I love history, including world history, and stamps are a great way to learn more about the world. So I have not restricted myself to only U.S. stamps. Actually, by accident, I ended up with stamps from an assortment of countries as distant family members traveled and sent back post cards and letters to my great-aunts, and received many from friends who visited other countries, or have family still in the old world.
I also have a mix in this batch that my wife's friend gave me - she used a couple of the stamp vendors and received small batches of stamps from "around the world".
So I have quite a few from some places - Germany, Austria, Australia, Russia and the former USSR, and then 1 or 5 from some other smaller countries, including some from members of the UAE. That means I could fill a page or three with German stamps, and maybe a row with some from another country. I have one from Iran, one from Palestine, and so on.
So the question is - what are people doing for non-U.S. stamps where they may have a lot from some countries, 1 or 2 from others? I can't see buying pre-printed books for them as 3/4 would remain empty, unused, yet I do want some order to them as well.
Some I'd like to know the history of- I have a Japanese stamp from about 1899 that my son says was likely printed in Korea while Japan occupied that country and used the Koreans as sort of slave labor, and used their resources as their own - he thinks that stamp may be Japanese but printed in Korea at that time.
I'd like to know things like that.
I know places like Mystic offers a 2 binder set for non-US stamps, but that seems like a waste - or would it be?
Right now I have the stamps sorted into glassine envelopes and labeled by country. I have about 2 dozen envelopes, and another that's unsorted because there's maybe just one stamp from a country. I have blocks from Korea, and would like to mount them as is.
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