What we collect!

 

Stamporama Discussion Board Logo
For People Who Love To Talk About Stamps
Discussion - Member to Member Sales - Research Center
Stamporama Discussion Board Logo
For People Who Love To Talk About Stamps
Discussion - Member to Member Sales - Research Center
Stamporama Discussion Board Logo
For People Who Love To Talk About Stamps



What we collect!
What we collect!


General Philatelic/Gen. Discussion : Opening Mail At Home

 

Author
Postings
Stampme

14 Mar 2014
02:59:09pm
I use a very sharp pocket knife to slit open envelopes I receive in the mail, the ones I want to keep, that is. Unless the sender has gone tape crazy, I find the top corner opposite where the stamps are placed, and insert the knife there, working my way downward to the bottom corner along the natural fold line of the envelope.

How do you open your incoming mail and where do you open it: Sharp knife, letter opening, scissors? Eagerly tear open by hand? Left side? Right side? Top? Bottom. Under the envelope flap.

Just curious.

Bruce
Like
Login to Like
this post
AGKING
Members Picture


14 Mar 2014
03:03:34pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Sharp Swiss Army knife - Stamp side first along top - I start there in case I am over zealous with the blade and ruin the stamps.

Like
Login to Like
this post
cocollectibles

14 Mar 2014
03:50:18pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Old fashioned letter opener. I turn the envelope around and do as you do. However, if the stamps are ones I want to keep, I open the envelope at the bottom or side without stamps using a razor knife. I keep stamps like that on cover; I rarely soak them off any more.

Peter

Like
Login to Like
this post

"TO ERR IS HUMAN; TO FORGIVE, CANINE."
HungaryForStamps
Members Picture


21 Mar 2014
04:43:58pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

I usually tear the envelope. I don't much care about the modern stamps I toss in the trash. I'll probably regret that one day though when they are classics.

Like
Login to Like
this post
Jeredutt3

21 Mar 2014
11:26:59pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Letter opener. Top left to bottom. Save everything including modern postage labels

Collector or pack rat .. You decide

Like
Login to Like
this post
smauggie
Members Picture


22 Mar 2014
07:41:07am
re: Opening Mail At Home

If it is a cover I would like to keep I use scissors to cut off a hair's width off the non-stamp edge of the cover.

Like 
2 Members
like this post.
Login to Like.

canalzonepostalhistory.wordpress.com
Rhinelander
Members Picture


Support the Hobby -- Join the American Philatelic Society

22 Mar 2014
08:26:32am
re: Opening Mail At Home

I open envelopes at the top with a sharp object if it is a keeper. If I cut the stamps from the envelope, it does not really matter how I open the envelope, right?

I do not recommend reducing the envelope by cutting a strip from the envelope to open at left or top. Many cover collectors will consider these envelopes damaged and inferior to those opened without reduction.


Like
Login to Like
this post
cdj1122
Members Picture


Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..

22 Mar 2014
09:59:47am
re: Opening Mail At Home

" ...Many cover collectors will consider these envelopes damaged and inferior to those opened without reduction. ..."
Yes, that would be their good excuse to offer a lower amount during a negotiation.

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "
Greek

22 Mar 2014
11:13:10pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Letter opener almost always. Sometimes I will use a scissors to cut off one edge of the envelope if there is tape present at that edge.

Like
Login to Like
this post
Revstampman

23 Mar 2014
12:12:26am
re: Opening Mail At Home

If it's a bill I favor a Chainsaw right down the middle. Otherwise, I have a nice very sharp 6" mini Damascus Steel Sword that I have been using for 25 years! Cool

Like
Login to Like
this post
ECollector
Members Picture


23 Mar 2014
07:46:29pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

"a nice very sharp 6" mini Damascus Steel Sword "



does it look like this Toledo?
Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.
Revstampman

23 Mar 2014
08:35:57pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Very similar, I have one like that as well. .

Like
Login to Like
this post
BobbyBarnhart
Members Picture


They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -Benjamin Franklin

23 Mar 2014
10:27:52pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Michael

I have 3 just like the one you show. My parents brought them back from Spain in the early 60s.




Like
Login to Like
this post

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. -Edmund Burke"

www.bobbybarnhart.net
ECollector
Members Picture


23 Mar 2014
10:34:35pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

Aren't these cool.... I found mine in an antique store for $6.00...... I also have a set of 18 Hors d'oeuvre skewers in an umbrella like holder..... skewers look same as the letter opener. The swords skewers have slight differences and the holder is very ornate.... I have never seen anything like these on-line

Like
Login to Like
this post
Philatarium
Members Picture


APS #187980

24 Mar 2014
01:18:52pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

For those who are just tossing modern stamps on mail into the trash, if they're commemoratives, they're pretty desirable to others.

If they're common definitives, they could really be used at the Holocaust Project:

http://www.foxboroughrcs.org/students-families/frcs-holocaust-stamp-project/

Like 
3 Members
like this post.
Login to Like.

"You gotta put down the duckie if you wanna play the saxophone. (Hoots the Owl -- Sesame Street)"

www.hipstamp.com/store/the-philatarium
CapeStampMan
Members Picture


Mike

25 Mar 2014
08:43:13am
re: Opening Mail At Home

I certainly agree with everyone that opposes "throwing stamps in the trash". We have many requests for stamps and remember "one stamp collectors trash is another stamp collectors treasure".

Back to the subject of opening mail at home; while not as elaborate as a Damascus sword, I use a Japanese 8" sword for the purpose of opening mail and have had it for many years. There used to be a tassel on one end, but that went by the wayside several years ago!

Mike

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

"It's been three years now, since I joined a support group for procrastinators. We haven't met yet..."
Revstampman

25 Mar 2014
08:57:49am
re: Opening Mail At Home

Mini Tanto, another good one, I like it. Thumbs Up

Like
Login to Like
this post
HungaryForStamps
Members Picture


25 Mar 2014
04:21:19pm
re: Opening Mail At Home

"For those who are just tossing modern stamps on mail into the trash, if they're commemoratives, they're pretty desirable to others.

If they're common definitives, they could really be used at the Holocaust Project:

http://www.foxboroughrcs.org/students-families/frcs-holocaust-stamp-project/
"



I get a very small number letters a year with US stamps on them, all definitives that I can recall. Not worth the time IMO to even think about it. That may seem strange for a stamp collector to have that attitude, but that's mine.

Now I will keep the stamps (and cover) sometimes from a shipment of stamps or supplies I order that the thoughtful seller applied.
Like
Login to Like
this post
postmarks
Members Picture


I still have more questions than answers

26 Mar 2014
08:34:36am
re: Opening Mail At Home

I try to open at the bottom with a letter opener. This is not always possible then I very carefully open at the top with a very sharp small swiss army knife.

Like
Login to Like
this post

pjsstamps.blogspot.com/
Mtrabz

26 Jun 2014
10:26:39am
re: Opening Mail At Home

I use the scissors and I cut it from the left side. (the other side of the stamps)

Like
Login to Like
this post
philatelia
Members Picture


APS #156650

26 Jun 2014
10:36:59am
re: Opening Mail At Home

I bought this dagger from a friend at work who sold knives. It makes a nifty envelope opener and discourages sneaks from putting my good stamps on the utility bills. heh heh


Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

"Just one more small collection, hun, really! LoL "
        

 

Author/Postings
Stampme

14 Mar 2014
02:59:09pm

I use a very sharp pocket knife to slit open envelopes I receive in the mail, the ones I want to keep, that is. Unless the sender has gone tape crazy, I find the top corner opposite where the stamps are placed, and insert the knife there, working my way downward to the bottom corner along the natural fold line of the envelope.

How do you open your incoming mail and where do you open it: Sharp knife, letter opening, scissors? Eagerly tear open by hand? Left side? Right side? Top? Bottom. Under the envelope flap.

Just curious.

Bruce

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
AGKING

14 Mar 2014
03:03:34pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Sharp Swiss Army knife - Stamp side first along top - I start there in case I am over zealous with the blade and ruin the stamps.

Like
Login to Like
this post
cocollectibles

14 Mar 2014
03:50:18pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Old fashioned letter opener. I turn the envelope around and do as you do. However, if the stamps are ones I want to keep, I open the envelope at the bottom or side without stamps using a razor knife. I keep stamps like that on cover; I rarely soak them off any more.

Peter

Like
Login to Like
this post

"TO ERR IS HUMAN; TO FORGIVE, CANINE."
Members Picture
HungaryForStamps

21 Mar 2014
04:43:58pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

I usually tear the envelope. I don't much care about the modern stamps I toss in the trash. I'll probably regret that one day though when they are classics.

Like
Login to Like
this post
Jeredutt3

21 Mar 2014
11:26:59pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Letter opener. Top left to bottom. Save everything including modern postage labels

Collector or pack rat .. You decide

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
smauggie

22 Mar 2014
07:41:07am

re: Opening Mail At Home

If it is a cover I would like to keep I use scissors to cut off a hair's width off the non-stamp edge of the cover.

Like 
2 Members
like this post.
Login to Like.

canalzonepostalhisto ...
Members Picture
Rhinelander

Support the Hobby -- Join the American Philatelic Society
22 Mar 2014
08:26:32am

re: Opening Mail At Home

I open envelopes at the top with a sharp object if it is a keeper. If I cut the stamps from the envelope, it does not really matter how I open the envelope, right?

I do not recommend reducing the envelope by cutting a strip from the envelope to open at left or top. Many cover collectors will consider these envelopes damaged and inferior to those opened without reduction.


Like
Login to Like
this post

Silence in the face of adversity is the father of complicity and collusion, the first cousins of conspiracy..
22 Mar 2014
09:59:47am

re: Opening Mail At Home

" ...Many cover collectors will consider these envelopes damaged and inferior to those opened without reduction. ..."
Yes, that would be their good excuse to offer a lower amount during a negotiation.

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

".... You may think you understood what you thought I said, but I'm not sure you realize that what you think you heard is not what I thought I meant. .... "
Greek

22 Mar 2014
11:13:10pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Letter opener almost always. Sometimes I will use a scissors to cut off one edge of the envelope if there is tape present at that edge.

Like
Login to Like
this post
Revstampman

23 Mar 2014
12:12:26am

re: Opening Mail At Home

If it's a bill I favor a Chainsaw right down the middle. Otherwise, I have a nice very sharp 6" mini Damascus Steel Sword that I have been using for 25 years! Cool

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
ECollector

23 Mar 2014
07:46:29pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

"a nice very sharp 6" mini Damascus Steel Sword "



does it look like this Toledo?
Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.
Revstampman

23 Mar 2014
08:35:57pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Very similar, I have one like that as well. .

Like
Login to Like
this post

They who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -Benjamin Franklin
23 Mar 2014
10:27:52pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Michael

I have 3 just like the one you show. My parents brought them back from Spain in the early 60s.




Like
Login to Like
this post

"The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. -Edmund Burke"

www.bobbybarnhart.ne ...
Members Picture
ECollector

23 Mar 2014
10:34:35pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

Aren't these cool.... I found mine in an antique store for $6.00...... I also have a set of 18 Hors d'oeuvre skewers in an umbrella like holder..... skewers look same as the letter opener. The swords skewers have slight differences and the holder is very ornate.... I have never seen anything like these on-line

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
Philatarium

APS #187980
24 Mar 2014
01:18:52pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

For those who are just tossing modern stamps on mail into the trash, if they're commemoratives, they're pretty desirable to others.

If they're common definitives, they could really be used at the Holocaust Project:

http://www.foxboroughrcs.org/students-families/frcs-holocaust-stamp-project/

Like 
3 Members
like this post.
Login to Like.

"You gotta put down the duckie if you wanna play the saxophone. (Hoots the Owl -- Sesame Street)"

www.hipstamp.com/sto ...
Members Picture
CapeStampMan

Mike
25 Mar 2014
08:43:13am

re: Opening Mail At Home

I certainly agree with everyone that opposes "throwing stamps in the trash". We have many requests for stamps and remember "one stamp collectors trash is another stamp collectors treasure".

Back to the subject of opening mail at home; while not as elaborate as a Damascus sword, I use a Japanese 8" sword for the purpose of opening mail and have had it for many years. There used to be a tassel on one end, but that went by the wayside several years ago!

Mike

Image Not Found

Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

"It's been three years now, since I joined a support group for procrastinators. We haven't met yet..."
Revstampman

25 Mar 2014
08:57:49am

re: Opening Mail At Home

Mini Tanto, another good one, I like it. Thumbs Up

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
HungaryForStamps

25 Mar 2014
04:21:19pm

re: Opening Mail At Home

"For those who are just tossing modern stamps on mail into the trash, if they're commemoratives, they're pretty desirable to others.

If they're common definitives, they could really be used at the Holocaust Project:

http://www.foxboroughrcs.org/students-families/frcs-holocaust-stamp-project/
"



I get a very small number letters a year with US stamps on them, all definitives that I can recall. Not worth the time IMO to even think about it. That may seem strange for a stamp collector to have that attitude, but that's mine.

Now I will keep the stamps (and cover) sometimes from a shipment of stamps or supplies I order that the thoughtful seller applied.
Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
postmarks

I still have more questions than answers
26 Mar 2014
08:34:36am

re: Opening Mail At Home

I try to open at the bottom with a letter opener. This is not always possible then I very carefully open at the top with a very sharp small swiss army knife.

Like
Login to Like
this post

pjsstamps.blogspot.c ...
Mtrabz

26 Jun 2014
10:26:39am

re: Opening Mail At Home

I use the scissors and I cut it from the left side. (the other side of the stamps)

Like
Login to Like
this post
Members Picture
philatelia

APS #156650
26 Jun 2014
10:36:59am

re: Opening Mail At Home

I bought this dagger from a friend at work who sold knives. It makes a nifty envelope opener and discourages sneaks from putting my good stamps on the utility bills. heh heh


Image Not Found

Like 
1 Member
likes this post.
Login to Like.

"Just one more small collection, hun, really! LoL "
        

Contact Webmaster | Visitors Online | Unsubscribe Emails | Facebook


User Agreement

Copyright © 2024 Stamporama.com