Stamp condition

The value of a postage stamp in the stamp collecting market depends on various features of its condition. Among the features assessed are centering, margins, and gum.

Centering and margins

The following grades convey how well centered the stamp is and the width of the stamp's margins.[1]

Gum

Another key factor in the case of mint stamps is the presence or absence of postage stamp gum and whether the gum has been disturbed.[2]

Stanley Gibbons uses the following to describe stamps with disturbed gum:

Postally used stamps usually have no gum and these terms do not apply. An apparently used stamp with gum, for example from the former Soviet bloc, may be "cancelled to order" ("CTO") and have little or no value to collectors.

Notes

  1. Datz, Stephen R. (1999). Stamp Collecting. Loveland, Colorado: General Philatelic Corporation. pp. 83–92 [88]. ISBN 0-88219-030-X.
  2. Datz, Stephen R. (1999). Stamp Collecting. Loveland, Colorado: General Philatelic Corporation. pp. 83–92 [86]. ISBN 0-88219-030-X.
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