From Royal Mail's Post and Go News website
87th Scottish Congress
Post and Go machines A011 and A012 will be attending the 87th
Scottish Congress at the Dewar’s Centre in Perth on 15/16 April 2016.
Machines will vend the Heraldic Lion, Machin and Union Flag designs with
an ‘87th Scottish Congress 2016’ overprint. Jersey machine JE01 will
have the same overprint on the Crest of Jersey and Jersey Flag designs. [see note 1]
World Stamp Show NY 2016
The Royal Mail stand will have A011 and A012 machines accompanied by
Jersey’s JE01 machine. Also at the show will be Gibraltar’s GI01 and
Guernsey’s GG01 machines. The New York skyline design from the Sea
Travel set, issued in September 2015, and the Union Flag design will be
vended with a ‘World Stamp Show NY2016’ overprint. Royal Mail will be
offering GB printed versions of the show overprint from Tallents House.
Unlike recent single design reels, the New York skyline stamp was
produced in
gravure alongside the original set and pre-dated the digital
production capability.
Static Sites
Royal Mail is pleased to announce that two museums will be added to the
line-up of Royal Navy Museums. Locations and installation timings will
be advised in due course. Both sites will carry the same ‘Royal Navy’
static identifier and logo as A002.
Comment
1. Scottish Congress Perth stamps may be ordered from the
ASPS website as usual: see 24 February entry and use the interactive pdf form.
2. The New York 2016 International Stamp Exhibition has been on the calendar for many years, so it was natural that Royal Mail would plan to take the Post and Go machines there. It was a surprise to many collectors that the 'Sea Travel' set did not show ocean liners or other shipping but the views from the liners. This, of course, paved the way for Royal Mail to then use a single design at the NY2016 show, and these were printed by the traditional method in gravure. Maybe the cost of that short run highlighted for Royal Mail that there might be a cheaper way - the stamps for use in
Qatar's Post and Go machines, and Gibraltar's Christmas stamps were printed by a digital process, so it made sense for the
Hong Kong solo reels (which seem to have been a late addition to the programme) to be similarly printed.
3. In his Machin Watch column in the March edition of
Gibbons Stamp Monthly John Deering outlined his Post and Go ponderings, with thoughts on 'inscriptions and the future'. In this well-considered article John draws a distinction between Philatelically relevant inscriptions (such as at major exhibitions and the Postal Museum), but he also writes:
"With the Armed Forces having a direct link to our monarch I feel comfortable enough with their museum machines and their inscriptions."
But he doesn't like the latest Swindon installation:
"Things took an unwelcome turn in August 2015 when a machine... was put into the Museum of the Great Western Railway in Swindon. 'Unwelcome' because most advocates of Post and Go and enthusiasts of inscriptions seem to think that this is a step too far. Unlike the other locations, the GWR has no direct association to our hobby, seems less relevant, and... is entering into truly unwarranted territory."
And now we are getting two more Naval Museum machines! According to wikipedia, the only parts of the museum which don't yet have a machine are:
- HMS Victory, Portsmouth Dockyard, Hampshire
- Explosion! Museum of Naval Firepower, Gosport, Hampshire
- HMS Trincomalee, Hartlepool
Surely they won't put a machine on HMS Victory, which is within Portsmouth dockyard, so it probably means Gosport and Hartlepool.
I totally disagree with John Deering that the Swindon GWR Museum machine is unnecessary. To my mind NONE of the machines are in any way justified. A connection with the monarch, as head of Britain's armed forces, means nothing.
I doubt very much whether the tourist visitors are buying more than a
very small fraction of these stamps. The bulk of the sales will be to you, the collectors and dealers. Tourists - especially overseas visitors - are more likely to buy the stamps produced by Universal Mail UK which are already produced for HMS Victory!
There can be very little money to be made by the museums from the sale of Post and Go stamps. Even when selling by mail order at a price higher than face value, the labour costs involved in getting the stamps and processing the orders cannot be worthwhile unless they get a very high proportion of the face value of the stamps, something which is most unlikely (and which Royal Mail is not likely to reveal).
If Royal Mail want to develop Post and Go as a product then there are several avenues they could take. It is too late now, but the annual remembrance Poppy stamp could have been created from the ones issues in the World War 1 commemoration stamp issues.
For commemorations, a design used for a commemorative stamp
could also be used on short-term Post and Go stamps, as has been done in Spain and France. La Poste also produces pre-stamped envelopes with commemorative designs matching adhesive stamps, and apparently these are widely used.
Similarly the Post Office self-service kiosks could sell stamps with designs appropriate to their location, as Universal Mail UK has been doing for years.