1 (edited by William 2022-03-20 09:46:48)

Topic: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

I remember reading, years ago, in several different places, in advice about job applications, about statements like the following.

Mention your hobbies - not stamp collecting!

There seemed to be some unexplained sort-of "everyone will undersand this comment ha ha" about it.

I wondered why.

Is having a hobby of stamp collecting supposed to be something that "we" do not do?

I know this is basically a trivial topic but it is something I remembered recently when I became interested in the new barcoded stamps that are being introduced. So I am just wondering if anyone here has any insight into why this might have been written. Is it part of "the culture of us" to have a pop at stamp collecting?

William

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

William wrote:

Is having a hobby of stamp collecting supposed to be something that "we" do not do?

Perhaps they’re just trying to tell you politely that (at least in relation to your job application) philately won’t get you anywhere!

"Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?"
― Tennessee Williams

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

That it won't glaze with vegan margarine any type of root vegetable. smile

William

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

I think stamp collecting has, for whatever reason, gone out of fashion, which is a shame. Back in the 1950s my father  bought both myself and my sister a stamp album completely out of the blue. I was around 8 years old at the time and enjoyed my new collecting hobby.

We joined a stamp approval 'club' where books of stamps were mailed to you and you had a few weeks to decide which ones you wanted to buy. I cannot remember how long we collected stamps for, but it was probably a few years. As time went on, stamps became much more interesting, especially British stamps. They started issuing stamps to commemorate anniversaries. I can remember getting very excited when the World Cup stamps came out in 1966, and even more excited when they had the word 'Winners' printed on them.

 
https://i.postimg.cc/gwQz7fGV/sg700-1966-england-winners-world-cup-football-stamp-2615-p.jpg

I guess the people who go train spotting feel that they don't get a fair press either - anoraks the lot of 'em. https://punster.me/images/whistling.gif

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

Commemorative stamps were issued long before the 1960s! A quick search on the Interwebs found these from stampsforsale.co.uk:

https://s3.eu-west-2.amazonaws.com/bb-stamps/uploads/741/aqz4Zjpk4KWV.jpg

"Has it ever struck you that life is all memory, except for the one present moment that goes by you so quick you hardly catch it going?"
― Tennessee Williams

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

I suppose what I meant was that new commemorative stamps were a lot more interesting than the bog standard stamps of the day. My father had two stamp albums, one of which had the penny black and twopenny red in them, not so valuable as I imagined they would be.
The two stamps which you uploaded I can remember my dad having, but they did not excite me that much, but from a historical standpoint they are fascinating, as an eight year old boy however...

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

As a young kid I remember going on a school trip to the victorian street in York where I bought amonst other things, a penny black. A copy of course, but it did find it's way into my stamp album.

I used to be indecisive, now I'm not so sure.

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

For a time, there was a glut of stamps from East Germany, heavily overprinted, and frankly (pun intended) worthless. I am sure these were produced especially for sale to novice  collectors  in the West, who paid small sums for giant packets of rubbish. "Every packet contains some high value stamps." Phooey!

BTW, stamp collecting was a hobby of King George 5, so it ought to be OK for lesser mortals. There are cabinets full of his stamps in the British Museum, as I remember.

When I cleared my late father's papers, there were many receipts with old postage stamps, acting as duty stamps (Geo 5 in an era of E2R, but unfortunately, I understood these were not collectable.

Do people remember, or realise, that for years, one had to fix a stamp, usually 2d, on every document like a receipt. Printed receipt form pads had a space for the stamp, and I think you were supposed to overwrite it to prevent reuse. Cheque books were ready printed with a duty 2d stamp, so you had to pay for a cheque book to settle the duty. A book of 25 cheques would have cost you 50d or 4s2p - "four-'nd-tuppence". I can't remember how many cheques a book would have; it might have been 12, costing 2s in duty. nb That's all from memory, subject to error.

9 (edited by William 2022-03-21 15:39:08)

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

I remember going to a bank to draw £5 and the cashier asking

"Have you got tupprence for a stamp?"

When I said "No, can you take it out of the account please, so I withdraw five pounds and tuppence please?" I was given a strange look, which I took as he thinking 'Young person coming in here to draw money out of his account and not bringing tuppence for a stamp with him, what is the world coming to with the youth of today' and he duly passed to me a form to draw £5-0s-2d from my account with a 2d stamp affixed to it.

On a later occasion I went in and asked to withdraw five pounds and twopence please, and can you use the tuppence for the stamp please. I got a peculiar look as if I should be walking around with loose change in case I needed to draw money out of my bank account.

Years later, at another bank, after stamp duty on receipts had been abolished and decimal money was in use, I needed to pay something in cash and it was so many pounds and so many pence, not a round number, so rather than go and pay with whole notes and get change, I drew the exact amount from the bank. The cashier just did it matter of fact, no comment about it, just did the job as he should.

William

Re: Stamp collecting - why not to mention it?

I seem to remember paying five shillings for a cheque book.

So that would be 60d as 240d to the pound and 20 shillings to the pound.

So 30 cheques in the cheque book.

Which is the same as today.

There was a time when I used to pay lots of things by cheque, then later I only very rarely paid anything by cheque for many years, maybe only one a year some years, but continuing to have a cheque book was still useful to pay for a few things where a business did not have a facility to pay by card.

I seem to remember that there was something some years ago about banks wanting to discontinue having cheques but there was protest so they are still available..

William