A Service Dog gives a person with a disability independence. Never approach, distract or pet a working dog, especially when (s)he is in harness. Never be afraid to ask questions to the handler (parent). 21 Jun 2012 08:12:21pm
I have a copy of Chile's Christopher Columbus with watermark "b". (To clarify, I'm referring to A1)
I am stumped on identifying the colours listed in Scott to figure out which number it actually is.
I was going to scan it but since it's an issue of colour I don't think that will help. So, can someone explain to me the difference between deep red brown, chestnut, burnt sienna and brown red?
Any help would be appreciated.
Kelly
Login to Like this post
"Let's find a cure for Still's Disease, Breast Cancer and Canine Addison's Disease. We CAN find a cure and save lives!!"
Kelly,
I don't believe anybody can tell you the difference between the colors you indicated. Identifying colors is way too subjective. The best approximation you can accomplish is to purchase a good stamp color guide like Gibbons. Once you have a guide it is still a guessing game for many stamps, but at least you have a source of reference.
Hopes this helps,
Terry
A Service Dog gives a person with a disability independence. Never approach, distract or pet a working dog, especially when (s)he is in harness. Never be afraid to ask questions to the handler (parent). 22 Jun 2012 12:12:52pm
re: Colours of Chile's 5c Christopher Columbus
Thanks Terry - I'll check that out. I hate the guessing games on some of these stamps - especially on postally used - what may have been vibrant red brown at issue time, through exposure have lightened up. Big difference in some of the Scott CVs though for the various colours and I haven't a clue how they come up with them, for example with this particular stamp. The CV ranges between 67.50 to 275 depending on colour (granted my copy is what I would grade as Fair so obviously the actual CV is significantly lower), but drives me nuts when I have something that I can't actually put a number or identifier to (other than list it as Design A1).
Kelly
Login to Like this post
"Let's find a cure for Still's Disease, Breast Cancer and Canine Addison's Disease. We CAN find a cure and save lives!!"
A Service Dog gives a person with a disability independence. Never approach, distract or pet a working dog, especially when (s)he is in harness. Never be afraid to ask questions to the handler (parent). 23 Jun 2012 04:01:27pm
re: Colours of Chile's 5c Christopher Columbus
Thanks Roy - that site oughta keep me busy for a while! :-)
Kelly
Login to Like this post
"Let's find a cure for Still's Disease, Breast Cancer and Canine Addison's Disease. We CAN find a cure and save lives!!"