“STAMP COLLECTING” The
earliest story of stamp collecting is that of a young lady who had a strange
fancy to cover her dressing room with cancelled postage stamps. She collected
16,000 stamps herself. In 1841 she advertised in the London Times requesting
readers to send her more stamps. This craze for collecting stamps was
widespread in the early years of the postage stamp. Gradually indiscriminate
and chaotic collection was replaced by careful and systematic collection.
Stamp collecting also acquired a respectable name, “philately”, is made
a combination of the Greek words “philos” meaning “fond of” and “ateles”
meaning “exemption from tax”.
HOW
TO COLLECT:- Start your collection
by accumulating stamps. Plenty of them will be available. Check the coming
to your house from friends or from the office. Do not try to remove stamps
from their covers by peeling them off. Cut out the portion of the envelope
with the stamp leaving a good margin around. From a stamp store you may
also buy a small packet of stamps already separated from the envelopes
on which they were stuck. You will also find that your school friends
are eager to exchange their duplicates.
MOUNTING
OF STAMPS:- Before starting the actual
operation of mounting your stamps, you should get a packet of hinges and
a pair of tongs. Never use glue, paste or adhesive tape for mounting stamps.
They will damage your stamps forever. What you need is a packet of hinges.
Stamp hinges are small rectangles of a special thin but tough paper with
a double coating of gum, so that, when dry they can be detached easily
from the back of the album page with out damaging the stamp. Hinges are
not expensive, so always buy the best quality. Hinges are available as
flat strips gummed on one side. When using them they are to be folded
with the adhesive side on the outside. The hinge is not to be folded in
the centre but towards one end so that one fold is longer than the other.
The short end is to stick on the stamp and the long one to stick on the
album. Now place the good stamps in a vessel (a tray) of cold water, push them down and separate them gently from the paper. Do not put in all the stamps together. Put in a handful or two at a time and let them soak long enough for the stamps to detach themselves from the paper. While soaking, the ink on some stamps may run. Pull them out of the water immediately or you will spoil the whole batch. Stamps which are printed with fugitive ink (ink that is not fast) should be soaked separately and carefully. Pick up the detached stamps with the tweezers and spread them out face down on a clean paper to dry flatten them and put them in a book for a few hours to keep them flat. After soaking, drying and flattening, the stamps are ready to be mounted on your album. Sort out your stamps and lay them out on pages in the order you plan to mount them. Fold a hinge about one third or one fourth the distance from one ends and apply the short end to the top of the back of the stamp just below the perforations. When sticking the hinges, do not moisten them too much. Particularly in the case in the case of mint (unused) stamps too moistening is likely to affect the gum on the back of the stamps. After fixing the hinge properly and place the stamps at the appropriate place on the page.
STAMP
LAYOUT:- Once you have started stamp
collecting you should aim at having a complete collection. All the stamps
issued on the subject you have chosen should appear in your album. The
information required to complete your collection will be available in
the catalogue. Do the layout of your album pages even if you do not have
all the stamps you need. Reserve space in your layout for stamps you do
not have so that when you acquire them, they can be put in the right places.
A clean well mounted and property laid out collection is always worth
more than an untidy one. A small write up against each stamp is necessary.
Making write ups for a stamp collection is one of the most enjoyable aspects
of the hobby. After the layout is worked out mark the positions of the stamps and the write up lightly with a pencil on the album pages so that the markings can be rubbed out later on. A write up should be completed before sticking the stamps. Black ink and stencils with appropriate stencil pens ought to be used for the write up so that the page has a neat and uniform appearance. |