Description
Booklet HBA2 Machin Plain Millennium Inset Band
“Machins and Millennium Commemoratives.”
Farmers’ Tale stamps (Concise pane number 2108a).
Royal Mail Philatelic Bureau Stock Number UB180.
Contains 8 x 1st red class (pane catalogue number UIPW33/1667). There is also a separate pane of two commemorative stamps (catalogue number WP1269/2108a).
Issued 21st September 1999. Printed by Walsall Security Printers.
Non-cylinder booklet.
Booklet HBA2. Concise catalogue (2016) valued at £14.00 for normal booklet.
You are buying ONE Non-Cylinder Booklet with an INSET BAND RIGHT on the right hand commemorative stamp. It has the normal 9mm phosphor band at the left of the Millennium Machin Pane.
During this era Walsall Printers closed their booklets with a “blob of glue” and are difficult to open, and at best, are unsightly.
Unmounted mint and in pristine condition.
Booklet HBA2 Machin Plain Millennium Inset Band.
INFORMATION SOURCES:
First of all, Royal Mail will handle your order. Therefore please see our Shop menu for postal options: Postage We only charge postage for the first item in most cases. Thus any further items purchased would not increase the final postal charges. Furthermore we do not charge you for envelopes and packaging.
Recorded Delivery or Registered Post is also available if required. Loss or damage compensation can be claimed, therefore, if this option is taken.
We mention Stanley Gibbons catalogue numbers where it is possible. These numbers are either from the “Concise Stamp Catalogue” or from the “Specialised Stamp Catalogue Volume 4 Part 1”. We will try to mention any other numbering that we may use if not covered by the above. Sometimes particular stamps, Smilers sheets, booklets, miniature sheets, or cylinder blocks are not recognized anywhere. Hence, in this case, we would use our own expertise to describe and value that item.
In conclusion, all of our stamps are unmounted mint and in an excellent condition. We will mention any variation to this statement.
Please let us know if we have made a mistake with this description.
We are members of the “Great Britain Philatelic Society” (GBPS): http://www.gbps.org.uk