Showing posts sorted by relevance for query spiro. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query spiro. Sort by date Show all posts

2021-11-28

SPIRO - a look back

THE SPIRO FORGERIES OF JAPANESE STAMPS

By Harold E. M. Bradshaw and Varro E. Tyler, Jr.

Philatelic forgery, the production of counterfeit postage stamps for sale to collectors, is almost as old as 

philately itself. The origin of this nefarious practice virtually coincided with the beginning of serious stamp collecting in the latter part of the 1850's and early 1860's. Some idea of the scope of these early operations may be gained from the observation that the first published work on the subject,

De la falsification des timbresposte, by J. B. Moens, Brussels, 1862, 34 pp., lists forgeries of some 45 different countries.

The first volume originally written in English describing forgeries, 

Forged Stamps: How to Detect Them, by Thornton Lewes and Edward Pemberton, was published in Edinburgh in 1863. In its introduction the authors mention the existence of forgers in Zurich, Brussels, Brunswick and Leipzig, but cautiously refrain from specific identifications. In spite of the continued efforts of the philatelic press,  the sale of forgeries either as such or as genuine items proved to be a lucrative business.

1864 the prominent lithographing firm, Spiro Brothers, of Hamburg, Germany, entered the field. Their forgeries were advertised and sold as "imitated postage stamps for collections," and proved to be very popular and apparently profitable merchandise. It has been asserted that Philip Spiro, who personally directed this phase of the company's business, considered it as a perfectly legitimate enterprise and one which supplemented nicely the firm's production of more prosaic lithographic merchandise which ranged from beer bottle labels to Sunday school cards; principal thesis, argued at some length, was that the imitation of stamps is "of the most inestimable benefit, as much to the dealers as to the collectors."

During 1864 Philip Spiro continued to advertise as a dealer in genuine postage stamps at Adolphsplatz 10, Hamborg, in the Magazin für Briefmarkensammler. His last advertisement in that journal appeared in the November 1865 issue, and it has been assumed chat when his status as a producer of facsimiles became known, his patronage was no longer acceptable. In spite of this rather mild ostracism, the Spiros continued to produce their forgeries with such perseverance that a contemporary writer feit obligated to comment that their motto must have been Dum spiro spero.

Fred J. Melville, who in his paper "The Lives of the Forgers" writes as follows:

The Spiros specious defence of imitations is that of a long line of successors in the forgery and facsimile line. The brothers were humndrum, commercial rogues, with no redeeming or saving graces. We could well forget them, but for those all-to-white paper scraps which still a bound but which even in the sixties were an insult to the intelligence of the rational collector."

During the 15 years that production continued, the Spiros printed millions of forgeries of approximately 500 different stamps. They were supplied in ungummed sheets of 25 (5 x 5), usually obliterated with one or more varieties of cancellations according to the choice of the purchasers. The imitations sold for prices ranging from one to four cents per copy when purchased singly, but considerable discounts were allowed on items purchased in lots of a dozen or a hundred copies. 

though the lithographed Spiro facsimiles were in most cases extremely poor imitations of the genuine stamps, they were produced in such enormous quantities that many of them have survived down to the present time.

According to Dr. Lowell Ragatz, renowned authority on forgeries, the Spiro forgeries of all countries are contained by the dozens in virtually every old collection. The Spiros turned their attention to Japanese postage stamps some time prior to October, 1875, because on that date the first "Spud Paper" covering a forgery of Japan made its appearance in the Philatelist.

Written by Messrs W. Dudley Atlee, Edward L. Pemberton and Robert B. Earee, the "Spud Papers" were a pioneer study of philatelic forgeries which appeared originally in three successive English stamp periodicals between the years 1871 and 1881.

The fact that the originals were illustrated with actual copies of the Spiro forgeries makes them highly desirable items, much sought after by collectors of reference material and practically unobtainable at the present time. Fortunately for collectors the entire series has been reprinted in book form, The Spud Papers, together with an introductory essay and comprehensive index by Dr. Ragatz. The first comprehensive philatelic descriptions of Spiro Japanese forgeries appeared in this series.

2021-01-11

SPIRO kobans and Francois Fournier

  





Since genuine Japanese stamps were printed on a wide variety of native and foreign papers, and recognition and classification of the various types is best reserved for the specialist, a description of the paper types of the forgeries is not a particularly useful criterion of recognition.

The koban issues are quite well perforated 12.5 These creations were recognized as rather poor imitations even at the turn of the century, and it is believed that these Spiro forgeries of Japan are the "Second Choice" facsimiles listed by Francois Fournier in his 1914 price list. This assumption is based upon the fact that Fournier, although frequently blamed, did not himself produce any of the Japanese items in his facsimile lists. His "First Choice" listings included a total of 59 imitations of both hand-engraved and koban issues. These were apparently of Japanese origin since this many varieties were not produced by forgers in other countries.


Spiro Japanese forgeries may be recognized readily and easily by the cancellations which were almost always applied by the manufacturer. An extremely limited number of types of cancellations, only a few of which are found on genuine Japanese stamps, exist on these forgeries. Since the cancels were applied in black ink, more or less at random to entire sheets prior to separation of the stamps, parts of two or more cancels of the same or different types frequently appear on a single stamp. Perusal of the following illustrated descriptive list of the basic types of cancels on the Spiro forgeries of Japan will enable the interested collector to detect these items with a minimum of effort.

1. 2.

Spiro Cancellations A single circle, 22mm in diameter, containing the word "JOKOHAMA". A single circle, 22mm in diameter, containing the word "Nagasaki".





 botas on koban forgeries (spiro) are very scarce ...


2023-01-06

Introduction ...







ISJP study is based on Wilhelmsen cataloging plates and makers. I have been solving some of weaknesses in category. Meiji woodblock was skillful, . Copper plate and  photo-lithographs followed..   sekihan

MAEDA  surpasses WADA as maker of koban litho facsimilespostcards and playing cards were bulk of his trade.   Spiro - a look back.... my view MAEDA is SPIRO.

all but 1 5x5 koban sheets sourced to Japan... the Aachen 5rin was acquired in Germany ...

In recent times , Gerhard Lang-Valchs  introduced me to PR TORRES of Spain.  so I began researching classic albums and catalogs of europe. increasingly more TORRES fakes are emerging ...
investigations have shown - stamp packets are more predominant ... illustrations or unused fakes  >  cancelled packet fakes  roots of philately  begin with facsimiles .  TORRES values to search below.




  • classic albums of europe yielded koban illustrations. SENF offered steel engraved  facsimiles = these form basis for fakes ,  I have merged these in ID charts
  • TORRES .early woodblock and litho imperfs are beyond the ISJP 2003 CD on forgeries.  illustrations bear cancels as fakes  from illustration  .> album catalog > cancel > stamp packet
  • both OK and NK litho fakes derived from MAEDA KB4 and D11 underprints ... 
  • MAEDA-Spiro koban  botas are scarce , implying sold as packet singles ...  Not 1 Spiro sheet has surfaced.

readers are urged to send scans of unusual collection items for inspection .   I am reviewing my archives and streamlining by topic and designers... StampCat database is constantly changing, so edits are inevitable to posts ...  use keyword search box . CTL+ will enlarge images ...

M C STRATHDEE  ISJP3399



 

2021-01-03

SPIRO sheets ... J/N


Plating singles should be easy with 5x5 sheets
orphans abound
so templates are numerous and production immense overtime

search : spiro 
for complete study to date....

I welcome spiro material from viewers...


new template #4


new template #3


#3 template . most common

 

 

2021-11-25

1875--1880 origin of spiro sheets ...





my study reflects on 37 spiro sheets,   the woodblock method has been sucessfully decoded and further sheets will surface in time ... all but 1 are japanese origin ... past literature stated these were the work of Philip Spiro of Hamburg, DE . however, he disclaimed he was maker; only a dealer-distributor ... his dealings began 1864, and ceased in 1880. the golden era of facsimiles by international graphic artists...  LONDON price was 1d per sheet 1900.

my view, is that all litho koban reproductions or imitations are the work of one artist - Maeda Kihei
new evidence shows series more complex than imagined ...   a 5rin sheet surfaced in Aachen, DE.

2012-07-26

a new 5sen sheet discovered ...

.


a new 5sen sheet discovered offers again 25 new positions ... I am appending these to my spiro study ....

historically, little has been written to describe these woodblock koban sheets ... analysis of the 15 spiro koban sheets has revealed some interesting patterns ... I have compiled results with images and rationale. it is also a collectors guide: pdf album pages for each value and anotated catalog of 340 positions...



to enjoy the full experience of CD, be sure to download Picasa3 ... to view the image library.   some positions remain unallocated ... and I am always looking for new ones !    registered users receive free upgrades ...  anyone who sends a signifigant number of spiro imitations can trade for the study - otherwise.


2022-06-03

MAEDA - SPIRO

 Maeda is source of SPIRO kobans ... compare
  • positions are unique drawings 
  • size of kiku crest
  • corner  detail   
  • frame
  • kanji center design and oval
 






IJP 2sen drab had highest production 
MAEDA 2sen is scarcist of lithos


IJP


2020-03-30

MAEDA 1sen B8 -with irregular NAGASAKI cancel overlay


previously, I assumed spiro cancels were silk screened over value sheets.   the B8 shown may offer a test print.
unknown sheet ... U01- p16-20;21-4   this block breaks the rule ...


NJN
the PLATE was assembled from 3 sub blocks ... arrayed top to bottom .
18 sub-blocks *were prepared : 54 radials - the result. ... each is unique - either "jokohama" or "nagasaki" .
these 18 modules : MXC... a,b,c were loaded randomly to produce varied final prints of the different sen values.





(thanks to Florian Eichhorn, ISJP BPP)

KNOWN sheet and B9 below ...  readers are urged to send scans of spiro forgeries @ 300dpi ...


Cancel analyis and synthesis. Having examined the sheets very closely, I determined there we 54 distinct radials
of “Nagasaki” and “Jokohama”. Further, these were patterned in blocks of 3, and repeated randomly on
subsequent prints, intervalue. This is demonstrated in the following table …
Block / Usage
JJJ1 10b-01
JJJ2 10b-01
JJJ3 10b-01
JNJ1 01a-01, 04b-01
JNJ2 005a-03, 02a-01, 05b-02, 10b-02
JNJ3 05b-01
JNJ4 005a-02, 04b-02
JNJ5 005a-01, 10b-03
JNJ6 02a-01, 05b-02
JNJ7 005a-03, 10b-02
JNN 005a-01, 10b-03
NJJ 01a-01, 04b-01, 05b-01
NJN1 005a-02, 04b-02
NJN2 01a-01, 04b-01
NJN3 005a-01, 10b-03
NJN4 005a-02, 04b-02
NJN5 02a-01, 05b-02
NJN6 005a-03, 10b-02
note - petal extension in kiku ...





2019-10-11

5rin imitations ... warning


Wada Katoro did not produce any ... and Maeda Kihei has been identified as designer of one position grey-black koban ... however, looking at the 25 position spiro sheets : 3 16-petal kiku sheets exist ... that I would class as troublesome to the collector ...

close examination of the kiku design , and comparison to the genuine is required ... on the left is a spiro-kiku; on the right a genuine-kiku design. in the imitations, normally a dot appears in the core ... also the petals are mishapen ...

note the variance in the oval frame designs ...

2021-12-16

MAEDA-spiro 5sen unknown position

the 5sen brown is from an unknown spiro sheet ... the cancel just touches on the upper frame ... this shows clearly in the negative image ...

building a image library, will allow identification of items ... and plating of position in a matrix 5x5 

  • 5 SHEETS ARE DEFINED TO DATE  
  • of the 125  positions I have plated very few from my collection and scans.   
  • this points to high volume printing of sheets with varied indicia overlay.    
  • packet making...


.

2022-06-01

MAEDA 5rin B16 B17 ex DE








  • anomolies vary between positions as spiro sheets
  • 5 R and romaji : missing n Rn /
  • 13x15 perf
NB UR corner dot constant...

compare below ... small S 5  romaji similar


B16

Spiro
         
NB center kanji
D11 / Kamigata



discovered in germany

same anomolies as B16


5x5 matrix







2021-11-25

1877 UPU and spiro sheets ....

In 1877 Japan joined the Universal Postal Union, which specifies cooperative rules for international mail. ROMAN LETTER postmarks were mandatory ...
The UPU’s history can be traced as far back as 1863, when then United States Postmaster General Montgomery Blair called a conference in Paris, France, to lay down a number of general principles for mutual agreements, but delegates failed to agree on an international postal agreement.
Ten years later, Heinrich von Stephan, a senior postal official from the North German Confederation, drew up a plan for an international postal union, and upon his recommendation the Swiss Government convened an international conference in Berne on 15 September 1874. Representatives from 22 nations attended the conference, and on 9 October – a day now celebrated as World Post Day – the Treaty of Bern establishing the General Postal Union was signed.This treaty succeeded in unifying a confusing international maze of postal services and regulations into a single postal territory for the reciprocal exchange of mail. The barriers and frontiers impeding the free flow and growth of international mail had finally been pulled down.Membership in the Union grew so quickly that its name was changed to the Universal Postal Union in 1878. The organization became a United Nations specialized agency for postal services in 1948.

the spiro sheet facsimiles commemorate UPU and IJPO foreign mails

2sen new koban fake

  IMPERIAL too close to oval