New Zealand – Varieties of Postage Stamps
A. Types
B. Constant Varieties
1903/39: Express Delivery Stamp | |||
---|---|---|---|
6 d | Field № | ||
I | Top horizontal stroke of the first letter E of IMMEDIATE missing. | R10/1 | |
1935, 1 May: Second Pictorials | |||
2 s | Field № | ||
I | Dot above 2. | R10/2 | |
II | Also on official stamp |
COQK instead of COOK. | R1/4 |
1940: Centennial of New Zealand, Official stamps | |||
Multiple values | Field № | ||
I | Overprint error: joined letters ff. | R1/10 | |
1946, 1 April: Victory Issue | |||
3 d | Field № | ||
I | Rudder flaw (bottom stamp). The plate was retouched due to the damage it had suffered during printing. The line was cut slightly deeper than the original, resulting in stronger print than was intended. |
R2/4 | |
1963, 7 August: Health | |||
3 p + 1 p | Field № | ||
I SG816a |
Bloodstained Finger. | ? | |
1963, 14 October: Christmas | |||
2½ d | Field № | ||
I | Nosebag flaw. | R3/8 | |
1971/74: Magpie Moth surcharged | |||
4 c. on 2½ c. | Field № | ||
I | Larger spacing between 4 c and two canceling lines (upper stamp). The plate(s) used in the letterpress process use individual pieces and in trying to raise the 4c it was temporarily put back in the wrong place. |
R7/20 | |
II | Missing 100% red. The first printing was mainly taken up with adjusting the red plate to get full coverage but may examples exit from the first and las three columns (17-20) of partial missing red. Much rarer is 100% missing red. |
R3/20 |