First
Day Cover Collecting
Basics
There
are many ways to collect
First Day Covers. This
guide will discuss
several major options,
available resources,
general pricing advice
and more.
How you collect is your
choice. Whatever your
choice, you will be able
to find a wide array of
material on Online
Stores, eBay
and at your local
stamp dealer
with which to build your
collection.
Once you have made a
choice we suggest you get
the 2007
U.S. Scott First Day
Cover Catalogue &
Checklist
which is available for
purchase to your right.
It provides updated
values for more than
10,000 cacheted and
uncacheted U.S. First Day
Covers. Listings are
arranged by Scott
Catalogue number and
includes brief
description featuring
denomination and subject.
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So what
is a First Day Cover?
The three basic elements of a
first day cover are the envelope,
the stamp and the postmark. The
postmark is the critical element
as it verifies the date on which
the stamp in question was
cancelled and ties it to the
cover. If the date of the cancel
is on the first day a particular
stamp design has been issued by
the post office, the evelope it
is on is a First Day cover.
Generally, the US
Post Office issues a stamp in
only one city the day before a
new issue is put on sale in post
offices around the nation.
The issuance of a new stamp is
frequently a cause of
celebration, and as such the post
office often holds special
ceremonies in the First Day city.
A special Ceremony Program has
been used at most of these events
since WWII. These are also
collectible. On eBay you
should search for First Day
Programs.
Most people focus
on first day covers
themselves. Since 1923
first day covers have been
decorated with a special cachet
(pronounced "ka-shay")
printed, stamped, pasted or drawn
on the envelope which usually
relates in some way to the
subject depicted on the stamp.
These designs vary from the
crudely drawn to virtual works of
art in their own right. First day
covers can be broadly grouped
into two primary groups: Cacheted
and Un-Cacheted. A number
of individuals and companies have
developed a series of cachets
over the years which they sold to
the general collecting public.
Some first day cover collectors
specialize in collecting one or
more cachet maker, trying to
accumulate as many different
creations of their favorite over
time.
Don't Forget
Postal Cards
US Postal Cards are an often
forgotten aspect of first day
cover collecting. As a result,
they offer the collector an
opportunity to build a
significant collection at
realtively low cost.
Unfortunately most dealers
do not carry these.
Cachet Makers
Among the more popular cachet
makers are the following:
Artcraft
are perhaps the most numerous
cachet available. Started in
1939, Artcraft used plain black
ink engraved designs. Very clean
and well executed designs were
well recieved by stamp
collectors. After all stamp
collectors have an advanced level
of appreciation for engraved art,
like the stamps they collected.
Because they were produced and
collected heavily, they are among
the most common first day cachet
on the aftermarket. At the same
time, that popularity has
resulted in many people trying to
collect them all. The early
issues from 1939 are more
difficult to come by. There are a
number of variations available to
add to the enjoyment. With the
exception of early issues, you
should probably insist on
unaddressed material for this
cachet maker.
Artmaster
celebrated 50 years of First Days
in 1996 our first cachet
was issued on May 9, 1946.
Founded by Bob and Mary Schmidt
"in a filebox on the kitchen
table," as the story goes,
the business is still owned by
family. Uncle Bob and Aunt Mary
were collectors themselves, and
always did their best to please
their customers with personal
service. We try to do the very
same today. Artmaster envelopes
are printed by offset in one or
two colors. On the reverse is a
short biography or description of
the stamp subject. Early
Artmaster covers are single color
engravings.
House of
Farnam is the very
oldest continuously produced
cachet, founded by Dusty Farnam
and his wife, Vera, in Cleveland,
Ohio on May 9, 1936. The business
was sold to John Halliday of
Whittier, California in the late
1970s; then Artmaster assume
production of Farnam covers in
1988. House of Farnam cachets are
multi-color engravings and have a
rich, distinctive appearance and
texture. Early Farnam covers are
single color.
Cover
Craft Cachets is a line
of covers founded in New Jersey
by Ben Schwartz in 1964. It has
been a limited edition version of
Farnam since 1987; the line has
been produced by Artmaster since
1988. CCCachets are made from the
same engraving plates as Farnam
covers; but feature gray rather
than white stock envelopes. Each
comes with a stuffer card
detailing the number produced for
that issue as well as a short
description or biography of the
stamp subject.
Fleetwood
has made the finest First Day
Covers in the business since 1929
for more than 75 years.
Fleetwood First Day Covers
are painstakingly crafted using
beautiful designs created
exclusively for Fleetwood
collectors. Every Cover bears the
coveted Fleetwood watermark and
uses fine linen-finish paper made
to our exacting specifications.
Stamps are masterpieces in
miniature and are carefully
affixed. Add to this the
authoritative narratives... the
full-bodied feel and enduring
quality of the covers
themselves...the official
postmarks...and you have the key
reasons why Fleetwood-brand First
Day Covers are so popular among
collectors.
Colorano
Silk are this country's
leading manufacturer of
full-color "silk"
cachets for first day and special
event covers. Brilliant
full-color art, dazzling gold
borders, and the unique look that
only a "silk" cachet
can offer, have made COLORANO the
choice of knowledgeable
collectors for more than 25
years. Browse our web site and
you'll soon see why COLORANO
covers are considered by many to
be the finest available in the
market today.
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