Saturday/ the falling ladder and the mole hill 🪜

I fancy myself to be a hard-core philatelist— at least when it comes to the stamps from South Africa in my collection.

To identify variants of a particular stamp that had been issued, I would say one needs at least a detailed stamp catalogue, a magnifying glass, and a stamp perforation gauge. Let’s also throw in an ultra-violet (UV) light, for stamps tagged with special inks.

1933 6d Orange Tree | Orange and dark green | Perf. 15×14 | Photogravure printing, Die III | Watermark multiple Springbok Heads | Afrikaans or English text
The orange tree on this 6 penny stamp was a symbol for the Orange Free State province of the Union of South Africa.
(After 1994, the Orange Free State province name was shortened to Free State.)
The 6d stamp comes in three different designs (printing dies). In addition, there are two known flaws: the ‘falling ladder’ ($177 per pair) and the ‘mole hill’ * ($147 per pair).  These flawed stamps are sometimes worth ten times or more than the flawless ones*. 
*Then again, in the words of Henry Havelock Ellis ‘The absence of flaw is in itself a flaw’.
[Source: 2016 Stanley Gibbons Stamp Catalogue for Commonwealth & British Empire Stamps 1840-1970)

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