In February the American Philatelic Society approved new
classifications for exhibits. The APS
Committee on the Accredition of National Exhibitions and Judges
recommended that the exhibiting
classes of single frame, multi frame (general) and youth be further
divided into six Divisions:
Postal, Revenue, Thematic, Charity - Promotions - Cinderella, Display,
and Illustrated Mail.
According to the report in the March 26 issue of Linn's by APS director
at large Lloyd de Vries,
First Day Cover exhibits would fall into the Illustrated Mail Division,
which is described as
having a "focus on the illustation or illustrated subject of the
philatelic material, that is
the adverting, patriotic message, or corner card or cachet subject
rather than its postal use".
Mr. de Vries continues: "Some of the msterial included in this
division, such as maximum cards,
are accepted now at highest level of exhibiting in international
competitions".
This Illustrated Mail Division, I believe, will increase public
interest in attending and
collectors interest in exhibiting in stamp shows. I expect that
Maximaphily now will be in a
sub division by itself and under distinct rulrs of judging. There has
to be a caution here.
Some areas in this Illustrated MaIL Division will allow exhibition of
material that hitherto
was disalowed or none competitive.
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This is not the case with Maximaphily. There already are
standards set by International Federation of Philately (F.I.P.). The
judges are not going to
ignore these rules. If yoy are going to exhibit you should know what
they are.
When preparing a card for cancellation, you have to be sure that there
is good concordance with
the postmark and the subject of the stamp. Recently the Celebrate the
Century series included a
stamp from the Grand Canyon. The first day of issue cancellation was
Washington, D.C. An exhibit
of Maximum Cards, whether international or at a national show here in
the USA, should, and I
hope will be downgraded in the judging if it included a postcard with a
stamp of the Grand
Canyon cancelled with a Washington, DC first day of issue postmark,
instead of that of the
Grand Canyon, AZ (place of site).
Also let us not expect that recognition of Maximum Cards in exhibiting
means that now we can
accept those "reproduction of the stamp" cards that were published by
Colorano, Velvetone,
Collotype and others, or those put by the United States Postal Services
and the Post Offices of
some other countries as Maximum Cards. They never were and they never
will be. If they appear
in first day cover exhibits that is a matter that does not concern us.
What does concern us is
that they continue to be misidendified as "Maximum Cards". These have a
name in Germany:
Reprokarten. I wish we had a name foe them here.
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