"For the governments of some countries, selling canceled, unused stamps at a discount directly to stamp dealers has provided additional income."
most of those appear to be machine cancels and not the kind one would expect to see as any kind of favor cancel nor bulk defacer.
in the US, sometimes large blocks were cancelled as a way of accounting for payment of dues or BREs or even make-up amounts for discounted rates (pre-sort etc). I don't know if Aussies did the same. Just a thought
Hi to all,
It has me intrigued, but I have only heard of the circular postmark CTO stamps in Australia, and even today they are circular.
Maybe these were issued to Government Instrumentalities, but then they don't have the perforations of state or commonwealth.
Did private organizations buy pre-cancelled items in bulk and use them when needed, and perhaps staff and management saw it as a cheap way to obtain stamps illegally for personal use?
Items two, four, five, six seven and eight, remind me of the USA pre-cancels with their bars. To quote a spoonerism, "the thick plottens"
Regards
Horamakhet
I wonder if the stamps could have been applied over cellophane or packing tape. I have frequently seen the situation where gummed stamps applied over tape easily pop loose, leaving most of the gum intact on the stamp. I have even seen strips or blocks of gummed stamps just flopping in the wind when such a parcel is delivered. Hey, no need for soaking!
Is the gum truly 'as issued', or are there any hints that the gum was disturbed?
-Paul
Hi Horamakhet,
This is intriguing.
Could at least some of these have been regummed given the Australian interest (and value) in CTO stamps?
I'd expect these stamps' perfs and margins to be more uniform in colour if they were normally used stamps (and the same if they were CTOs) but I'm no expert.
I've just spent a few minutes staring at my ordinary used duplicates of this stamp and I'm still not sure.
Maybe this is how it was done.
https://stamporama.com/discboard/disc_main.php?action=20&id=4405
I have never used the actual Stamplift Fluid ( the above uses plain water) so am unsure if it would leave the gum intact or not.
Hi pigdoc,
I know what you mean, as I have many decimal Australian stamps, when I have purchased items, that the supplier has sent that way in my collection.
But in the 1940's I have never heard of that happening.
So I don't think that is the answer, but good thought that deserves more research.
Regards
Horamakhet
Hi nigelc,
The only time that stamps in that era would have been regummed is for fraud, and then the postmarks would have been totally removed.
The stamps were part of a collection that had belonged to a friends uncle, who acummulated the stamps along with his collection of MNH stamps, so I don't think that is the answer.
I still possibly think that maybe in that era, private companies would buy stamps in bulk and possibly have purchased them pre-stamped, but who knows what the solution is.
Regards
Horamakhet
Hi to sheepshanks and all,
I don't think that lifting fluid is the answer, as these stamps are not valuable and are very common. I have more than a thousand of them, plus the ones with the gum.
ALso was lifting fluid around in the early 1940's, particularly in Australia, as these were the war years, and such an item would not be considered a necessary commodity for survival in the troubled years of WWII, I have seen envelopes that have been opened and reversed and re-used and have a couple, and that was common in the UK to save paper, but so far it is a puzzle that needs a solution.
I actually deliberately sacrificed one of the stamps with a real messy postmark and stuck it on paper to see if it truly had its gum, and sure enough it did.
Records over the years do get lost, misplaced, stolen and destroyed, somewhere hopefully there is an answer.
Regards to all
Horamakhet
You find a disscution about Australia CTO:
www.stampcommunity.org/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=76466
Ronsonol and other lighter fluids leave gum intact, and they've been around for a long time
Hi amsd,
True, but lighter fluid and ronsonol will not soak stamps of envelopes, as far as I know.
Regards
Horamakhet
Hi Gerom,
I am familiar with that discussion, but it only deals with CTO that are circular.
As said, the Ship Mail one I would say is probably a CTO, but the barred ones I have never heard of, except in USA and Canadian stamps.
Regards
Horamakhet
Pauls explanation appears the most logical one to me. Traditionally gummed stamps do not stick too well to smooth surfaces, and when you moisten the gum to stick a stamp on a piece of mail, most of it remains on the back of the stamp (or it would not stick). If anything, the gum on such stamps should appear smoother than on unused stamps.
Stamps cancelled in sheets for accounting purposes usually bear handstamps or roller cancels, or sometimes even penstrokes. It would be awkward to try to fit a sheet of stamps through a cancelling machine.
Martin
Hi jmh67,
yes that idea sounds feasible, but in the USA and Canada, don't they put whole sheets of stamps through cancelling machines to do pre-cancels?
The cancels on items two, three, four five and six are very similar, which is why I am suggesting that perhaps in the 1940's companies were able to buy such pre-cancels in bulk.
Regards
Horamakhet
Horamakhet,
as far as I know, the precancelling machines in North America were essentially printing presses that processed whole sheets of stamps at once. A cancelling machine usually applies a postmark along the edge of a piece of mail, in order to cancel whole sheets you'd need to fold them which would be a bit awkward and slow.
The cancels on the Australian stamps above look like typical machine postmarks of that epoch. I don't know whether they had hand roller cancels with slogans in "Oz". That might be a possibility for a bulk cancellation. By the way, aren't the last two scans duplicates?
D1stamper,
yes, steamed-off stamps often have gum residues on the back, but unless one is very careful, these are very much disturbed and do not look like original gum any more.
Perhaps a scan of the backs of the stamps would help?
Martin
Hi jmh67,
incredible as it may seem, the last two scans are entirely different stamps, that is what first led me the think, that possibly there were bulk cancellations for companies.
It one of those mysteries, unless you have access to original archives, it is hard to prove one way or another.
I have never steamed stamps of envelopes, so I can not say whether or not it would leave them sticky, but it sounds feasible, as I have seen people actually steam open envelopes to read other peoples mail, then reseal the letter, but it looks very obvious that the item has been tampered with when steamed.
Regards
Horamakhet
The last two scans show what happens when a stamp is placed at a point on the envelope where it picks up the same portion of a cancellation machine. They will appear different when placed at differing heights or places on an envelope.
You had better look again. Of the four scans posted, the bottom two scans each show the same two stamps. I'm looking at the perforations on the left side of the left stamp in both scans. Identical.
-Paul
Paul you are quite correct, it is a repeated scan.Though I still think they are just ordinary machine cancellations.
Hi Sheepshanks,
But would they be classed as CTO as they still have the gum on them, The ship mail I would say is a definite CTO although a bit heavy.
Regards
Horamakhet
Presence of gum on a used stamp does not necessarily mean it's a CTO, and its absence does not always mean postal usage.
As far as I remember, CTO stamps (and favour-cancelled ones) haven't been used to pay for postage at all, but bear a cancellation for collecting purposes, either on order from the postal authority or on demand from a customer. Whether they still have gum or not, does not matter (they were sometimes sold glued to sheets of paper, from which they needed to be soaked off). On the other hand, you can have a stamp that's been used for postage, but still has its gum. It could have been cancelled in bulk for accounting purposes or as part of a mass franking, or it could have stuck to some smooth surface and fallen off, but it's postally used nevertheless.
Remember, these are common stamps, there would be little need for CTOs (which at any rate would look nicer, I'd expect), and there is a lot that can have happened to them so that they retain their gum despite having been cancelled.
Martin
it is essential to use Martin's most recent post as a starting point. Gum doesn't mean CTO and its absence doesn't mean postal use.
could be, but aint necessarily so
Hi to all,
CTO is always a bone of contention with all.
The illustrated stamps are common enough in fact I have hundreds used and MNH.
These illustrated examples are different in that everyone of them still has the original gum, but each has a postmark, and I have lots of them as well.
Technically, therefore IMO they are CTO, but I am intrigued as why all the strange postmarks. The Ship Mail joined pair to me would be true CTO, but do the others qualify as well?
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
"For the governments of some countries, selling canceled, unused stamps at a discount directly to stamp dealers has provided additional income."
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
most of those appear to be machine cancels and not the kind one would expect to see as any kind of favor cancel nor bulk defacer.
in the US, sometimes large blocks were cancelled as a way of accounting for payment of dues or BREs or even make-up amounts for discounted rates (pre-sort etc). I don't know if Aussies did the same. Just a thought
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi to all,
It has me intrigued, but I have only heard of the circular postmark CTO stamps in Australia, and even today they are circular.
Maybe these were issued to Government Instrumentalities, but then they don't have the perforations of state or commonwealth.
Did private organizations buy pre-cancelled items in bulk and use them when needed, and perhaps staff and management saw it as a cheap way to obtain stamps illegally for personal use?
Items two, four, five, six seven and eight, remind me of the USA pre-cancels with their bars. To quote a spoonerism, "the thick plottens"
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
I wonder if the stamps could have been applied over cellophane or packing tape. I have frequently seen the situation where gummed stamps applied over tape easily pop loose, leaving most of the gum intact on the stamp. I have even seen strips or blocks of gummed stamps just flopping in the wind when such a parcel is delivered. Hey, no need for soaking!
Is the gum truly 'as issued', or are there any hints that the gum was disturbed?
-Paul
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi Horamakhet,
This is intriguing.
Could at least some of these have been regummed given the Australian interest (and value) in CTO stamps?
I'd expect these stamps' perfs and margins to be more uniform in colour if they were normally used stamps (and the same if they were CTOs) but I'm no expert.
I've just spent a few minutes staring at my ordinary used duplicates of this stamp and I'm still not sure.
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Maybe this is how it was done.
https://stamporama.com/discboard/disc_main.php?action=20&id=4405
I have never used the actual Stamplift Fluid ( the above uses plain water) so am unsure if it would leave the gum intact or not.
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi pigdoc,
I know what you mean, as I have many decimal Australian stamps, when I have purchased items, that the supplier has sent that way in my collection.
But in the 1940's I have never heard of that happening.
So I don't think that is the answer, but good thought that deserves more research.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi nigelc,
The only time that stamps in that era would have been regummed is for fraud, and then the postmarks would have been totally removed.
The stamps were part of a collection that had belonged to a friends uncle, who acummulated the stamps along with his collection of MNH stamps, so I don't think that is the answer.
I still possibly think that maybe in that era, private companies would buy stamps in bulk and possibly have purchased them pre-stamped, but who knows what the solution is.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi to sheepshanks and all,
I don't think that lifting fluid is the answer, as these stamps are not valuable and are very common. I have more than a thousand of them, plus the ones with the gum.
ALso was lifting fluid around in the early 1940's, particularly in Australia, as these were the war years, and such an item would not be considered a necessary commodity for survival in the troubled years of WWII, I have seen envelopes that have been opened and reversed and re-used and have a couple, and that was common in the UK to save paper, but so far it is a puzzle that needs a solution.
I actually deliberately sacrificed one of the stamps with a real messy postmark and stuck it on paper to see if it truly had its gum, and sure enough it did.
Records over the years do get lost, misplaced, stolen and destroyed, somewhere hopefully there is an answer.
Regards to all
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
You find a disscution about Australia CTO:
www.stampcommunity.org/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=76466
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Ronsonol and other lighter fluids leave gum intact, and they've been around for a long time
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi amsd,
True, but lighter fluid and ronsonol will not soak stamps of envelopes, as far as I know.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi Gerom,
I am familiar with that discussion, but it only deals with CTO that are circular.
As said, the Ship Mail one I would say is probably a CTO, but the barred ones I have never heard of, except in USA and Canadian stamps.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Pauls explanation appears the most logical one to me. Traditionally gummed stamps do not stick too well to smooth surfaces, and when you moisten the gum to stick a stamp on a piece of mail, most of it remains on the back of the stamp (or it would not stick). If anything, the gum on such stamps should appear smoother than on unused stamps.
Stamps cancelled in sheets for accounting purposes usually bear handstamps or roller cancels, or sometimes even penstrokes. It would be awkward to try to fit a sheet of stamps through a cancelling machine.
Martin
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi jmh67,
yes that idea sounds feasible, but in the USA and Canada, don't they put whole sheets of stamps through cancelling machines to do pre-cancels?
The cancels on items two, three, four five and six are very similar, which is why I am suggesting that perhaps in the 1940's companies were able to buy such pre-cancels in bulk.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Horamakhet,
as far as I know, the precancelling machines in North America were essentially printing presses that processed whole sheets of stamps at once. A cancelling machine usually applies a postmark along the edge of a piece of mail, in order to cancel whole sheets you'd need to fold them which would be a bit awkward and slow.
The cancels on the Australian stamps above look like typical machine postmarks of that epoch. I don't know whether they had hand roller cancels with slogans in "Oz". That might be a possibility for a bulk cancellation. By the way, aren't the last two scans duplicates?
D1stamper,
yes, steamed-off stamps often have gum residues on the back, but unless one is very careful, these are very much disturbed and do not look like original gum any more.
Perhaps a scan of the backs of the stamps would help?
Martin
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi jmh67,
incredible as it may seem, the last two scans are entirely different stamps, that is what first led me the think, that possibly there were bulk cancellations for companies.
It one of those mysteries, unless you have access to original archives, it is hard to prove one way or another.
I have never steamed stamps of envelopes, so I can not say whether or not it would leave them sticky, but it sounds feasible, as I have seen people actually steam open envelopes to read other peoples mail, then reseal the letter, but it looks very obvious that the item has been tampered with when steamed.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
The last two scans show what happens when a stamp is placed at a point on the envelope where it picks up the same portion of a cancellation machine. They will appear different when placed at differing heights or places on an envelope.
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
You had better look again. Of the four scans posted, the bottom two scans each show the same two stamps. I'm looking at the perforations on the left side of the left stamp in both scans. Identical.
-Paul
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Paul you are quite correct, it is a repeated scan.Though I still think they are just ordinary machine cancellations.
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Hi Sheepshanks,
But would they be classed as CTO as they still have the gum on them, The ship mail I would say is a definite CTO although a bit heavy.
Regards
Horamakhet
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
Presence of gum on a used stamp does not necessarily mean it's a CTO, and its absence does not always mean postal usage.
As far as I remember, CTO stamps (and favour-cancelled ones) haven't been used to pay for postage at all, but bear a cancellation for collecting purposes, either on order from the postal authority or on demand from a customer. Whether they still have gum or not, does not matter (they were sometimes sold glued to sheets of paper, from which they needed to be soaked off). On the other hand, you can have a stamp that's been used for postage, but still has its gum. It could have been cancelled in bulk for accounting purposes or as part of a mass franking, or it could have stuck to some smooth surface and fallen off, but it's postally used nevertheless.
Remember, these are common stamps, there would be little need for CTOs (which at any rate would look nicer, I'd expect), and there is a lot that can have happened to them so that they retain their gum despite having been cancelled.
Martin
re: WHAT CONSTITUTES A CTO
it is essential to use Martin's most recent post as a starting point. Gum doesn't mean CTO and its absence doesn't mean postal use.
could be, but aint necessarily so