Detecting Forgeries
Lobko's
Catalog is one
of the best references for differentiating forgeries and fantasies
from the legitimate item.
If an overprinted Soviet stamp or provisional stamp design is not
featured in Lobko's catalog, then there's a very strong possibility
that the stamp is bogus.
According to Lobko's catalog, the main indicator of legitimacy is the
paper making up the provisional.
The paper on which overprints were made was manufactured in the
former Soviet Union and Ukraine. The technolgy used to manufacture
this paper insured that, when examined over a light, pulp filaments
all ran in one direction. Paper rolls were cut in such a fashion that
filament direction coincided with the longest part of the page.
Widespread sampling has shown that all
provisional issues shown in this catalog were made on paper with
vertical filaments.
Envelope manufacturing technology
differed: it printed text, illustrations, and imprinted stamps at an
angle to the filaments in the paper. Thus, all
overprints/surchages that were made on envelopes display filaments
running at an angle of approximately 45-55 degrees.
Therefore, provisional stamps with angled filaments were not prepared
on a sheet, but instead cut from an envelope that had the same
provisional marking. All such stamps are forgeries.
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