I have been thinking about getting one of these sheets too even though I have stopped my collection at the year 2000. I have purchased a few issues after that that have been of interest to me. I think this one will be one of those too.
Yes, it's hard to pass up. There it is, one of the most famous stamps in "stamp-dom" , so much so that even a noob like me knows about it. Plus it fits my interest in modes of transportaion, so it's a "two-fer" . I'm not going for the $200 deluxe set, but it does look really nice.
Once I find out the total printing, which I think is 10 million I know I will get a few, even to use on mail...
couldn't count on the local post office stocking those, so ordered 4 sheetlets from the Philatelic Center. I guess they'll ship sometime after Sept 22nd. They won't be quite as rare as the originals unless they goof up and make one of the sheetlets with the plane flying right side up. Now wouldn't that be irony? Just don't be like the guy who bought the sheet of Dag Hamerskold (sp ?) invert or Legends of the West. If you get an error, sit on it for at least a couple of years before any revelation, then the post office won't be in a position to immediately re-issue the error in bulk.
Do you mean you think you can get me the stamps or is it possible to send you money thorugh paypal, the latter is easy?
Twelve dollars is a little high for a souvenir sheet. That's why I quit collecting US stamps in the 1980s...... Chris
Yes, making each stamp a two dollar value without an applicable rate application kind of makes it obvious that this is a stamp being directed at collectors. I will still probably order one anyway. I stopped my collection at the year 2000, but I have a few stamps after that mainly the retro reprints.
Yeah. The least the USPS could have done is make it 48 cents (double the 24 cents of the original) to make it usable for 1st class postage (kinda like a semipostal). Probably didn't want to make it 24 cents. Too many gullible collectors would buy one at an inflated price thinking they were gettting a steal on a rare stamp, given a recently unearthed large cache of hitherto unkown inverts had just just been discovered????? My guess is if you don't purchase them thru the USPS philatelic fullfiment center out of Kansas City, you'll be hard pressed to buy them at you local post office. Then expect to pay thru the nose with you local/remote stamp dealer. It's all part of the big conspiracy by the USPS to get the collector to subsidize postal operations by having to buy an intact sheet to get single stamps / issuing multitudes of large denomination stamps (the new $1, $2, $5, and $10 'wave stamps' come to mine) / frequent changes to the priority and express mail rates to justify issuane of those new stamps (but the USPS uses metered postage instead so they don't have to stock those stamps in the local offices).. Bah humbug! I'll buy some excess of them, then use them to spite the USPS!
OK - so it's here! Shipped on the date of issuance and about 3 days to get here http://www.stampexchange.com/gallery/image/400-jenny-invert/