Brixton Chrome
Lot 252 Canada #586, 587, 588-590, 591iii, 593iii, 1c - 8c Orange - Royal Blue Sir John A Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II, 1973 Caricature Issue, 9 VFNH LL Plate & Scarce Field Stock Blocks Of 4 On LF Paper, Unlisted On 2c
Lot 252 Canada #586, 587, 588-590, 591iii, 593iii, 1c - 8c Orange - Royal Blue Sir John A Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II, 1973 Caricature Issue, 9 VFNH LL Plate & Scarce Field Stock Blocks Of 4 On LF Paper, Unlisted On 2c
10 VFNH LL plate & field stock blocks of 4 of the 1c - 8c orange - royal blue Sir John A Macdonald - Queen Elizabeth II from the 1973 Caricature Issue on LF paper. The LF paper is unlisted on 2c, and field stocks are scarce.
Unitrade values these at $10.50. The blocks offered here grade between 75 and 84 as follows:
Centering/Margins: 45/70, 50/70, 54/70
Paper Freshness: 5/5
Colour: 5/5
Impression: 5/5
Absence of Visible Paper Flaws: 5/5
Perforations: 10/10
The caricature and landscape definitive issue is an important issue in the sense that there are several aspects to the stamps that appear on the philatelic scene for the very first time. The most remarkable is that it is the first issue in which the fluorescence of the paper on the front of the stamps can differ from the fluorescence on the back, due both to the properties of the newly developed PVA gum and the chalk coatings found on the mid values. The scarcity of many of these varieties is vastly underestimated by many collectors, largely because Unitrade gives the impression that many are of equal scarcity. However, this is not the case at all. The vast majority, being about 75-85% of all stamps you examine will fall into a fairly narrow range of varieties. On the low values this would be the low fluorescent paper, and on the mid values it would be the vertically ribbed DF or NF paper on the perf. 12.5 x 12 type 1's, or most of the perf. 13.3 type 2's. The perf. 12.5 x 12 type 2 stamps, are much scarcer than the catalogue prices would indicate. The second aspect is the scarcity of field stock corner blocks. Indeed, the vast majority of the better printings are found on field stock corners. A third aspect to this issue is that there are many unlisted combinations of front and back fluorescence that are not listed, and these can be readily identified by comparing them to blocks of other values.
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