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| Electric Eye to Endwise Coil · Engraved to Exploded Booklet | |
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Earliest Documented Cover - (EDC) The earliest documented cover is becoming the preferred way to collect early usages of U.S. stamps, partly because a cover tells much more of the story behind the early usage. Many texts are beginning to make this distinction. Although, we are making an effort to make the most current information regarding earliest documented covers and usages available on this web site, this is a difficult task, particularly since the information is not kept in an easily available format and in some cases the information is guarded jealously. If you have any information that supercedes any listed date on this site, we, and the stamp collecting community, would be most grateful for such updates. Our records reflect EDUs and EDCs through 2003. |
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Earliest Documented Use - (EDU) This term is often used interchangeably and incorrectly with "Earliest Known Use". It refers to the earliest date, documented by expert opinion, for which a stamp is known to have been used. We have included the "Earliest Documented Usage" for many of the classic issues in the U.S. by Year pages. The distinction between EDU and EKU is an important one, since many of the earlier reported EKUs have proven to be incapable of verification. By definition, "documented" means the stamp/cover has been expertized by one of the expertization agencies. |
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Earliest Known Use - (EKU) The first date for
which a stamp is reported to have been used. Note that many U.S.
stamps had official release dates, but occasionally a post office released
the stamp before that release date. These early usages are not regarded as
EKUs, they are known as pre-dates. |
![]() Edison Coil Pair |
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EE Bars - (Electric Eye Bars) These bars aid the
electric eye in the perforating process. EE bars are commonly found in the
margins of sheet stamps, but are usually trimmed from coil stamps; the
plate block at right has the EE bars in the left margin. The
term "EE" refers to the fact that the stamps were perforated
using the electric eye method. |
![]() Electric Eye Bars in Left Margin |
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![]() Experimental Electric Eye Rotary Press Plate Block |
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Electric Eye Dashes - On the 400 subject sheets, 41 vertical dashes were added to the vertical gutter between the right and left panes to aid the electric eye in the perforating process. There were two vertical dashes per stamp and a single vertical dash dead center between the upper and lower panes. |
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Electric Eye Horizontal Frame Bars (Frame Slugs) - Horizontal lines in the left sheet margin were used to aid the electric eye in the perforating process. This marking was first used in 1939. |
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Embossed Printing (Relief Printing) - The design of an embossed stamp is raised on the transfer roll, as opposed to the recessed design on the engraved plates, with the resulting image pressed into the paper, rather than being placed on top of the paper as in the engraving process. Note that ink is not necessary for embossing purposes |
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Endwise Coil - coil stamps linked together
endwise, that is the top of one stamp is connected to the bottom of the
next. These are more often referred to as "vertical coils". Note
that endwise (vertical) coils are perforated horizontally. |
![]() Endwise Coil Pair |
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Engraver - the craftsman who engraves the image of the stamp on a die |
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Engraving Process- the process by which the stamp's design is cut into a metal die. The design is then transferred to the "transfer roll" and finally to the printing plate. |
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Entire - On this web site, "entire" refers to any intact cover. |
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Error - Errors are a special group that are often given separate listings. The most famous U.S. errors are the inverts, for example the upside down airplane, but the term also applies to imperforate stamps that were intended to be perforated, or perforated stamps that have an improper perforation, as well as stamps missing a color or colors. Lack of tagging when the stamp should be tagged is also considered an error, and is analogous to a missing color error. What distinguishes "errors" from their cousins, the freaks and oddities, is that an error must be a major production mistake. |
![]() Horizontal Pair Imperforate Between |
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Errors, Freaks and Oddities - a general term for stamps and envelopes that have irregularities of some form. "Errors" are major production mistakes. "Freaks" encompass a wide range of unusual variations, including color or perforation shifts, while "oddities" encompasses an even wider range of variations, including over- or under-inking, foldovers, or any other factor that makes the stamp look odd. |
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Essay - a design or any artwork officially proposed (essayed), as the design for a stamp. An essay is a stage in the design of the stamp that was not adopted in the final design. Thus an essay differs from the design of the issued stamp. This is to distinguish it from a "proof" which is identical in design to the issued stamp. |
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Expertization - the process by which an expertizing
service renders an authoritative opinion on the genuineness of a stamp and
cover. |
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Exploded Booklet - a booklet that has been broken into its component parts, usually for display purposes. |
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