I am pleased to say that Delcampe, the European online auction site has taken action on two forgery listings I reported late last week. The Romanian seller listed two potentially high priced unused Hong Kong QV definitives.
Both were virtually identical, except for purportedly having different watermarks; the Crown CC and the Crown CA (SG30 and SG36). On the reverse images, one did have the feint outline of a watermark but it would have taken a toffee hammer to break through the gum to see the other.
Here is an image of one of the listings:
Here's an extract of the details I submitted, which identifies the features of the forgeries, followed by an image of a genuine stamp and the forged example beside it.
I have not seen this type of forgery before, so it is of some interest to me. Nor have I seen a supposed 'mint' forgery. Every example of the early forgeries I own shows a forged cancellation as well.
I think that Delcampe should be applauded for taking action here and closing both auction items. They obviously take this sort of business more seriously than eBay.
That just illustrates why the Delcampe site drives me to distraction; crap images which you can't enlarge adequately. How is a novice (I include myself here, as regards 2d blues), able to judge this?
Despite eBay's shortcomings, their image posting capabilities (if used) are far superior.