| A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
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| Narcotic Tax Stamps |
Stamps created to show payment of taxes on opium, coca leaves,
and their derivatives in use between 1919-71. These long stamps were applied
to narcotics containers. |
| Negative Postmark |
Postmark in which the text is formed by the uninked part
of the marking, rather than the inked portion of the design. |
| Net Price |
Often used in sales books or by dealers in pricing stamps.
A net price may not be further discounted. |
| New Issue |
A recent stamp or set of stamps issued by any country or
postal authority. A new issue dealer sells the newest stamps of one or more
countries. |
| New Issue Service |
Many collectors rely on new issue services to keep their
collections up to date with stamps from various countries. A new issue service
works by keeping a subscriber list of collectors, collecting deposits, and
mailing the new stamps out in small batches after they are released. A new
issue service may either be maintained at face value by the postal entity
responsible for the stamps, or by a stamp dealer for a slight cost above
face value. |
| New Value |
The first meaning, which is obsolete, is a surcharge - a
new, different denomination printed over an old one. More commonly, however,
a new value refers to a new stamp in an existing stamp series that bear
a denomination that is different from all others in that particular series. |
| Newspaper Stamp |
Stamps created to pay postage on newspapers, periodicals,
journals, and other forms of printed matter. Some types of these issues
combine tax and postage, thus becoming both postage and revenue stamps.
Several forms of newspaper stamps are created for use on individual mail
pieces or papers, while others exist to pay bulk postage on large shipments
of printed material. Newspaper stamps in their various forms exist from
many different countries, including the United States. Newspaper stamps
also are commonly referred to as journal stamps, although the latter term
often refers to lower denomination issues. |
| Nibbed Perf |
The end of a perforation tooth that has been poorly torn
and is rough looking. It is a common trait and is considered a
minor fault. (see also Pulled Perf and Short
Perf) |
| Non-Denominated Definitives |
A stamp with no denomination, or face value. Many countries
have released such stamps, mainly for domestic use. In the United States,
definitives were issued for the rate changes of 1978 (orange "A" Eagle
[15-cent]), March 1981 (violet "B" Eagle [18-cent]), November
1981 (brown "C" Eagle [20-cent]), 1985 (green "D" Eagle
[22-cent]), 1988 (multicolored "E" Earth 25-cent]), 1991 (multicolored "F" Flower
[29-cent]), and 1995 (multicolored "G" Old Glory [32-cent]). |
| Non-Pictorial Permit Stamps |
State and Indian reservation revenue stamps issued for use
on various game licenses. These items, often inexpensively printed and humble
appearing, frequently are many times scarcer than their more attractive
counterparts. These exist for duck, small game, fish, and other recreational
hunting purposes. |
| NSDA |
Abbreviation for The National Stamp Dealers Association,
an organization that caters specifically to the needs of stamp dealers. |
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| Oblique Roulette |
A roulette separation on stamps that consists of parallel
diagonal slits. |
| Obliteration |
Any form of marking used to deface a stamp. An obliteration
may refer to a cancellation or those political obliterations where unwanted
parts of a stamp design are marked out by overprinting. |
| Obsolete |
No longer in general use. An obsolete stamp may or may not
have been demonetized; it simply is no longer sold over post office counters. |
| Occupation Stamp |
A stamp issue released by the conquering force of an occupied
country for specific use in that territory or area. Such stamps may be overprinted
or surcharged stamps of the occupied country itself or entirely new stamps
created for that purpose. |
| Oddity |
Desirable and collectible items that don't fit comfortably
in the error or freak categories. Such items include plate varieties, odd
or unusual cancels, and a host of other unusual items. |
| Off Center |
A stamp that is not well centered within its perforations
or margins, due to production imperfections or mishandling during separation.
Stamps that are off center are undesirable to most collectors. They are
too poorly centered to be attractive in a collection, but not poorly centered
enough to be considered misperforation freaks and, thus, are collectible. |
| Off Paper |
A stamp soaked or otherwise removed from the envelope or
piece to which it was originally affixed for mailing. |
| Offices Abroad |
Usually overprinted or surcharged stamps with the country
name, or currency, or both, of another country in which the satellite post
office is located. The United States, France, Great Britain, Italy, and
Germany are some of the nations that have issued stamps for use in their
post offices abroad. |
| Official Mail |
Mail sent on official government business, frequently designated
by special stamps, postal stationery, or overprints. U.S. Official
mail that did not use special stamps often was called Penalty Mail, because
the
special envelopes for it included the imprint "Penalty For Private
Use $300." |
| Official Seal |
See Post Office Seal. |
| Official Stamps |
Postage issues released for use by the government and selected
officials on official government correspondence. These may be specially
designed stamps or overprinted postage issues. In some cases, various government
departments may or may not have to pay for the stamps they use, but in most
cases, official stamps provide an effective means for the government to
keep tabs on individual and departmental expenditures. |
| Offset Printing |
A form of indirect surface printing that works on the principal
that oil and water do not mix. Offset printing is now the most economical
and versatile form of printing known. Its roots are in lithographic printing,
which is another form of surface printing using a litho stone (a type of
limestone from Germany) as the plate. Modern offset printing is accomplished
with the use of an aluminum plate that is photographically treated to retain
the positive stamp image, while attracting ink. The non-design areas repel
the ink. Rather than applying the inked image directly to paper, the offset
plate transfers the image to a rubber blanket roll (a negative image) that
then transfers the design to paper for the finished stamp. Indirect offset
printing can use the characteristics of any other form and can be accomplished
with both sheet-fed and web fed presses. |
| Old Paper |
A term most often encountered with the first issue revenues,
although it also is found with some private die proprietary issues. Old
paper is the tough, semi-transparent paper in use during the 1860s. |
| "Old stamps not recognized" |
A special postal marking applied during the U.S. Civil War.
As part of an effort to pressure the South financially, the United States
government devalued all postage stamps released prior to 1861. This left
large stocks of unusable postage in the South, which could no longer be
exchanged for cash to aid the Confederacy. When these devalued stamps were
detected on mail, the marking "old stamps not recognized" was
applied to the mail piece. This scarce marking is valuable and extremely
scarce. |
| Omnibus Issues |
This term describes stamps or sets of stamps released by
several different countries to mark the same event. The designs
of omnibus issues may be identical, similar, or completely different,
although they
are most commonly found with similar designs. In most cases, omnibus
issues are released by different colonies of a single country or
member states
of some other postal union. These unions include the British Commonwealth
and the European federation of countries, to name but two. (See also
Jubilee) |
| On Cover |
Any stamp still on the entire mailing piece (usually an envelope
or card) to which it was originally affixed for mailing and subsequently
canceled. |
| On Paper |
Describes stamps that are still affixed to a bit of the paper
of the original mail piece. Such items are usually cut close. |
| On Piece |
A similar term to "on paper," but this usually
refers to a larger piece with some form of cancellation or other validating
form of postal marking, giving evidence of where or when the stamp was originally
mailed. Stamps on piece are often neatly cut to facilitate mounting. |
| Opera Glass Cancel |
A double-ring obliteration designed by Pearson Hill that
was used in Great Britain during the late 1840s. |
| Original Gum |
The adhesive originally present on a stamp at the time it
was produced. Many older stamps have been regummed, but there is a premium
for stamps with original gum, even if it has been disturbed or redistributed. |
| Overall Tagging |
Several types of phosphorescent tagging where individual
stamps are completely covered with taggant. This includes stamps tagged
by continuous steel or rubber rollers that apply taggant, as well as large
blocks that cover full panes of stamps. |
| Overprint |
Any form of printing applied to a finished stamp. Overprints
can be text or pictorial, and can take the form of a surcharge changing
the value, change in country name, pre-cancel, commemorative, or security
feature. |
| Oxidation |
A chemical process where the color of a stamp is greatly
changed by exposure to elements present in the air or by improper storage.
In some cases, the changed in appearance caused by oxidation can e reversed.
Despite its dramatic appearance, an oxidized stamp is of interest to collectors
only as a reference item or as a curiosity. It represents a form of stamp
damage. |
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| A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
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Definitions taken from © Copyright
All About Stamps, written by Wayne L. Youngblood, used with permission.
Championship Stamp Supply wishes to thank Wayne L. Youngblood
and Krause Publications for their kind support and permission in using
© Copyright All About Stamps for our online definitions of philatelic terms. |