Friday, 30 August 2024

Stamp Collecting Starter Packs - Version 3.0!

So far, I've placed nine Stamp Collecting Starter Packs since March, mostly in our nearest neighbourhood free sidewalk library. Based on an outreach idea from NTSC's Lisa Tam, I can't be sure if it's the same person taking them all, the library owner saying 'get that out of my library' and to me, it doesn't really matter. I'm just putting them out there, knowing that the person visiting that library is at least interested in free stuff!

All nine were similar, filled with a mix of 50 topical and Canadian stamps that I thought would interest beginners of any age - the first four packs with an orange backing card, the next five with blue, and now a third batch with green. That means animals, space, transport topicals and recognizable Canadian subjects like RCMP,  scenery,  Olympics and definitely no admirals, Queens or back-of-the-book. Like any good stamp dealer, I seed the front of each pack with large, brightly-coloured stamps.

This third version of the starter pack has My First Stamp Album included, and today I placed three, and will be placing the other three of these in various free libraries around our neighbourhood. After requesting the starter albums from CSDA back in June, I picked up a few more at the recent Kingston BNAPS show. 

Then I wondered, "How are the new collectors going to affix the stamps in the album?". In one of the text boxes that appear on many pages in the album, there is one about how to use stamp hinges. Of course, sponsored by CSDA, they would like you to visit one of their dealers to buy some! But we're not quite there yet as beginners, so I decided to attach a glassine of 50 stamp hinges on that page, to go with the 50 stamps in the pack. 

An advantage of including the album is that a longer, taller pack will make the packs more prominent among the paperbacks in the sidewalk libraries, and the green backer makes it more eye-catching. The stamps are still visible, as is the word 'Album'. Out they go!

Wednesday, 28 August 2024

Summer Stamping - with Updates!

Summer's here and the time is right for stamping in the streets. Originally published on June 4, let's catch up with updates added in August.

I submitted my membership request for this new online club. 
AUGUST UPDATE: The online Zoom and emails made this seem like just any other stamp club, albeit online. Left.
I emailed the Canadian Stamp Dealers' Association for a few copies of their My First Stamp Album. I plan to place these, along with stamps from my starter packs, in free sidewalk libraries in our neighbourhood. The albums do not include hinges or stamps, but I will be enclosing both in each of the five copies the CSDA kindly sent me. 
AUGUST UPDATE: These albums are going out, each to a different free sidewalk library in our neighbourhood!

The second issue of the American Philatelic Society's online magazine StampEd is available. AUGUST UPDATE: Well worth a read! Looking forward to more issues in future.
This Saturday: Kingston Stamp Club stamp show. I have some leftover birthday money burning a hole in my pocket. I will be visiting the club consignment table and Roy Lingen's booth. 
AUGUST UPDATE: This show provided a summer's worth of fun sorting!
August 23-25: The BNAPS is holding their annual convention and bourse (we need a better word - how about marketplace or mall?) right here in Kingston. Free admission to some events! 
AUGUST UPDATE: I went to the show and it was well worth the visit!



The North Toronto Stamp Club hosts some excellent circuits, keeping postage costs for me low within Canada. I'm already part of the Worldwide and UK circuits, though I was finding my UK collection was decent enough to make a change. A quick email response from club president Klaus Hintz had me selecting some new circuits: Caribbean, US and Topical (aircraft). 
AUGUST UPDATE: The circuits are making their way to me - very good selection!


Saturday, 24 August 2024

75 Bucks o' Fun! BNAPEX 2024

Feeling a bit like a trout among swordfish, I found myself at my old alma mater, the Kingston campus of St Lawrence College. Today it was serving as the venue for the three-day British North America Philatelic Society annual stamp show and convention. Perhaps trout is attaching too much importance to my philately - I'm more of a carp - a bottom-feeder. I'm never going to spend $2,500 on a 150 year-old piece of paper like a true BNAPSer - I like a bargain too much! And I know what I like - when I see it. 

But that didn't stop me from partaking in free parking and free attendance and with the venue so close to our home, of course I went to check out the exhibits and the bourse (top photo and below). Even though there were concurrent sessions, there were lots of vendors and buyers. I scanned the list of sessions, available to the public, but the topics were a little either before-my-time or over-my-head (large queens, small queens, and admirals, oh my!)
One of my first, and last, stops was as legendary dealer Roy Houtby's booth. Roy was busy and just moved out of the frame at left as I snapped the above photo. I found five boxes of collections/albums and Roy mentioned all were 50% off the sticker price. I was one happy carp! See my finds at the end of this post. I also enjoyed walking around checking out the various buyers' techniques - some were using their laptop-based want lists to find those elusive stamps they needed. Intense!

While ambling aimlessly about, I checked out the plethoric of fine frame exhibits at the far end of the Event Centre, just visible in the photo above. They were very specialized, and were a lot to absorb. Among the most interesting to me were various items of postal history associated with Royal Canadian Navy vessels of World War II, ranging from lowly motor torpedo boats to mighty aircraft carriers. Examples from Flower Class corvettes:


In the foyer outside the Event Centre were several excellent exhibits on Kingston-based philatelic history. Check them out in this post in my Kingston's Hanley Spur blog. My sixth Traveler album, packaged together with an Ambassador album, and between which the previous owner split pages from one album: A-M in the Ambassador and N-Z in the Traveler. Lots of blank pages available!
Envelope display stock pages and a packed stock book of older stamps - remember, both half-price!
Some of the upcoming event cards available at registration, as well as two specially-produced covers for BNAPEX with overprints and special cancellations on the Kingston-related cachets sold by the BNAPS. I had my choice of aircraft, going with the ugly but effective Avro Anson!
At the Trajan Media/Canadian Stamp News booth, I picked up a copy of the Unitrade Postage Stamp Identifier for that envelope full of 'Hard to ID' that I'll work on someday. My future success with albumizing hinges on ... more hinges. Thanks to Trajan for the 20% subscriber discount! I also found a few more copies of the CSDA's My First Stamp Album to include with future Stamp Collecting Starter Packs and two recent Canada Post FDC's:
This was my first attendance at a national-level exhibition, and it was impressive! St Lawrence College provided an excellent venue for BNAPEX, with rooms available at the nearby residence for a reasonable rate. Although I overheard one conversation about a 'swordfish spouse' relaxing back at the 'hotel', and another randomly saying you can't get decent pizza in Halifax! The Event Centre was brightly lit and high-ceilinged, one of several new additions to the campus. I found myself walking past some hallways that I recall leading to our classrooms and laboratories waaaay back in 1982-85 - our Medical Laboratory Technology student years. Further reinforcing the fact that bearing that span of time in mind, I may have been the youngest, and least grey-haired (!) attendee at the exhibition. And hair dye doesn't count!

Sunday, 4 August 2024

Best Finds of the Stamp Show Finds

In an earlier post 'The Start of (Round 2 of) a Long and Noble Crusade', I shared my system for sorting my stamp show finds. I made a point of setting aside some of the best finds, and they're in this post!

Commonwealth (above) and miscellaneous worldwide (below).

Propaganda, Cinderellas and oddities (above and below).

Maisie Makes Germany Great - Again!

Fellow philatelist Maisie Van Doren and I have been exchanging since November, 2023. Maisie paints on a big canvas, twice sending me 1,000+ lots of Germany. This happened again on July 3, when the below package arrived in a vintage Simpson Lumber Co. envelope. In fact, Maisie sent the stamps in envelopes I had previously sent her, returning a previous large lot of Germany. Fun! And look at the scenic views applied as postage! Hot and cold beverage and cookie time!
The only way I can sort stamps is to stack by size/orientation. All phases of Germany are represented and I learned lots: Germania, Hindenburg, pre-war, German states, WWII, semi-postals, Official issues, post-war and our late dictator himself - he of the bunker, preserved for historical and completeness purposes only. Maisie hinted at the overprints and varieties contained herein, and she was right - so interesting!
Here's where they're headed - my Germany album:
The stacking process, with DDR (still not sorted!) in glassine envelopes:
I returned about two-thirds of all, and everything I kept (save DDR) has been albumized. My thanks to Maisie for adding so much to my Germany - again!