Friday, September 10, 2010

Katesplayground Cookin

Chronology of issuing books of 50 c. Sower red line


(+) indicates the existence of other sets of blankets
identified by names of towns, or Web airplane



Completion of this timeline was only possible through the valuable information provided by several members of the CFCA and so listed by our friends and Coutan Patrick Lucien Reynaud in Volume 2 of their book "Carnet de France" published by Yvert and Tellier in 2007. That's why we preferred, and for clarity, use only the numbering of this book.


The table allows us to better visualize the period of co-existence of both processes print books at the time:
- typography flat (used for types I and II B)
- and that on presses (for types IV and II A). This period
will last more than two years before the printing plate leaves his place to finally printing press.

printing the covers of the notebooks, which had previously been conducted in typography flat, it will also appeal to the presses.

Note that the rotary printing has been used here until the end of 1928 for the first notebooks to type IV, while her debut at the workshop production of postage stamps But went back to March 4, 1922, with printing sheets of 100 stamps Sower type 10 c. green, and the appearance of first corner-dated.
The date will not appear until much later books on: October 7, 1932 for the type notebooks Peace 50c red!

A book on four of the 50 books rotary c. Sower red line (all well before that date) does, however, that the sheet number at the bottom or top left (depending on the cut).

_______________

remarkable Another curiosity: the existence of two books mixed (199-199-C 22 and C 27) printed flat during that famous period (1929 and 1930) and with two types of different stamps!


The ten stamps slip right are normally type IIB, while those in the leaflet are left type IV, the same one reserved for the presses, and also created them!

What reason has ever moved the workshop to this juxtaposition, technically difficult?

Recall that, by definition, the rotary plate type IV was not flat, but actually bent around the printing cylinder. It was therefore necessary to make it usable for a flatbed, before cutting and insert a small part in the flat plate type IIB!

The most likely hypothesis would be that of an accident on the printing plates for books related to the type IIB (199-199-C 21 and C 26) and did damage to a specific location, as they left ...

Regarding Bussang book was even able to pinpoint the location of the book mixed within the board, through its leaf edge higher still not serrated, so it was located in top of said board, on top of five other books normal. Hence its rarity.

However, we known whether this supposed crash occurred during printing, or if the replacement block of ten punches to the type IV was necessary from the very manufacture of the board, prior to its use. In the latter case, the entire run would have necessarily been affected, and so a book on six be mixed.

To answer this question, he would discover (if any) a book Bussang top sheet that is not a 199-C 22 but a 199-C21, that is to say with all his twenty stamps to the type IIB

Perhaps one of our readers ever had this luck? ...

__________

By analogy, one can also consider the delicate problem of having an isolated books : This is the time to type IV of books, printed on presses, and having the characterized by a two stamp type II (199-C 51, 199-C 60, 199-C 63/65).


An isolated type II course, but: II A or B?
It is true that the distinction between types is not the easiest, even with good eyes and a magnifying glass!
The rarity of these books is not here to help us! ...
Given the above table, logic suggests that the Workshop has used a replacement to be "contemporary"
- Type II B for producing the board giving the books 199 C-63 / 65,
- Type II A for producing the board giving the book 199 C-60,
- to one or the other for producing the board giving the book 199-C 51. In the catalog

Yvert specialty 1982, Yvert specialized "books" of 2007, and in the course CACP there is no question that the type II A for all isolated.
In contrast, annual catalogs often describe the substitute check as to the type II B for the book 199-C 51! So: what is it really?

You'll notice that the books 199-C 63/65 were issued well before the onset of type IIA books: more than a year before!

The use of Type II B, then vested in the other books, was the most likely.

But no: the insulated box 1 is well type IIA on these two notebooks, and can in no case come from the board used to manufacture the same type of books, board that there probably not! But, you say, no impediment to use one of the planks used since August 25, 1926 for printing presses sales sheets of 100 stamps, and also the type IIA ...
is probably what has been done: one this time has indeed inserted a single person from one of the planks for the leaves, in the board books designed for the type IV.

A recent discovery in any case allows me to be formal about the book 199-C 51 :
one thing is certain: the famous insulated box 11 is also the type IIA


It clearly seen here, the stamp box 11, the different size of eyelets
of R and French Republic.

This isolated occurrence at once per revolution of the cylinder, is somehow a sheet on both, and in any case in a book on eight !
Or even less if the substitute was inserted during the draw!


Moreover, on rare books 199-C51 we have seen, advertising the lower left panel is still being poorly centered relative to stamps, slightly shifted to the left:



However, we find this curious leftward shift of advertising on one of very rare books type II A with coincidentally the same ads (199-C 69 )


Would it just a coincidence?
Or would we chose to replace the notorious Block 11 adjacent to the five pubs in the board books 199-C 50, probably damaged by a fragment of the board of those rare books 199-C 69?
represented by the isolated fragment adjacent to the entire bottom edge with its five ads Benjamin. This is chronologically quite possible, since the printing of books 199-199-C 50 and C 69 dates from the same period of 1931.

This may explain the extreme rarity of these books: their impression that necessarily had to be stopped ...

In this case, it would be this time of a single sheet from a printing books to the type IIA (and not a board for the leaves) inserted into a board for the type IV books!
__________

All responses, comments, or criticisms are welcome anyway!

I take this opportunity to slip for a ad: I am desperately looking for a book Yvert 199-C 13 = 85 Ceres,
even if is in poor condition, re-gummed or with hinges!

Similarly, if you separate one of the books mentioned above,
your offer will be received with great pleasure ....

0 comments:

Post a Comment