Stamp
Catalogs: Your Guide to the Hobby
If you went to
Washington, D.C., to tour the city, you would need more than a camera
and comfortable shoes, you would need a guidebook. Without one,
you might wander aimlessly throughout the city, from one unidentified
building to another. You might miss the Capitol or even the White
House or the Washington Monument. You would probably be unaware
of the many other attractions available.
Your guidebook
for stamp collecting is the stamp catalog. The catalog is your illustrated
map, directing you to many stamp attractions and depicting where
you are, what you have accomplished, and where you want to be heading.
Since 1867, when
John Walter Scott published one of the first catalogs (a stamp list
with prices), a number has been assigned to every stamp issued by
every country of the world. Scott and Minkus publish U.S. Specialized
catalogs and their numbers are used in most other catalogs and price
lists in the United States. Scott publishes six volumes of catalogs
covering the entire world in addition to its U.S. Specialized Catalog.
The diagram below
shows what information can be found in a catalog. But, how do you
locate that information for a specific stamp? First, of course,
you must identify the country. Then you should determine the year,
or at least the general time period, when the stamp was issued.
For U.S. issues,
featuring a person, you can easily determine the time period; armed
with the date of death for that person and the knowledge that no
U.S. stamp has ever honored a living person. The denomination also
can be helpful, since postage rates are generally grouped in a sequence.
You can quickly thumb through the catalog searching for a grouping
of stamps with the same denomination, and begin there.
Finally, look at
the stamp pictures in the catalog for one that matches the stamp
you are trying to identify. Be certain to compare all the elements
denomination (number), color, perforations, variations
to be sure you have found the correct listing.
The Scott catalog
and some others simplify the locating process by providing an index
for U.S. regular and commemorative issues.
The catalog prices
that are listed, even in a current publication, should be considered
as only a rough guide. They represent what you might approximately
pay for a stamp, and the price for which you could sell it. The
condition of any stamp has a great influence on its price relative
to the catalog listing. Catalog prices for mint stamps are for those
in "fine" condition and only lightly hinged. A stamp considered
"superb" might sell for several times the catalog value.
And naturally, stamps in less than fine condition will sell for
a small percentage of the listed price. Your club advisor can provide
further information on determining the condition of a stamp.
The best way to
become familiar with stamp catalogs is through use. Try using a
catalog from your school or local library. Read the beginning of
the catalog and you will find that it is filled with information
about the catalog format and about stamp collecting. Then take the
catalog and some stamps from your collection and attempt to locate
the listing for each.
Remember, catalogs
are much more than just price lists. They are guidebooks containing
information about stamp attractions to make your continuing tour
of the hobby more fun.
(We
wish to thank the U.S. Postal Service for permission
to utilize a version of this article originally published in its
Ben Franklin Stamp Club's "Stamp Fun" newsletter.)
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