Wilding 588a 1d Graphite Two Line Error July 1961

£1.00

Wilding 588a 1d Graphite Two Line Error July 1961

6 in stock

Description

Wilding 588a 1d Graphite Two Line Error July 1961

Issued July 1961

The 1p stamp was from the design by Enid Marx.

The graphite-lined stamps were first issued in 1957 and used in conjunction with automatic sorting machinery first introduced, experimentally, in Southampton. They were printed in black on the reverse of the stamp underneath the gum.

This error was from an issue during July 1961. By then the use of graphite-lined stamps was coming to an end and residual stocks of the paper were being used. As the register of the lines in relation to the stamps was not critical, misplacements occurred. This example, number 588a, refers to stamps with two lines only at the left (from the back) clear of the perforations.

Concise (2017) catalogue number 588a.

Unmounted mint and in pristine condition.

Wilding 588a 1d Graphite Two Line Error July 1961

INFORMATION SOURCES:

First of all, Royal Mail will handle your order. Therefore please see our Shop menu for postal options:  Postage                                                                                                                                                                                We only charge postage for the first item in most cases. Thus any further items purchased would not increase the final postal charges. Furthermore we do not charge you for envelopes and packaging.

Recorded Delivery or Registered Post is also available if required. Loss or damage compensation can be claimed, therefore, if this option is taken.

We mention Stanley Gibbons catalogue numbers where it is possible. These numbers are either from the “Concise Stamp Catalogue” or from the “Specialised Stamp Catalogue Volume 4 Part 1”. We will try to mention any other numbering that we may use if not covered by the above. Sometimes particular stamps, Smilers sheets, booklets, miniature sheets, or cylinder blocks are not recognized anywhere. Hence, in this case, we would use our own expertise to describe and value that  item.

In conclusion, all of our stamps are unmounted mint and in an excellent condition. We will mention any variation to this statement.

Please let us know if we have made a mistake with this description.

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