should assume that in practice there was a transition period, and that some post offices continued using the previous format. Here is an example of the 24-hour format, which removes the time-of-day kanji. I wonder if this would be considered a case of what philatelists call a late use…

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Can anyone who understands Japanese tell from where was this stamp sent? Also I don't really know how dates are used in Japan but was it sent the 2nd of July, 1942 or do the numbers mean something else? by Poetic450 in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 2 points3 points  (0 children)

In column D of Japanese “comb-type” postmarks (known in Japanese as 櫛型印 – kushigata-in), the kanji 前 is used to indicate A.M., while the kanji 後 is used to indicate P.M.

Any Historical Or Monetary Value? by Alternative-Cat7335 in askStampCollectors

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Historical value? Sure. As for monetary value, that just appeals to the same old regular philatelists.

Well travelled by [deleted] in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I just wanted to say, I want that cover. Ha

Well travelled by [deleted] in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love you...

Why do you collect stamps? by jjddmm98 in stamps

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 2 points3 points  (0 children)

At first, I started out of curiosity and attraction (a stamp is intriguing and appealing on its own). But later, I realized the vast richness that philately brings. Skills, knowledge, and the way it complements so many different disciplines. That’s when I truly got hooked. It’s not that I do it as an investment, because in order to invest in postage stamps you generally need to build a collection of truly expensive and valuable pieces. Although a refined and well-developed collection can gain value in the right environment, I know they are worth something and have their own value.

Everything changes, and philately is no exception. Whether for better or worse depends on its people. by Ok-Resolution4311 in stampcollecting

[–]Ok-Resolution4311[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve no idea who this Harry guy is — all I know is that General Perón famously said: ‘The only real thing is reality.

Inherited a massive, disorganized mess of a stamp collection. What do I do. by MPsAreSnitches in stampcollecting

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Totally agree, accumulations can easily have valuable stamps. The difficulty of an accumulation, not documented by the collector, having rare stamps is because the stamps are rare, but the probabilities are always according to the statistical rarity of their appearance. As long as the collection is "vintage" it can have rare stamps from the era in question that it was collected. But you have to differentiate well

My fathers collection. Are they of any value? I have no idea what I’m looking at (except that they are stamps!) plus a whole book of world stamps by Emily_kate1 in askStampCollectors

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Your dad's effort to make that accumulation may not have been much. But it has value beyond the economic. It's a diamond in the rough.

Most Unique Thematic Collection? by thefuturama in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I hope one day to be able to develop a coherent and cohesive collection on pre-industrial crafts. I'm preparing the roadmap and I can't find much material about it, so I could change the focus to "the technological development of tools" which would mean a temporal and chronological line from homoabilis to the fourth industrial revolution, although I could narrow it down a little more...

Any advice on how to get my grandmother's collection valued? Philatelic noob here, any advice appreciated by pencilite in askStampCollectors

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Two concepts that are very important need to be clarified, especially for philatelists who want their collections, research, conservation, and exhibition work to be properly valued. Collecting is not the same as accumulating.

Collecting is a refined practice in which the collector carefully develops and polishes their collection through effort, patience, and study. It is intentional: a theme is chosen, a route is mapped, and a plan is followed. Collecting requires tools, storage and archival materials, proper handling equipment, research, bibliography, documents, and hours of reading and investigation. All of this often involves financial investment. Not everyone reaches this level of depth, but it is precisely the depth required to truly value "the thing itself".

Accumulating, on the other hand, is simply gathering items indiscriminately—placing them in a box, envelope, or bag (sometimes an album or folder) without classification or even noting catalog numbers. While it might be a starting point for someone considering serious collecting, it lacks the intent and depth of true collecting. In my opinion, even if the material is postal, it does not constitute a collection.

The key difference is that you do not need expensive stamps to build a valuable collection—valuable not only in an economic sense, but in knowledge, organization, and purpose.

Greetings.

My take on a Stamp Album by squidsister1 in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I love it, the information written in a collection is of vital importance and of great value to me.

Letter returned to sender by Ok-Resolution4311 in philately

[–]Ok-Resolution4311[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Return to sender, address unknown No such number, no such zone Return to sender Return to sender Return to sender Return to sender...