Stamp Catalogues and Catalogue Values

Stamp catalogues are expensive books. When I was a young boy, I managed to lay my hands on a few from local kabadi shops (junk/paper scrap dealers). Catalogues provide useful information about the stamps, their variations, errors etc. and also provide a value for each stamp, typically for mint and used condition and for full sets.

Recently in my discussions on online groups I discovered that stamps actually sell only at a fraction of catalogue value costs. So if a catalogue value is $10, then the stamp is likely to be available for $1-$2 or so. It got me wondering, why do catalogues exist if no one pays catalogue prices?  Why will nobody pay the catalogue prices and real price is only 10-15% or maybe 20% of the catalogue value?

And while browsing for stamps online, I saw that stamp of catalogue value GBP 125 are sold on eBay for Rs. 300, and catalogue value of GBP 60-70 are being sold for Rs. 750/1500/2500 each. I found ways of cataloging and eBay dynamics quite strange.

Someone explained that "90% of all stamps have no value, how to sell something that has no value? you make a fixed value, that make you forced to make fixed value for all stamps, cat values can be used to trade stamps for stamps, not stamps for something that has actual value."

That led me to wonder why would catalogues provide a monetary value if stamps had no value? Stamps are bought and sold at auctions with money, so there is a monetary value to a stamp. I am just wondering that if a catalogue says the stamp is worth say $400, why would we say that it is worth only 10-20% of that in the market? Why do catalogues exist in such case?

Well, basically catalogues list indicative prices of "genuine" stamps that can be certified. It is assumed that most of forgeries and so by default every one values them at 10-20% of the catalogue value. What an interesting concept I must say.


Cinderella Stamps

While interacting with other philatelists on a Facebook group, I discovered Cinderella stamps. In philately, a Cinderella stamp is "virtually anything resembling a postage stamp, but not issued for postal purposes by a government postal administration" The term also excludes imprinted stamps on postal stationery. You can read more about these here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinderella_stamp

I checked my collection and fortunately I didn't have too many of those. And while I didn't know the term Cinderella stamps then, the few non-postal stamps that I had were segregated out in my collection.



Stamp in a Stamp

While browsing through my collection, I discovered that I actually had the stamp depicted in another stamp. It would make a nice theme for collection. I had only one such pair when I looked. Since then I think I might have another such pair.


Traffic Lights

I remember going to the post office on the day new stamps were issued. There would be a queue at the philatelic counter and one had to be early if you wanted stamp blocks with traffic lights. Traffic lights in stamps are the coloured dots on stamp sheet margins printed with offset litho or photogravure methods, used by the printers to check colour accuracy. I had read in some magazine the collecting traffic light issues was a big deal. And so I would diligently go to the post office early and ask for stamps with traffic lights.


Themes or Countries

When I dug out all my old collection, I realized that I have collections of countries as well as themes. I am torn between whether to collect countries of themes. I think themes make a nice collection but countries are easier to catalogue and document.