I have just seen this very nice stamp from KUT was amazed at the colors. British colors have always been a favorite of mine anyway, but this one is so different than any other that I just wanted to share it with everyone. There are tons of stamps that have many colors on them, but usually they depict a scene or more than one subject on the stamp, while this stamp is another of the Queen. Long live the Queen!!!
What do you think of this stamp and what is your favorite stamp with different colors.
Mike, I hate to tell you, but the stamp actually is only a two-color stamp. I think the multi-color effect is caused by a refraction of the light when the image was made. Here is the true appearance of the stamp:
Michael,
Oh yeah, thanks a lot for spoiling my whole life!!!! Now I'm going to have to buy that stamp and then sue the seller for false advertisement. OK, OK, maybe it's not so bad after all and I think I will keep that scan, mine not yours, as a momento of a very unique stamp. I still like the color combinations that the commonwealth uses for their stamps.
Just kidding about spoiling my whole life, of course. Plus, you didn't leave a comment about your favorite colors of stamps.
Mike
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Peter, in a way, I guess you are correct. More than one is a multiple, thus "multi". However, I believe as far as the Scott catalogs go, a stamp is listed as "multicolored" if it has more than three colors.
Mike, I don't know that I have favorite colors of stamps. I like stamps that are well designed and color coordinated, but that covers the entire spectrum.
"Mono-color", "bi-color" or "multi-color". Yes, it can be confusing given that there are many sources, philatelic and otherwise, that do not agree on those terms.
My take on it is that a mono-color stamp has only a single color, such as blue. That term probably has the most universal agreement on its definition.
A multi-color stamp, by the literal definition, has more than one color. So, a stamp with blue and red could indeed be considered a multi-color stamp.
But that begs the question of what is a bi-color stamp? Would it be more appropriate, therefore, to call the blue and red stamp bi-color, i.e., 2 colors, and then more than 2 colors would be considered a multi-color stamp?
To add a bit more confusion to the mix, I’ve seen auction catalogs describe stamps as bi-color when a single color such as blue was used to print the stamp on yellow paper. I believe that stretches the definition of bi-color too far. Such a stamp is actually a mono-color stamp printed on colored paper.
I think the brighter colour on the KUT stamp might have happened when I was scanning at 150 instead of 200,
I usually scan at 200,but had scanned some documents at 150 and forgot to change it back to 200
But it is a pretty stamp.
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re: British stamp colors
The divisions between colors we were taught in school; Primary or Secondary and so on, are purely an arbitrary segmentation of what is actually a stead range of wave lengths.
What I enjoy is that Chinese and Japanese colors are often just slightly off what I would expect. This must be cultural with he precise separation point they are taught a tiny bit different from what western society accepts.
Someone else must have noticed this and written an explanation of how this happens.
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