In October last year a postmaster found, in his new stock, a sheet of 2nd class stamps with no datamatrix barcodes, which we reported here.
Well before the stamps were due to be issued an image of this sheet was shared on a postmaster chat forum and, although we don't know the full facts, it came to the attention of Royal Mail and it seems that Post Office Ltd arranged for the stamps to be withdrawn. They were apparently never sold over the counter, nor direct to collectors or dealers.
Not so in this case.
Earlier this month I was alerted to another case. The writer had found the earlier blog post and wrote with details and an image, and this time the error is on a 2nd class booklet.
Christmas 2023 2nd class booklet with missing barcode |
The writer tells that the booklet was sold at a branch in Surrey.
This error is previously unreported: nobody has mentioned this or similar errors to me before, nor to the Modern British Philatelic Circle (MBPC), the Great Britain Philatelic Society, and no dealers have reported it, and nor have the three monthly magazines with wide circulation in the UK.
The owner is interested in its value. As I explained,
The way they are printed, there must be - unless quality control only let a few out in error - a dozen or more, maybe 50. The fact that they haven't been reported means that:
UPDATE 3 March
I suppose it is a sign of the times that the first comment on this is that the booklet might be counterfeit, never mind the fact that there would be no point in counterfeiting an error rather than a stamp-as-issued. This reflects the plethora of forgeries on the market now, not only of Machin and KC3 definitives, but also many Christmas stamps and, more latterly, gummed special stamps.
To my mind it is an error, nothing more nothing less. Let me remind you that these were probably printed in the summer, at a similar time to the sheet stamps with missing barcode which were recalled before they could be issued.
Christmas stamps are printed well in advance of issue. Other special stamp issues are not printed quite as far in advance of the issue date. Also issued last summer was the River Wildlife set which included the error of a single phosphor band on the 1st class stamps.
And in February the King Charles valued definitives were printed in sheet form. We don't know exactly when the coil stamps for first day covers - produced erronesusly without U-shaped slits - were printed but it would have been well before November. What seems evident is that all these - River Wildlife, Definitives, Christmas sheets and Christmas booklets - were produced during the first 9 months of 2023.
Although there were other errors, most notably involving prestige stamp books which had missing or duplicated stamp or interleave panes (or covers), or which had serious miscuts or other misalignments, these types of errors were occurring many times over the life of this blog.
If you look at the word-cloud in the right-hand column of this page, you will see that 'Error' runs to 127 posts. This does include pre-release usage, and various Post and Go errors, as well as errors in the design (Wales 1st class font types), the missing P from the source code in PSB stamps (M_IL), and errors of colour the 81p PSB stamp) or make-up/inclusion (The £1.17 stamp included in a PSB after it ceased to pay a postage rate), but it also includes many instances of "these should not have made it to the public"!
So errors of one sort or another have abounded, and they really came to a peak in 2023. It doesn't seem to be unreasonable that the booklet under discussion is another one in the 2023 errors saga.
I hope that publication here and by the Societies and magazines will come to the attention of anybody else who might have one of these and we will then have a better idea of how many there might be.
If any dealer wishes to suggest a value for my contributor, then I shall be pleased to pass it on.