



Moderador: Rein
rubiera escribió:These are great finds. I wonder why anyone would bother with a stamp dated 1953?
I have been looking at my selection and all I have look genuine. I wonder if these are from a European faker? I see the point of faking the faboluously rare 50c ones, but the others? I don't get it.
tony
Jorge,Jorgec escribió: People, please be careful about this. Absolutely no stamp in this set is "fabulously rare"!
Most stamps in this set are very common, and they deserve the minimum price in the catalog. There are, of course, a few scarce items, among them there is probably a single type that I would qualify as rare (but certainly not a rarity, and it is not any 50c stamp). Possibly some of these are a bit underpriced. But there are probably more over-priced ones. Especially in GJ that it seems that automatically, and wrongly, assumes that all 15c, 20c JMG, 1 Peso with limits, and 10c Type I, are rare.
Jorge,jorgec escribió:I said it many times. Forgeries don't follow common sense. It is naive to believe, and will misguide you if you do, that only rare and expensive items are forged.rubiera escribió:These are great finds. I wonder why anyone would bother with a stamp dated 1953?
I have all sort of forgeries. And I would say that I have more forgeries of common items, than rare ones. I have lots of forgeries of extremely common types. I have forgeries of stamps that are much rarer and much more expensive without the overprint. I have forgeries that are so badly done, that nobody could be fooled, and you come to think that the forger never saw the original. Forgers do not follow common sense. Certainly not when talking about these overprints, which are far easier to make than a complete stamp forgery.
Tony,rubiera escribió:Jorge, Rein:
The key point here is that these stamps mint were not sold to collectors. Someone had to steal them....right? Or maybe the post office sold the remainders to dealers? In my opinion, the ones that served postal use are guaranteed to have been 'real stamps.' The regulars are another story. A mint 20p regular 1E1 (Ingles, 1936) cost someone a very dear 20 pesos in 1936, and that was serious money back then. And the regulars were sold to collectors but at full face value, not by the pound.
About rarity:
The 10cR I, 50c, and 1p (limits, without limits) I find to be rare mint.
These used are also very rare.....I am serious, I still only have one lousy 10c MG type I in very poor quality, and am missing the 3c M..M and the 1p MRC with limits, as well as 1 p MM without limits on 1E1 (Ingles, 1936) and 1E2 (Austriaco, 1937) , and almost all the others on 1E1 (Ingles, 1936).
If anyone has these, let me know....I need them.
Jorge:
paqueteria: packets
saludos
tony
Pablo,zakur escribió:That M.M. seems typewrtten!!!
Beg to digger, but I disagree. This stamp is rare in mint condition, probably the rarest major type in this set. It is still scarce in used condition, bot not nearly that rare (you know I have more than one cover). And it is not even the rarest used type in this set. I realize this was the last stamp that you were missing, but it is because of the combined used+mint rarity. The other stamps that are scarcer in used condition, are not that rare mint (so you had them mint long ago).rubiera escribió:I have finally acquired a copy of the extremely rare 10c MG Type I. This stamp is not in the best condition, but it is an acceptable copy of what seems to me is the rarest departmental, and perhaps one of the rarest of the entire series.