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Brixton Chrome

Lot 480 Nigeria #295a-296a 7k, 8k Multicoloured Timber & Oil Industry, 1975-1986 Nigerian Life & Industry Definitive Issue - Watermarked, 6 Fine & VFNH Singles On Different Papers With Different Shades, Different From Lot 479

Lot 480 Nigeria #295a-296a 7k, 8k Multicoloured Timber & Oil Industry, 1975-1986 Nigerian Life & Industry Definitive Issue - Watermarked, 6 Fine & VFNH Singles On Different Papers With Different Shades, Different From Lot 479

6 fine & VFNH singles of the 7k, 8k multicoloured Timber & Oil Industry from the 1975-1986 Nigerian Life & Industry Definitive Issue - Watermarked on different papers with different shades, different from lot 479. The 7k is on NF/HF paper with inverted wmk and eggshell PVA. The fluorescent orange & brown are the top colours. The 8k includes (2) orange yellow, black, deep yellow green, bright aquamarine, grey, black and goldenrod, with the yellow green being the top colour, NF/HF paper with eggshell PVA gum and inverted wmk; (3) NF/MF paper with upright wmk and satin PVA gum, orange yellow, deep green, aquamarine, grey, black & grey, with the green, goldenrod and aquamarine being the top colours; (4) similar colours to (3) but paper is NF/HB, with upright wmk and eggshell PVA; (5) NF/LF paper with upright wmk, orange yellow, aquamarine, black, grey, goldenrod and yellow green, with the yellow green being the top colour; (6) as (5), but the green is a purer shade that lacks the yellow tone, and all three colours: green, aquamarine and goldenrod are the top colours.

2017 Scott values this at $12.25.

The watermarked lithographed printings of this issue appeared from 1975 onwards, and constitute the scarcest and most complex of all the stamps in this issue. The initial printings were very similar to the unwatermarked ones, and were on a thicker chalky paper with PVA gum. Later printings became successively blurrier and the paper surfacing in the early 1980's took on a grainy texture. In contrast to the previous printings which were almost exclusively medium to high fluorescent, these cover the full range from dead to hibrite, and the readings on the front and back of the stamps are usually different, often wildly different. Very late printings, made on an emergency basis during the inflation period in the early 1990's are on dull paper containing red-orange fluorescent fibres. In keeping with the earlier unwatermarked printings, the colours were printed separately, and the order in which they were printed differs. Thus, we describe them with reference to what the top colour is. Scott is hopelessly inaccurate on the mint stamps of this issue, which are seldom found in the market. This is why all the values in Scott are in italics. I very highly doubt that any of them are worth just 25c each. In 10 years of daily buing on E-bay and Delcampe I managed to assemble a stock of about 2 dozen sets of the photogravure printings and about as many of the unwatermarked lithographed and even fewer of the watermarked lithographed stamps, plus a few multiples. That's hardly anything at all. Used is no problem at all - most were used up for postage, but mint is another story. The sheets of this issue are 50 stamps and had imperforate selvedge at top and bottom. The side selvedge has a single extension perforation hole beyond the outer vertical perforations, on both left and right margins.

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