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Spotted 45c Flag, a.k.a. "Snowstorm Variety" Apr 17/98
Have you seen the 45¢ Flag definitive with randomly placed white spots of varying sizes? Chances are you have, either in person or in recent ads. We have had many calls (in fact, too many) regarding this "variety".
These are not printing varieties and, in our opinion, have no value!
Multicoloured 45¢ Flag stamps come in various formats (click for printing history): sheets of 100 and 120; booklets of 10, 25, and 30. The spots occur only on the stamps from booklets. These stamps did not miss any ink (colour) in the printing process. As the booklet is opened and the stamps are spread out, spots of colour are removed from the stamps and are left adhering to the inside of the booklet cover. There are two possibilities as to how these varieties could have occurred:
The former idea sounds good but is not the cause: it is quite unlikely that the panes are attached to the cover immediately after printing while the ink is still moist. In addition, random spots are removed from the stamp where there is no ink! Thus, by elimination, the second scenario is the cause of these spots.
We repeat, this variety is not a missing colour and does not occur during the printing of the stamps! They can be easily created by simply splashing glue onto any surface, sticking the pane to the glue, and removing the pane from the surface after it has dried.
Although they have no value, they do make for interesting proof to the poor binding techniques used to produce these booklets.
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