According to former Federal Councillor Christoph Blocher
the Western world is in a state of upheaval
And the 84-year-old reveals what he and Donald Trump have in common
At the SVP delegates' meeting on Saturday
Christoph Blocher spoke of "new questions of destiny": Evil spirits wanted to drive Switzerland into the EU
The SVP has been the only party to fight against this for 40 years
The treaty package negotiated between the Confederation and the EU was a "typical colonial treaty"
Anyone still talking about the "bilateral path" or "Bilaterals III" was using "crook terms"
He was sure to receive applause from the SVP delegates
The 84-year-old is known for not mincing his words when it comes to national affairs. Now, in an interview with CH Media newspapers
he has also shared his thoughts on current international developments
he believes that US President Donald Trump is credible because he was able to withstand a lot of mud being thrown at him and survive many lawsuits
"You shouldn't underestimate Donald Trump
He's just being unserious," Blocher is quoted as saying
Trump has meticulously prepared for his second term in office
Christoph Blocher sees Trump's re-election to the most powerful office in the world as a symptom of a global movement: "A conservative revolution is currently taking place in the Western world." The consensus to shape the world the way the elite wants it and to exclude anyone with a different opinion is collapsing
This is also the case in Germany: "I am convinced that the CDU in Germany will govern with the AfD," says Blocher
where the right-wing populist FPÖ was given the task of forming a government
Blocher predicts Marine Le Pen will be the next president
Blocher does not see many parallels between himself and Trump
that's not me at all." The only things they have in common are bureaucracy
Christoph Blocher is not thinking of quitting yet
"I will be involved in everything in the background," he told CH Media
When I began this rambling tour of great sets and series of the world eight months ago
I invited Linn’s readers to let me know which stamps and sets hit the sweet spot in their philatelic souls
What brings a smile to your face and a warm feeling whenever you open your album
One of those who shared his thoughts — with a commendable combination of brevity and eloquence — was Richard T
“I would like to nominate the 1936 engraved Landscape definitive set of Switzerland (Scott 227-236) as one of the great sets
highlighting some of the great scenic vistas of the country coupled with a long life spanning World War II
it offers philatelic variety as well as a view into an interesting era of modern postal history.”
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Hall has served since the 1990s as secretary and librarian of the American Helvetia Philatelic Society
He also edited the beautifully illustrated Philately of Switzerland: An Introductory Handbook
readable and informative outreach tool for the society
available as a 352-page book (2010) or on computer optical disc (2015)
I’ve spent much time ruminating on Hall’s suggestion of the Swiss Landscape stamps
their story is even more engaging than he suggests
It begins in the early 1930s in Switzerland
a nation with impeccable philatelic antecedents.
The Swiss cantons of Zurich and Geneva issued their first postage stamps four years before the United States did
was the world’s first tricolored postage stamp and one of the most striking designs of the 19th century
Switzerland in the 1930s was in need of new definitive stamps
Swiss stamps had depicted the Swiss cross (1849-1924); various images of the nation’s female allegory Helvetia (1854-1909); and William Tell
the father and son symbols of Swiss prowess and courage (1907-21)
Those who chose wisely selected alpine landscapes of Switzerland as fresh subjects for a new definitive series in 1934
Seven typographed monochrome designs by Eugen Jordi were printed on granite paper with large Swiss Cross watermarks: a 3-centime olive Staubbach Falls (Scott 219); 5c emerald Mount Pilatus (220); 10c bright violet Chillon Castle (221); 15c orange Rhone Glacier (222); 20c red St
Gotthard Railroad (223); 25c brown Via Mala Gorge (224); and 20c ultramarine Rhine Falls (225)
You’ll find all these stamps pictured across the pages of this article
although no single item gives the sense and style of the set as effectively as the Sept
29 souvenir sheet showing four denominations.
souvenir sheets were sold for three times their 50c face value
the additional franc going to help fund the show
The print run of 50,000 was readily snapped up
and those who refused to part with 1.50fr to support the hobby then now have an album space that will cost hundreds of dollars to fill.
A number of sources I consulted said or implied that the 1934 Landscape stamps were unpopular
though no one offered even an anecdote to back this claim
It may be that any stamps that failed to look exactly as postage had looked for the preceding 80 years were doomed to be derided in an aesthetically conservative country
they were not the success the PTT had hoped for; perhaps it was the Depression.
the PTT acquired a new press for stamp printing
an intaglio SSR 1 from the Goebel firm in Darmstadt
Goebel had delivered to Germany’s Reichspost the world’s first web-fed intaglio stamp press capable of in-line perforation
and Switzerland was only the latest stamp producer to buy one for its operations
An old promotional photo from the Swedish postal administration nearby shows a similar Goebel stamp press it acquired in 1938
it occurred to someone — probably Karl Bickel’s good friend Hans Gaudard
then head of PTT security printing operations — to invite Bickel to see if he could give the Landscape stamps a new lease on life
he also visited Switzerland and sketched many of the sites in person
Bickel “was given free rein to adapt Eugen Jordi’s pictures for recess engraving
but engraved the dies under conditions unusual for this work.”
Bickel even designed a test stamp to learn the capabilities of the new press and the intaglio process with different colors
Nearby is an unusual strip of five engraved designs for the 5c Mount Pilatus stamp
which are shown with Jordi’s 1934 stamp below the left end
and the finished 1936 stamp below the right end
Photographically cropped to make comparison easier
this image of engraved essays appeared in Adrian Keppel’s article “Karl Bickel: Of Mountains and Men” on page 92 in the March 2016 issue of Gibbons Stamp Monthly
and appears courtesy of that magazine’s editor
Please take a moment or two and take a good
Bickel does a fairly good job of capturing the feel of Jordi’s original 1934 definitive (Scott 220)
The denomination and inscription are almost identical
irregular lines of the typographic design are very close to those of that first stamp
This was the benchmark upon which Bickel hoped to improve
The four stamp designs to the right of it are all significantly but not dramatically different essays
though you have to look carefully to recognize all the differences
and the text are different in each of the five designs
the final essay is in every important detail the same as the 1936 stamp
though it is not the stamp’s precise design
It is much more heavily shaded than the issued stamp (Scott 228)
and some of the lines on it differ slightly from the essay.
That little village with the distinctive tower in the foreground is called Stanstaad or Stannstad
and a color view much like it may be found on a rare 1890-1900 Photochrom color print in the public domain in the U.S
The additional detail Bickel was able to include in his stamps because of the on-site sketches he made was significant
there is one prominent object in his 1936 5c stamp that I find no evidence of in images of the village
just above the “H” in “HELVETIA.” If such an object existed it would be hard to miss; the early 14th-century tower is 60 feet tall
which would approach 90 feet if rendered to scale
that Bickel moved it around and subtly modified its appearance in his essays
Could it have been a creative artifact that existed only in his imagination?
There are images on the web of most of Bickel’s stamp subjects
to enhance your appreciation of his achievements and artistry
Contrasting the designs of the 10c Chillon Castle stamps
it is clear that removing the solid dark panel behind “HELVETIA” and the heavily shaded “10” on the 1934 stamp (Scott 221) makes its red-brown 1936 successor (229) look more balanced
The same design was reused in different colors throughout the life cycle of the series: dark red-brown in 1939 (230)
orange-brown in 1942 (230B) and finally in green in 1948 (317)
close comparison of the 15c orange Rhone Glacier stamps from 1934 (left
231) again shows how the finer composition and line weight of engraving can add subtlety and realism even to a landscape displayed in a single shade.
and the detailed stonework of the roadbed on the left looks far more believable than the jagged teeth on the earlier stamp.
pictured in red on the 20c stamp in 1934 (Scott 223)
defied even Bickel’s formidable skills in the sense that his carmine version in 1936 (232) failed to find any more favor with the public than its predecessor did
The later engraved stamp has much more detail more realistically rendered than the typographic process was capable of
but this massive and important project simply has too much going on to successfully fit onto a definitive
consider this: Construction began in 1872 and the final phase will be completed by 2020
When a decent opportunity presented itself in 1938
it was replaced with a handsome new 20c red stamp depicting Lake Lugano
and in a horizontal pair on a granite paper souvenir sheet for the 1938 National Philatelic Exhibition in Aarau (242)
and was successful enough to be reprinted in 1948 in orange brown (318).
Both the 1934 and 1936 25c stamps (Scott 224
the sort of obstacle that has helped keep invaders out of Switzerland since 1499
this design gave way in 1948 to a 25c carmine stamp (319) showing Grisons National Park
whereas the theoretically more appealing Grisons National Park stamp reminds me of the approaches to volcanic Mount Doom of Mordor
where Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings saga reaches its fiery finale
Nearby are the typographed (Scott 225) and the intaglio (234) 30c Rhine Falls Landscape stamps
but only Bickel’s design conveys the untamed power of the rapids that dominate the great river at this point
a frequent subject of tourist snapshots.
The need for higher denominations brought two new Landscape stamps in 1936
a 35c yellow-green Balsthal Pass stamp (Scott 235) and a 40c stamp in gray showing the Alpine Lake of Santis (236)
the latter was reissued in ultramarine (321).
the 5c Mount Pilatus stamp in that most Swiss of shades — chocolate — also was issued in 1948 (Scott 316) because by then two other green Landscape stamps were in regular use (235 and 317).
but it barely opens the book on what is collectible about them
Scott lists a few of the best-known varieties
all of the engraved Landscapes have smooth gum
although most have inexpensive and collectible counterparts printed on grilled gum as well (227a-2236a)
you’ll probably be best served consulting European catalogs: the two-volume Zumstein Spezialkatalog Schweiz
or the Michel Schweiz-/Liechtenstein-Spezial-Katalog
and each has a wealth of information on paper and gum types
along with the illustrations you’ll need to make sense of them
You’ll also be well-served by the excellent graphic presentation of the engraved 10c by the American Helvetia Philatelic Society in the second edition of its Philately of Switzerland: An Introductory Handbook, available on CD for $10 from the society. For more information, visit the society’s website
It initially struck me as odd that a stamp-issuing nation breaking from tradition would issue stamps unlike almost all those it had previously produced
would get someone else to produce the same scenes
I had failed to note the philatelic precedents for such a decision already set by Switzerland
the Swiss had replaced unsatisfactory stamps of one scenic view with new stamps showing the same scene and denomination
a 1918 3fr red stamp showing the Mythen (Scott 182)
a pair of mountains in central Switzerland
was replaced in 1931 with a re-engraved orange-brown design (209) of the same locale
and a 1914 5fr deep ultramarine stamp depicting the spot where the Old Swiss Confederacy was first formed (183) was superseded by a second issued in 1928 (206)
One enjoyable way to collect the Landscape definitives is as overprinted Official stamps for use by the Swiss government and by the League of Nations
The League of Nations was headquartered in Geneva from 1920 to 1946
when it was supplanted by the United Nations
Official stamps for the League of Nations stamps and its member organizations are far more numerous than those of the Swiss government
and most of the 1934-48 Landscapes saw use in that capacity
and all from 1938 on are Scott-listed.
For maximum visibility of the often tiny black overprints
I chose the 20c stamps printed in red or carmine for illustration
Gotthard Railroad stamp both typographed and engraved with the nine-hole Swiss perfin representing the Swiss cross
used in 1934 and 1936 and unlisted in Scott
Also shown are 20c Lake Lugano stamps with a 1938 Official cross overprint (Scott O5)
the 1942-43 League of Nations overprint (2O69)
and the 1944 International Bureau of Education Officials (4O5)
Though many collectors in North America scarcely know they exist
coil stamps have long been part of Swiss definitive issues
they are not as easy to collect as United States or Canadian coil stamps
which are easily identified by their parallel straight edges on two opposite sides
Individual Swiss coil stamps look just like sheet-format stamps
The characteristics that identify them as coils vanish when they are used
so they are collected in mint singles or multiples
I’ve shown the front and back of two coil strips of the 5c Mount Pilatus stamp to show how they are collected.
Vertical strips from complete coil rolls or from dealers who break them down can be collected in 11-stamp strips
which cannot have come from a pane of stamps printed 10 by 10
these as well as shorter vertical or horizontal strips or even individual stamps can be collected displaying the counting numbers printed on the gum side of every fifth stamp
the 10-stamp horizontal strip shown is one on which counting numbers of adjacent coil rolls have been retained together
with alphabetical prefixes “A” through “K” followed by “7490.”
Swiss booklet panes from this period are prohibitively expensive to collect
It also seems that exploded booklets — carefully disassembled with covers
stamps and interleaving retained for display or exhibit — are virtually nonexistent
which show images of almost all rare German booklet panes
se-tenant printing combinations are abundant and affordable
because the panes from which they were taken were sold to collectors by the PTT
Scott lists and values only tete-beche pairs
while the se-tenants with a perforated or printed label between stamps are listed in the European catalogs.
Se-tenant printings originate from 90-stamp printing sheets created to furnish booklet panes
which were then cut vertically so that the selvage can be used to bind the booklets
Tete-beche pairs can be taken from the third and fourth columns in the sheet
where six-stamp panes were printed back to back to make them easy to recognize and cut.
Pairs of stamps with printed or perforated blank labels come from columns six through eight
Whether these are perforated or overprinted with rows of Xs
the purpose was to make sure no stamp-sized piece of usable unprinted stamp paper could fall into fraudulent hands
Which stamps, sets, or series make you glad to be a collector? Which ones do you turn to first when you meet with other collectors, or have occupied your interest and fascination for years? If you have one or more candidates, please write to me in care of Linn’s Stamp News, or email me at fwtb53@gmail.com
World Stamps
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