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Overprint

An overprint is the addition of text (and sometimes graphics) to the face of a postage stamp after it has been printed.

Overprints have been used for many purposes over the years. They have been used as surcharges, commemorations, and control marks.

A surcharge is an overprint that alters or confirms the face value[?] of the stamp. These are commonly used when needed types of stamp are unavailable, whether because new shipments are delayed, because circumstances have changed too quickly to get appropriate new stamps, or simply to use up existing stamps.

One famous example of surcharging came in the German hyperinflation of 1921-1923. Stamps in the 10-20 pfennig[?] range were no longer useful for paying postage (hundreds would have been required on a normal letter), so at first the government overprinted existing stamps with values up to 10 marks while it was designing new ones, but by 1923 even its printed stamps ranging up to 75,000 marks became useless and had to be surcharged with higher values, up to 2,000,000 marks and then a round with values up to 10,000,000,000 marks (10 milliard or American billion) before the financial system was reset.

Many countries have used surcharges when converting to new currencies, for instance the British Commonwealth when its countries went over to decimal sterling[?] in the late 1960s.

Countries with political instability have frequently had to resort to surcharges because the existing stocks were exhausted and there was no one in charge to order more. In many cases, countries have resorted to overprinting revenue stamps[?], telegraph stamps[?], and seemingly anything else they could find that was perforated and gummed - and, in the worst case - stamps that had been previously surcharged.

Occasionally surcharges have been applied by individual postmasters, especially those in the remotest locations and in the early days of stamps, but because of the possibilities for abuse, this is rarely approved by the national government.

Overprints have also been used as commemoratives, as a lower-cost alternative to designing and issuing special stamps. The United States, which historically has issued very few overprints, did this in 1928 for issues commemorating Molly Pitcher[?] and the discovery of Hawaii. A special subcategory is overprinting on sports-related stamps in events such as the Olympics. For example, on April 8, 1998 Guyana issued a set of 32 stamps showing team pictures of all the participants in that year's World Cup championships; on August 20, after the tournament, eight of these were reissued with an overprint announcing Farance as the winner. This practice is frowned upon by many philatelists. An unfortunately common use of commemorative overprints has been due to revolution; the overprint may obscure or even blot out the previous ruler's head, but invariably proclaims the new regime, frequently with the date of its takeover.

A more obscure use of overprints has been as control devices to deal with theft. In the 19th century Mexico was plagued by theft of stamps on their way to remote post offices, so every stamp was overprinted with the town name and a number. The United States used this strategy to deal with thefts in Kansas and Nebraska in 1929, overprinting the common stamps of the time with "Kans." and "Nebr." (surviving examples are scarce and prized, the 10c priced at over $100 in 2000).

Despite their temporary and expedient nature, many overprints were produced by the millions, and thus readily available to collectors today. Others are rare and desirable, but all too easy to fake by printing on a copy of the original stamps, and expert authentication is mandatory for valuable overprints.



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