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Overprint

An overprint is an additional layer of text or graphics added to the face of a postage or revenue stamp, postal stationery, banknote or ticket after it has been printed.[2][3] Post offices most often use overprints for internal administrative purposes such as accounting but they are also employed in public mail. Well-recognized varieties include commemorative overprints which are produced for their public appeal and command significant interest in the field of philately.[4]

Overprinted Iranian banknote with the seal of the Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, which was printed after the 1979 revolution in Iran
An 1897 Chinese Red Revenue stamp overprinted with small "one dollar" characters was sold for HK$ 6.9 million in 2013.[1]
France, 1929: Commemorative overprint for the Philatelic Exposition in Le Havre

Surcharges edit

The term "surcharge" in philately describes any type of overprint that alters the price of a stamp.[5] Surcharges raise or lower the face value of existing stamps when prices have changed too quickly to produce an appropriate new issue, or simply to use up surplus stocks.

Any overprint which restates a stamp's face value in a new currency is also described as a surcharge.[5] Some postal systems have resorted to surcharge overprints when converting to a new national monetary system, such as Sierra Leone did when the British Commonwealth converted to decimal currency in the 1960s.[6]

Stamps have occasionally been overprinted multiple times. A famous example of repeated surcharging happened during the German hyperinflation of 1921–1923. Prices rose so fast and dramatically that postage stamps which cost five or ten pfennigs in 1920 were overprinted for sale in the values of thousands, millions, and eventually billions of marks.[7]

Commemorative overprints edit

Overprints have often been used as commemoratives, providing a faster and lower-cost alternative to designing and issuing special stamps or postmarks. The United States, which historically has issued relatively few commemorative overprints, did this in 1928 for issues celebrating Molly Pitcher and the discovery of Hawaii. British stamps heralding the 1966 FIFA World Cup were reissued after England's victory with the overprint "England Winners". Similarly, Guyana issued a set of 32 stamps showing team pictures of all the participants in the 1998 World Cup – after the tournament eight of these were reissued with an overprint announcing France's win.

In some rare cases, commemorative overprints have been applied to souvenir sheets. When these postal commodities are overprinted, they are always very carefully positioned for aesthetic appeal, usually on the blank outer border ("selvage") of the paper.

Change of function overprints edit

Regular stamps were also overprinted to indicate exclusive usage for a special function or combination of functions; intended for airmail, official mail, newspapers, postage due, special delivery, telegraph and so on. The official stamps of some countries like Great Britain had an overprint which defined the specific official usage; for inland revenue, government parcels, office of works, military, admiralty, war tax (see below). The opposite occurs as well, in this case special function stamps are overprinted to serve as regular stamps.

Security measures edit

Overprints have been used as security measures to deter misuse and theft.[8] In the nineteenth century, Mexico was plagued by thefts of stamps on their way to remote post offices. To address this, stamps were shipped from Mexico City to the local districts where they were overprinted with the district name – they were not valid for postage without the overprint.

In El Salvador a significant quantity of stamps was stolen from the San Salvador post office in 1874. As a result all remaining stock was officially overprinted 'Contrasello' preventing usage of the non-overprinted stamps.[9]

The United States used a similar strategy to deal with thefts in Kansas and Nebraska in 1929, overprinting the current definitive issue with "Kans." and "Nebr." before they were shipped from Washington, to make it more difficult to sell stolen stamps outside the indicated state.

Colonial overprints edit

Nations overprinted stamps for use in their colonies mainly for the same reasons as for their domestic use. Due to poor planning, supply problems, faster than anticipated changing postal rates, changes in currency or other reasons they ran out of stamps, and demand had to be met. Some overprints were used to establish the first stage of postal service in a new territorial possession or colony however. If preparations had not been made, the controlling nation's regular homeland stamps would be overprinted with a local name, local currency or 'abroad' indication. In a similar fashion a nation's domestic stamps may be overprinted for use in foreign post offices under that power's control. For example, from 1919 to 1922 the United States overprinted 18 postage stamps at double value and marked for its office in Shanghai, China.

Provisional overprints edit

Provisional stamps are postage issue made for temporary ad hoc usage to meet demands until regular issues are reintroduced.[10]

Transitional government overprints edit

New states or states in transition have sometimes found it necessary to recirculate stocks of stamps printed by a previous government. Some historical perspective may be gleaned from the study of such stamps: some transitional government overprints blend neatly with their predecessors' designs, while others attempt to totally obscure or even deface the older markings. In several European nations in 1944–45, Nazi occupational stamps were overprinted for the provisional governments, and those which depicted Adolf Hitler were most heavily overprinted, obliterating his face.

Wartime overprints edit

During times of war, many nations have issued war tax stamps. Before new stamps could be printed, older stamps were frequently overprinted with surcharges or a simple inscription such as "War Tax".

In actual combat zones, the replenishment of stamp stocks is generally low on a military's list of priorities. In contested or occupied areas, captured local stamps are often expediently overprinted by the occupying forces.

Precancels edit

Any stamp that is cancelled by postal authorities before it is sold is described as "precancelled":[13] the precancellation mark is an overprint. This is usually only done when stamps are sold in large bulk quantities to businesses or other large organizations: the postal service will save the labor of cancelling each individual stamp by precancelling the entire purchased quantity.[14] The overprints also help prevent theft or misuse because they usually include the name of the city or region in which they are to be used. Unlike standard cancellation marks, they usually do not give a specific date, affording the bulk purchaser time to use them at their discretion. In some situations, however, months or years may be included in the overprint to indicate an expiration.

Precancels for official government use are fastidiously prepared, but other kinds are almost always "heavy cancels" which deliberately obliterate much of a stamp's design.

Since the 1980s, many modern postal systems no longer use overprints to indicate bulk purchases. Bulk mail is franked using barcodes on pre-printed envelopes or on blank adhesive labels. The USPS introduced a new standard of barcode cancellation in 2011.

Private overprints edit

Any overprint that does not originate from a stamp-issuing authority is considered a private overprint or private cancellation. Such overprints almost always invalidate a stamp for postal use. Most countries treat unofficial overprints the same way the United States Post Office does: the USPS Domestic Mail Manual states that stamps "overprinted with an unauthorized design, message or other marking" are not valid for postage.[15]

Private overprints generally remain outside the formal realm of philately, although individual issues can achieve notoriety through their popularity or aesthetic appeal. Private overprints are typically political messages or commercial promotion, but can also originate from speculative philatelic purposes produced deliberately with a view to selling them to unsuspecting collectors.

Stamps owned by commercial entities have sometimes privately overprinted the backs of their purchased stamps. These overprints are usually made as control marks or accounting information. Such overprinting does not invalidate a stamp unless it shows through the front.

Specimen overprints edit

Some stamps are never valid for postal use. They are made for use in promotional displays or as reference material by postal authorities and the Universal Postal Union (UPU). Still others are manufactured by printers for color matching throughout successive printings. In all such cases, the stamps will display the word "specimen" (or "cancelled") on its face. Occasionally, the word may be uniquely handwritten by a postal authority or, much more elaborately, punched through the stamp paper in a method known as perfin. Most often, though, specimen markings are applied as a prominent overprint.[5]

Overprints on currency edit

The design and printing of valid paper currency is rarely done hastily and overprints are extremely rare, but in times of crisis such measures have been taken. After World War I, the various successor states of the Austro-Hungarian Empire made multilingual overprints to their old Imperial currency until new notes could be designed and circulated.

Currency overprints were also used during World War II to mark all United States dollars in the Hawaiian islands. These Hawaii overprint notes were made in case the islands were captured and the invading forces gained control of the money.[16]

The Haitian Gourde was overprinted after the unexpectedly rapid fall of the Baby Doc Duvalier regime.[17] The overprint consisted of a red circle with a slash across it with the date of the end of the Duvalier regime (7 February 1986) printed below in red. The brusque symbol obscured the images of Baby Doc and Papa Doc until they were replaced with images of figures from Haitian history. Something similar was done in Iran in 1979 when the Shah's picture was covered by an intricate design.

Overprint errors edit

Overprint errors are widespread. Known are double, inverted, misspelled, wrong, partly or entirely missing overprints.

See also edit

References and sources edit

References
  1. ^ "1897 Red Revenue Small One Dollar" stamp sells for $970,000 at auction". News.com.au. 3 July 2013.
  2. ^ Reinfeld, p. 36.
  3. ^ Williams & Williams, p. 256.
  4. ^ Klug, Janet (3 June 2002). "Surcharges and overprints make a difference". Linn's. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  5. ^ a b c Williams & Williams, p. 258.
  6. ^ Klug, Janet (2008). Guide to Stamp Collecting. New York: HarperCollins. p. 45. ISBN 9780061341397.
  7. ^ Schenk, Robert (2011). "A Case of Inflation". Saint Joseph's College Economics Dept. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  8. ^ Williams & Williams, p. 253.
  9. ^ Gallegos, GF (2002). "El Salvador Handbook - Chapter 3: 1874 - 'Contrasello' Issue". Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  10. ^ Miller, Rick (2011). . Linn's World Stamp Almanac. Archived from the original on 25 June 2008. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  11. ^ Ceresa, Dr. R.J. (May 1986). The Postage Stamps of Russia, 1917-23. Vol. 2. Ukraine. Part 9/13. The Trident Issues of Kyiv Types I, II and II. Russian Philatelic Desk Top Publications, Felpham, Great Britain. p. 170. ASIN B0007BFS90.
  12. ^ Ceresa, Dr. R.J. (August 1978). The Postage Stamps of Russia, 1917-23. Vol. 1. Armenia. Part 3. The Large sized Framed HP Monogram Overprints. Russian Philatelic Desk Top Publications, Felpham, Great Britain. pp. 62–63. ASIN B0007BFS90.
  13. ^ Reinfeld, p.37.
  14. ^ Williams & Williams, p. 257.
  15. ^ USPS (2010). "Domestic Mail Manual" (PDF). United States Postal Service. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  16. ^ "Bills Stamped with Hawaii". Infoplease. 1944-10-21. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  17. ^ "Haitian Currency". Traveling Haiti.com. 2011. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
Sources
  • Reinfeld, F. (1976). Stamp Collectors' Handbook. USA: Doubleday. ISBN 0-385-11682-9.
  • Williams, L.N.; Williams, M. (1956). The Postage Stamp: Its History and Recognition. UK: Pelican Books. OCLC 3269097.
  • GBOS. Bogus overprints. Website Great Britain Overprints Society. Online article

External links edit

  • The GB Overprints Society, specializing in British overprints
  • Alphabetilately, essay on postal overprints

overprint, this, article, about, overprints, stamps, currency, term, printing, overprinting, other, uses, disambiguation, overprint, additional, layer, text, graphics, added, face, postage, revenue, stamp, postal, stationery, banknote, ticket, after, been, pri. This article is about overprints on stamps and currency For the use of the term in printing see overprinting For other uses see Overprint disambiguation An overprint is an additional layer of text or graphics added to the face of a postage or revenue stamp postal stationery banknote or ticket after it has been printed 2 3 Post offices most often use overprints for internal administrative purposes such as accounting but they are also employed in public mail Well recognized varieties include commemorative overprints which are produced for their public appeal and command significant interest in the field of philately 4 Overprinted Iranian banknote with the seal of the Mohammad Reza Pahlavi which was printed after the 1979 revolution in IranAn 1897 Chinese Red Revenue stamp overprinted with small one dollar characters was sold for HK 6 9 million in 2013 1 France 1929 Commemorative overprint for the Philatelic Exposition in Le Havre Contents 1 Surcharges 2 Commemorative overprints 3 Change of function overprints 4 Security measures 5 Colonial overprints 6 Provisional overprints 6 1 Transitional government overprints 6 2 Wartime overprints 7 Precancels 8 Private overprints 9 Specimen overprints 10 Overprints on currency 11 Overprint errors 12 See also 13 References and sources 14 External linksSurcharges editThe term surcharge in philately describes any type of overprint that alters the price of a stamp 5 Surcharges raise or lower the face value of existing stamps when prices have changed too quickly to produce an appropriate new issue or simply to use up surplus stocks Any overprint which restates a stamp s face value in a new currency is also described as a surcharge 5 Some postal systems have resorted to surcharge overprints when converting to a new national monetary system such as Sierra Leone did when the British Commonwealth converted to decimal currency in the 1960s 6 Stamps have occasionally been overprinted multiple times A famous example of repeated surcharging happened during the German hyperinflation of 1921 1923 Prices rose so fast and dramatically that postage stamps which cost five or ten pfennigs in 1920 were overprinted for sale in the values of thousands millions and eventually billions of marks 7 nbsp Victoria 1873 Penny stamp overprinted to new value of halfpenny nbsp Guatemala 1881 1 centavo surcharge on 1 4 real nbsp Ceylon 1888 Stamp surcharged by a double inverted overprint nbsp Uruguay 1892 1c provisional surcharge on 20c issue of 1889 1901 nbsp Russia 1919 Tsarist 3 kopeck overprinted to new value of 50 kopecks for use in Siberia nbsp Germany 1923 Five thousand mark value overprinted to two millionCommemorative overprints editOverprints have often been used as commemoratives providing a faster and lower cost alternative to designing and issuing special stamps or postmarks The United States which historically has issued relatively few commemorative overprints did this in 1928 for issues celebrating Molly Pitcher and the discovery of Hawaii British stamps heralding the 1966 FIFA World Cup were reissued after England s victory with the overprint England Winners Similarly Guyana issued a set of 32 stamps showing team pictures of all the participants in the 1998 World Cup after the tournament eight of these were reissued with an overprint announcing France s win In some rare cases commemorative overprints have been applied to souvenir sheets When these postal commodities are overprinted they are always very carefully positioned for aesthetic appeal usually on the blank outer border selvage of the paper nbsp Hong Kong 1891 Definitive postage stamp overprinted to commemorate the 50th anniversary of British administration nbsp United States 1928 The mythic American revolutionary war hero Molly Pitcher was honored with an overprint nbsp Soviet Union 1935 Aviator Sigizmund Levanevsky with red overprint for his North Pole flight August 1935 Also includes 1 rouble surcharge nbsp Soviet Union 1945 Overprint marking Victory Day nbsp Great Britain 1957 For use in UK postal agencies in Morocco commemorating the centenary of the British postal office in Tangier nbsp Peru 1957 re use of 1948 London Olympic stamps to commemorate Melbourne 1956Change of function overprints editRegular stamps were also overprinted to indicate exclusive usage for a special function or combination of functions intended for airmail official mail newspapers postage due special delivery telegraph and so on The official stamps of some countries like Great Britain had an overprint which defined the specific official usage for inland revenue government parcels office of works military admiralty war tax see below The opposite occurs as well in this case special function stamps are overprinted to serve as regular stamps nbsp Malta 1899 5s 1886 issue overprinted Revenue nbsp Great Britain 1900 British 1 2d stamp overprinted ARMY TELEGRAPHS nbsp Nicaragua 1901 A postage due stamp overprinted for use as regular stamp nbsp Austria 1918 Austro Hungarian Empire stamps overprinted FLUGPOST for airmail Also surcharged nbsp Soviet Union 1924 regular 1918 issue overprinted DOPLATA for postal duty Also 1 kopeck surcharge nbsp Great Britain 1942 British 2d stamp overprinted M E F Middle Eastern Forces for military use nbsp Soviet Union 1944 regular 30 kopeck stamp overprinted AVIAPOCHTA for airmail and value increased to 1 rubleSecurity measures editOverprints have been used as security measures to deter misuse and theft 8 In the nineteenth century Mexico was plagued by thefts of stamps on their way to remote post offices To address this stamps were shipped from Mexico City to the local districts where they were overprinted with the district name they were not valid for postage without the overprint In El Salvador a significant quantity of stamps was stolen from the San Salvador post office in 1874 As a result all remaining stock was officially overprinted Contrasello preventing usage of the non overprinted stamps 9 The United States used a similar strategy to deal with thefts in Kansas and Nebraska in 1929 overprinting the current definitive issue with Kans and Nebr before they were shipped from Washington to make it more difficult to sell stolen stamps outside the indicated state nbsp Mexico 1856 Guanajuato district overprint nbsp El Salvador 1874 Contrasello overprint nbsp Great Britain Victorian stamps of 1891 overprinted for use only on government parcels nbsp United States 1929 Kansas state overprint nbsp Germany 1948 Allied control mark for Berlin postageColonial overprints editNations overprinted stamps for use in their colonies mainly for the same reasons as for their domestic use Due to poor planning supply problems faster than anticipated changing postal rates changes in currency or other reasons they ran out of stamps and demand had to be met Some overprints were used to establish the first stage of postal service in a new territorial possession or colony however If preparations had not been made the controlling nation s regular homeland stamps would be overprinted with a local name local currency or abroad indication In a similar fashion a nation s domestic stamps may be overprinted for use in foreign post offices under that power s control For example from 1919 to 1922 the United States overprinted 18 postage stamps at double value and marked for its office in Shanghai China nbsp Italy 1874 Overprinted ESTERO abroad for use in the Italian post offices abroad nbsp Austria 1886 Local currency para overprint for the Austrian post offices in the Ottoman Empire due to transition from Soldi to Piaster currency nbsp United States 1899 postage due stamp overprinted for use in Puerto Rico nbsp United States 1899 overprinted for use in Guam nbsp Germany 1900 Overprinted for use in Caroline Islands nbsp United States 1903 Overprinted for use in the Philippines nbsp France 1923 Overprinted for use in Syria nbsp India 1937 Overprinted for use in Burma nbsp Great Britain 1957 Overprinted for use in QatarProvisional overprints editProvisional stamps are postage issue made for temporary ad hoc usage to meet demands until regular issues are reintroduced 10 Transitional government overprints edit New states or states in transition have sometimes found it necessary to recirculate stocks of stamps printed by a previous government Some historical perspective may be gleaned from the study of such stamps some transitional government overprints blend neatly with their predecessors designs while others attempt to totally obscure or even deface the older markings In several European nations in 1944 45 Nazi occupational stamps were overprinted for the provisional governments and those which depicted Adolf Hitler were most heavily overprinted obliterating his face nbsp Danzig 1920 German Empire stamp overprinted for Free City of Danzig nbsp Ukraine 1918 1923 Kyiv 11 trident overprint on 7 rouble Russian Imperial stamp for the Ukrainian People s Republic nbsp Armenia 1920 Framed HP monogram on 10 rouble Russian Imperial stamp This overprint type was introduced at Erivan now Yerevan 12 nbsp Lithuanian postage stamps with overprints of Central Lithuania Srodkowa Litwa 1920 nbsp Ireland 1922 British stamp overprinted for Provisional Government of the Irish Free State nbsp Latvia 1993 Soviet stamp overprinted for independent Latvia nbsp The first definitive issue of postage stamps of Sharjah UAE 1 riyal 1963 and 1965 with Saqr bin Sultan Al Qasimi obscured following the coupWartime overprints edit During times of war many nations have issued war tax stamps Before new stamps could be printed older stamps were frequently overprinted with surcharges or a simple inscription such as War Tax In actual combat zones the replenishment of stamp stocks is generally low on a military s list of priorities In contested or occupied areas captured local stamps are often expediently overprinted by the occupying forces nbsp Belgium World War I German postage stamp overprinted with Belgium for use during the German occupation nbsp Malta 1918 Postage stamp with wartime taxation applied nbsp Russian Civil War Wrangel 1921 Russian Imperial stamp of 1908 1918 overprinted for the posts of Wrangel s army and civilian refugees nbsp City of Fiume and environs Fiume Kupa 1941 Yugoslavian stamp overprinted for the Italian occupation nbsp Philippines 1942 Japan occupation overprint of US PI stamp for the First Anniversary of the Great East Asia War December 8 1942 FD CDS nbsp Australia 1946 Surplus kookaburra stamp from 1937 overprinted for use by the British Commonwealth Occupation Force in JapanPrecancels editMain article Precancel Any stamp that is cancelled by postal authorities before it is sold is described as precancelled 13 the precancellation mark is an overprint This is usually only done when stamps are sold in large bulk quantities to businesses or other large organizations the postal service will save the labor of cancelling each individual stamp by precancelling the entire purchased quantity 14 The overprints also help prevent theft or misuse because they usually include the name of the city or region in which they are to be used Unlike standard cancellation marks they usually do not give a specific date affording the bulk purchaser time to use them at their discretion In some situations however months or years may be included in the overprint to indicate an expiration Precancels for official government use are fastidiously prepared but other kinds are almost always heavy cancels which deliberately obliterate much of a stamp s design Since the 1980s many modern postal systems no longer use overprints to indicate bulk purchases Bulk mail is franked using barcodes on pre printed envelopes or on blank adhesive labels The USPS introduced a new standard of barcode cancellation in 2011 nbsp Canada 1870 Early heavy cancel for bulk purchase nbsp France 1920 Bulk postage precancel marked for Paris nbsp United States 1938 Business precancel marked for New York City Private overprints editMain article Private overprint Any overprint that does not originate from a stamp issuing authority is considered a private overprint or private cancellation Such overprints almost always invalidate a stamp for postal use Most countries treat unofficial overprints the same way the United States Post Office does the USPS Domestic Mail Manual states that stamps overprinted with an unauthorized design message or other marking are not valid for postage 15 Private overprints generally remain outside the formal realm of philately although individual issues can achieve notoriety through their popularity or aesthetic appeal Private overprints are typically political messages or commercial promotion but can also originate from speculative philatelic purposes produced deliberately with a view to selling them to unsuspecting collectors Stamps owned by commercial entities have sometimes privately overprinted the backs of their purchased stamps These overprints are usually made as control marks or accounting information Such overprinting does not invalidate a stamp unless it shows through the front nbsp Suriname 1873 A private speculative surcharge nbsp Dutch East Indies 1881 Moquette private overprint nbsp Germany 1926 A private commercial overprintSpecimen overprints editMain article Specimen stamp Some stamps are never valid for postal use They are made for use in promotional displays or as reference material by postal authorities and the Universal Postal Union UPU Still others are manufactured by printers for color matching throughout successive printings In all such cases the stamps will display the word specimen or cancelled on its face Occasionally the word may be uniquely handwritten by a postal authority or much more elaborately punched through the stamp paper in a method known as perfin Most often though specimen markings are applied as a prominent overprint 5 nbsp Colombia 1888 Overprinted muest ra Sp nbsp Natal 1902 Specimen for a 20 stamp nbsp Australia 1924 Specimen overprintOverprints on currency editThe design and printing of valid paper currency is rarely done hastily and overprints are extremely rare but in times of crisis such measures have been taken After World War I the various successor states of the Austro Hungarian Empire made multilingual overprints to their old Imperial currency until new notes could be designed and circulated Currency overprints were also used during World War II to mark all United States dollars in the Hawaiian islands These Hawaii overprint notes were made in case the islands were captured and the invading forces gained control of the money 16 The Haitian Gourde was overprinted after the unexpectedly rapid fall of the Baby Doc Duvalier regime 17 The overprint consisted of a red circle with a slash across it with the date of the end of the Duvalier regime 7 February 1986 printed below in red The brusque symbol obscured the images of Baby Doc and Papa Doc until they were replaced with images of figures from Haitian history Something similar was done in Iran in 1979 when the Shah s picture was covered by an intricate design nbsp Austria 1919 Austro Hungarian Imperial krone restricting circulation to the new Republic of Austria nbsp United States c 1941 US 10 Hawaii overprint note nbsp Haiti 1986 Duvalier portrait obscured with prohibition sign nbsp An overprinted Series 1974 counterfeit 100 bill marked Contrefacon counterfeit in French to indicate its status as a fake nbsp 5 Yen note from 1938 with cancel marks These were repurposed for military use in China nbsp 5 Yen note 1938 overprinted reverseOverprint errors editOverprint errors are widespread Known are double inverted misspelled wrong partly or entirely missing overprints nbsp Uruguay 1880 1882 block of four with double overprint OFICIAL nbsp Uruguay 1891 5c overprint error middle stamp with Provisorio 1391 instead of Provisorio 1891 nbsp Jind 1886 1899 Half anna Queen Victoria overprinted JHIND STATE inverted nbsp Barbados 1916 Stamps overprinted for revenue usage with missing tail to y of Penny nbsp Czechoslovakia 1920 Inverted 28Kc airmail overprintSee also editPrecancel Specimen stamp Countermark an equivalent to an overprint found on coinsReferences and sources editReferences 1897 Red Revenue Small One Dollar stamp sells for 970 000 at auction News com au 3 July 2013 Reinfeld p 36 Williams amp Williams p 256 Klug Janet 3 June 2002 Surcharges and overprints make a difference Linn s Retrieved 3 September 2011 a b c Williams amp Williams p 258 Klug Janet 2008 Guide to Stamp Collecting New York HarperCollins p 45 ISBN 9780061341397 Schenk Robert 2011 A Case of Inflation Saint Joseph s College Economics Dept Retrieved 3 September 2011 Williams amp Williams p 253 Gallegos GF 2002 El Salvador Handbook Chapter 3 1874 Contrasello Issue Retrieved 16 June 2019 Miller Rick 2011 Lines of stamp classifications have blurred Linn s World Stamp Almanac Archived from the original on 25 June 2008 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Ceresa Dr R J May 1986 The Postage Stamps of Russia 1917 23 Vol 2 Ukraine Part 9 13 The Trident Issues of Kyiv Types I II and II Russian Philatelic Desk Top Publications Felpham Great Britain p 170 ASIN B0007BFS90 Ceresa Dr R J August 1978 The Postage Stamps of Russia 1917 23 Vol 1 Armenia Part 3 The Large sized Framed HP Monogram Overprints Russian Philatelic Desk Top Publications Felpham Great Britain pp 62 63 ASIN B0007BFS90 Reinfeld p 37 Williams amp Williams p 257 USPS 2010 Domestic Mail Manual PDF United States Postal Service Retrieved 3 September 2011 Bills Stamped with Hawaii Infoplease 1944 10 21 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Haitian Currency Traveling Haiti com 2011 Retrieved 3 September 2011 SourcesReinfeld F 1976 Stamp Collectors Handbook USA Doubleday ISBN 0 385 11682 9 Williams L N Williams M 1956 The Postage Stamp Its History and Recognition UK Pelican Books OCLC 3269097 GBOS Bogus overprints Website Great Britain Overprints Society Online article nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Overprints nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Counterfeit overprints on stamps External links editThe GB Overprints Society specializing in British overprints Alphabetilately essay on postal overprints Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Overprint amp oldid 1176468881, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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