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· Gum to Gum Skip · Gutter to Gutter Snipe |
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Gauge - the number of perforations every 20mm on
a sheet of perforated stamps. For example a perf 12 gauge stamp has 12
perforations every two centimeters (20mm). Note that 20mm is just shy of
the width of the design of many definitive stamps.
Glassine - A glassine is a translucent envelope
with an open end and a fold-over flap.
Glassine Surfer, the - a column in the American Philatelic
Society's monthly magazine about stamp collecting and the Web. You can
read the archive and see where the best stamp sites are on the Glassine
Surfer's website.
Government Coil - coil stamps produced by the U.S.
Post Office Department, primarily the BEP, as opposed to privately
perforated coil stamps. The first government coils were issued in early
1908, made from the regular issues of the 1902 Series.
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A Typical Perforation Gauge |
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Government Printing Office - A federal agency
created to meet the printing needs of Congress, the GPO has printed all
postal cards since 1910. Today the GPO provides Government information in
a wide range of formats in addition to print, including microfiche,
CD-ROM, and online support through GPO
Access.
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GPO - the Government Printing Office
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Gravure - Gravure is an intaglio printing
process utilizing a printing plate created by photographic and chemical
means, rather than by the more traditional engraving by hand.
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Gridiron Cancels - Gridiron cancels are rows of
parallel lines enclosed in a circle, common in the 19th
century.
Grill - A grill is a security device
consisting of a waffle-like pattern of raised ridges intended to break the
paper fiber of stamps in the hope that the cancellation ink would be more
completely absorbed and thus harder to wash out.
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A Circular Gridiron Cancel |
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Gripper Cracks - cracks that formed over slots cut
in the edges of the engraved plates curved to fit the rotary press
cylinders at the spot where the clamps held the plates to the cylinders
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Guide Dot - a dot on the engraved plate or
transfer roll used as a guide in the spacing and alignment of stamps as
the siderographer entered the subjects on the plate
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Guide Line - a vertical or horizontal line, or
both, inscribed on a plate, usually running through the center, used as a
guide for operators of perforating machines or as an indication of the
point of separation of the sheet into panes. Note that guide lines
are NOT the same as joint lines. The example at right further
demonstrates the fact that the imperforate stamps with genuine guidelines
can be used to manufacture a guideline coil pair. Thus a genuine guideline
is no guarantee that a coil pair is genuine.
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A Guideline on the 2¢ Imperforate of 1908 |
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Guide Line Block - A guide line block, or simply
"line block", is a block of stamps with a guideline dividing the
stamps.
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Guide Line Pair - an attached pair of flat plate
stamps with a guideline between them. This term is most commonly used in
association with coil stamps, although it is sometimes used with flat
plate imperforate pairs. Guide-line coil pairs usually bring a premium
over pairs without a guideline. Note that a guideline was deliberately
placed on the flat plate sheets and is found only on flat plate stamps. A
joint-line is found on rotary press stamps.
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Gum - the adhesive applied to the back of stamps
that enables a stamp to be affixed to an envelope when moistened. The
presence and level of disturbance of the gum is often of great importance
in the determination of the value of a stamp. It has been said that never
hinged gum is the most valuable substance, pound for pound, on this
planet. Sometimes gum is added to a stamp, called regumming, in an effort
to deceive collectors into thinking the stamp is the more valuable stamp.
For investment purposes there is nothing like the never hinged stamp with
full gum. However, the presence of gum does have its detractors. Its
presence may crack, stain and possibly harm the paper of the stamp itself,
possibly even destroying the stamp over time. For this reason there is a
growing movement among collectors to abstain from the practice of
collecting the never hinged stamp, even to the point of collecting stamps
with no gum. In 200 years, these collectors may be heroes, since their
stamps may be reasonably fresh, while the never hinged stamps may have
deteriorated beyond collectibility.
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Gum Breakers - Gum breakers are horizontal or
slightly diagonal impressions across the backs of stamps made by
physically "breaking" the gum to reduce the curling of the sheet
stamps.
more...
Gum Crease - A gum crease is a naturally
occurring crease or creases found on flat plate stamps most often caused
by movement and subsequent cracking of the gum in the drying process. Gum
creases are often seen on early airmail stamps, including the Zeppelins.
Stamps of these issues without gum creases bring a premium.
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Type III Gum Breakers |
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Gum Ridges - Gum ridges run at right angles
(vertically) to the gum breakers on the backs of the rotary sheet stamps
starting with the Series of 1922. Ridges were added in the hopes that stamps would
adhere better.
more...
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Gum Skip - A gum skip is a naturally
occurring spot on a stamp to which no gum had adhered during the gumming
process, as opposed to a gum thin in which gum is removed in the
process of handling the stamp.
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Gutter - Gutters are spaces left between panes of
stamps on a printed sheet, often containing markings to aid in the
perforation process. Not all sheets of stamps have a gutter space between
the panes. Note that gutters are the spaces between panes
and not the outside sheet margins.
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Gutter Block - A gutter block is a block of
stamps that contains stamps from two or more panes and the gutter or
gutters between them. Gutter blocks are interesting in that they are
generally not available, since sheets are normally cut into panes before
distribution. Gutter blocks are available only when a sheet is purchased
intact with the panes unseparated, as with the Farley's
Follies.
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Gutter Dashes - A gutter dash is a thin
line placed at the edge of the sheet to indicate where the center of each
pane is located.
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Gutter Pair - A gutter pair is similar to a
gutter block, but with only two stamps separated by a gutter.
Guttersnipe - A gutter snipe occurs when the
pane is improperly cut leaving the entire gutter and occasionally a
portion of the adjoining stamp and perforations. A guttersnipe should be
regarded as an "error", whereas gutter blocks and pairs are the
naturally occurring result of leaving the sheet intact.
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A Horizontal Pair with a Vertical Gutter |