Return to News

4th March 2016

Warwick & Warwick March 2016 Stamp Auction Report

The March Stamp Auction achieved the best result for some months, recording a total realisation of £320,000 from an auction of 730 lots, with very few unsold.

British Commonwealth

The British Commonwealth section got off to a good start, with a collection of Australian States in 3 binders, described as mixed condition and duplicated, selling for £1000, well above the estimate of £250. Similarly, the next lot, a King George V to Queen Elizabeth collection easily surpassed the estimate of £700, eventually selling for £1090.

 

An 1897 Canada $5, with good colour & perfectly centred, sold for £507.

 

This charming letter sent in 1860 by a soldier from Gibraltar to Blackburn realised £189.

 

Foreign

Airship commemorative stamps are a popular and fascinating area and there were many on offer, in collections and single items, throughout the foreign section of the auction (read our news story here). A German 1931 Polar Flight 2rm, with missing hyphen, sold for £200.

 

Prices for Chinese stamps seem to be achieving even higher levels. A collection from classics through to modern and with many of the sought after PRC issues, in 4 albums and estimated at £4,400 was eventually knocked down for £9,150. From the same country, a lot consisting of 33 used examples of the 1885-88 5ca in various multiples, described in the catalogue ‘very mixed’ sold for £1590 dwarfing the estimate of £250.

 

Brazil was the second country to issue postage stamps that could be used throughout the nation, with the ‘Bull’s Eye’ 30r & 60r stamps of August 1843, plus a 90r that was reserved for international mail. They employed the same company that printed the Penny Black but issued them in much smaller quantities and, as a result, very good examples are rarely seen, so this outstanding 90r, with 4 good margins undoubtedly helped a Brazil collection in 3 albums reach a price of £1,150.

 

A France 1917-19 War Orphans 50c, 1f & 5f sold in UM condition, and catalogued in Yvert at over €8000 as such, sold to a fortunate buyer for a very reasonable £885.

 

Great Britain

The Great Britain section included various lots of KGV & KGVI booklet panes. This inverted watermark pane sold for £130.

 

A hoard of QEII pre-decimal material, including multiple phophors, coils, sheets, etc, estimated at £4,000, sold for £8550.

Latest Articles

Found an unusual £2, £1 or 50p coin in your pocket change?

25th December 2018

Found an unusual £2, £1 or 50p coin in your pocket change?

Read More
Warwick & Warwick's very successful Wrenn OO gauge sale on the 16th May 2018.

23rd May 2018

Warwick & Warwick's very successful Wrenn OO gauge sale on the 16th May 2018.

Read More
Early May Bank Holiday Opening Times

7th May 2018

Early May Bank Holiday Opening Times

Read More
1961 Tristan Relief Fund: The story behind the overprints

26th April 2018

1961 Tristan Relief Fund: The story behind the overprints

Read More