Me again. Your videos are answering so many questions I've spent years trying to find. I love the confidence of your knowledge. Keep up the great work!
Excellent presentation everything described so well. I acquired lots of these American stamps last year . I was just drawn to them and after seeing your video l am so glad l have treasured everyone. Thank you for sharing ☘️
Dear Ryan do you buy valuable stamps .i can see your approach is very professional in terms of pricing strategy and you really give a fair price stamps deserve not like most of other dealers who are just try making the most out of everyone !
I personally think that the grading system on some values is way off. I buy graded stamps but I will not spend $$$$ on perfect stamps. I'd rather spend my money on lower graded stamps to complete my collection. Thank you for the video and insight.
@@ThatStampGuy I am not collecting US stamps, except some thematic, but it is good to know that such tables exist at least for one country. Thanks for your answer! I am going to take liberties now. One more question, please. Does "grading" only refer to the centering of the stamp design on the stamp? Under what would one classify deteriorated quality like discolouration, some of the perforations bent or missing, fold in the stamp etc. Are these part of the grading system?
Grading is the centering and soundness of the stamp. The website also does Canada stamps as well. Faults that would prevent prevent or affect a grade are thins, creases, alterations, etc. Basically anything that would disturb the stamp from its original quality from the point it was originally purchased from the post office.
@@ThatStampGuy Thank you so much for the information. I understand better now. Someone else said grading purely refers to the centering of the stamp, but I now understand that the soundness or quality of the stamp can also influence the grading. Thanks again!
"OGh" and "OGph" designations are different when it comes to original gum with PSE graded stamps. As far as collecting graded OG, one would like to have OGph if possible.
Yes ph would indicate “previously hinged” which often indicates lightly hinged and more desirable, though there isn’t a separate SMQ value for hinged vs previously hinged.
🍁 Excellent Stamp Channel 🍁
🎯 Stamps🎯 Stamps🎯
Me again. Your videos are answering so many questions I've spent years trying to find. I love the confidence of your knowledge. Keep up the great work!
bro ive only watched 2 of. your videos and have learned more then I have in the Facebook groups. good shit! 💪
Thanks for that! It’s truly awesome motivation!
Excellent presentation everything described so well. I acquired lots of these American stamps last year . I was just drawn to them and after seeing your video l am so glad l have treasured everyone. Thank you for sharing ☘️
🔵🔵 enjoy your show thanks for sharing your collection 🟢
Dear Ryan do you buy valuable stamps .i can see your approach is very professional in terms of pricing strategy and you really give a fair price stamps deserve not like most of other dealers who are just try making the most out of everyone !
Yes I buy and sell better stamps, depending on what they are.
Thank you! This was a very informative video. It is amazing how much quality of a stamp has an influence on value!
Tough rotary press issue (701) Nice 100 grade.
I personally think that the grading system on some values is way off. I buy graded stamps but I will not spend $$$$ on perfect stamps. I'd rather spend my money on lower graded stamps to complete my collection. Thank you for the video and insight.
My apologies if this is clear from the video! Who publishes the tables you used to determine price, and where did you get them?
They are accepted values by almost all serious US collectors and can be found at gradingmatters.com
@@ThatStampGuy I am not collecting US stamps, except some thematic, but it is good to know that such tables exist at least for one country. Thanks for your answer!
I am going to take liberties now. One more question, please. Does "grading" only refer to the centering of the stamp design on the stamp? Under what would one classify deteriorated quality like discolouration, some of the perforations bent or missing, fold in the stamp etc. Are these part of the grading system?
Grading is the centering and soundness of the stamp. The website also does Canada stamps as well. Faults that would prevent prevent or affect a grade are thins, creases, alterations, etc. Basically anything that would disturb the stamp from its original quality from the point it was originally purchased from the post office.
@@ThatStampGuy Thank you so much for the information. I understand better now. Someone else said grading purely refers to the centering of the stamp, but I now understand that the soundness or quality of the stamp can also influence the grading. Thanks again!
"OGh" and "OGph" designations are different when it comes to original gum with PSE graded stamps. As far as collecting graded OG, one would like to have OGph if possible.
Yes ph would indicate “previously hinged” which often indicates lightly hinged and more desirable, though there isn’t a separate SMQ value for hinged vs previously hinged.
@@ThatStampGuy I'd pay less for OGh.
i have US IR stamps i want to sell