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  2. Crown Agents Philatelic and Security Printing Archive

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown_Agents_Philatelic...

    The 6d Gold Coast 1943 war savings stamp in a block of four (not from the archive). Examples of this stamp and a 1d in turquoise-blue are part of the archive. [1]The Crown Agents Philatelic and Security Printing Archive was deposited with the British Museum (later becoming the British Library) from the 1960s, though the first recorded deposit from the Crown Agents was in 1900. [2]

  3. Postage stamp reprint - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postage_stamp_reprint

    Unofficial or illegitimate reprints also exist, being produced by private printers who were contracted to print stamps, but retained the plates for their own use. The classic example is the Seebeck reprints of Latin American stamps produced in great numbers around the end of the 19th century.

  4. Bureau of Engraving and Printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bureau_of_Engraving_and...

    The first of the works printed by the BEP was placed on sale on July 18, 1894, and by the end of the first year of stamp production, the BEP had printed and delivered more than 2.1 billion stamps. The United States Postal Service switched purely to private postage stamp printers in 2005, ending 111 years of production by the Bureau.

  5. Nicholas F. Seebeck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicholas_F._Seebeck

    Nicholas Seebeck as a young man. A printer's sample card for the Colombian state of Bolivar produced by the Hamilton Bank Note Company. Nicholas Frederick Seebeck (1857 – June 23, 1899) was a stamp dealer and printer, best known for his stamp-printing contracts with several Latin American countries in the 1890s.

  6. United States postal notes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_postal_notes

    The third and final Postal Note engraving and printing contract extended from September 1891 to June 30, 1894. [5] Dunlap & Clarke of Philadelphia won the competition. Their design, unchanged during the length of their contract, is catalogued as Type V. Between 1883 and 1894, some 70.8 million Postal Notes were issued, used as intended, then ...

  7. Facing Identification Mark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Facing_Identification_Mark

    The FIM is a set of vertical bars printed on the envelope or postcard near the upper edge, just to the left of the postage area (the area where the postage stamp or its equivalent is placed). The FIM is intended for use primarily on preprinted envelopes and postcards and is applied by the company printing the envelopes or postcards, not by the ...

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